Telstra delays rural ADSL upgrades as funding cuts out

Telstra has temporarily ceased enabling some rural telephone exchanges for ADSL services after late last year reaching the limit of funds it could receive from the federal government's subsidised bush broadband scheme.

The telco had been using funds from the AU$157 million Higher Bandwidth Incentive Scheme (HiBIS) to subsidise the ADSL upgrades, which are taking place in areas of peak demand. HiBIS saw Internet service providers given incentives to supply broadband to the bush at city prices, and was replaced this year by the $878 million Broadband Connect scheme.

Telstra said it has so far enabled 800 exchanges using funding from HiBIS, and as late as September 18 was reported to have said it would continue the upgrade process. That has now changed.

"Wholesale customers were written towards the end of last year, saying that work had ceased on upgrading exchanges," a spokesperson for the telco told ZDNet Australia today.

"The government has an artificial 60 percent limit on the amount of funds Telstra could obtain under HiBIS and we had used up that amount of money."

"They weren't prepared to raise the artificial 60 percent barrier, therefore we couldn't continue with the work."

The spokesperson estimated the cessation would temporarily affect around 50 exchanges which his company's ADSL Demand Register lists as soon to be upgraded, although more accurate numbers could be obtained from the exhaustive register itself.

"I would say that I expect the funding issue to delay by some weeks the enabling of those exchanges," he said.

The register provides a mechanism for people to monitor the status of their local exchange and express their interest in having it upgraded for ADSL services.

Not getting a fair go?
The Department of Information Technology and the Arts (DCITA), who administers HiBIS and Broadband Connect, currently states on its Web site that the 60 percent funding cap is "in the interest of encouraging competition" and applies to any ISP in the HiBIS scheme, not just Telstra.

But the Telstra spokesperson claimed the 60 percent rule was "grossly unfair".

"I think it was dreamed up by some officials in the Department in Canberra," he said. "On what basis, I don't know. Perhaps that's what they feel that Telstra's market share should be."

He claimed the rule was unfair because Telstra is forced to give other telcos access to broadband infrastructure it installs, but "it's not the same the other way around".

"It's yet another rule that applies only to Telstra," he said.

The spokesperson recommended people continued to express their interest in services through the demand register, however.

The news comes as ZDNet Australia this morning revealed that Telstra's wholesale division will not participate in HiBIS's successor program Broadband Connect.

Telstra's decision will lock a number of ISPs out of getting access to the government funds unless they build their own regional infrastructure or gain access to alternative wholesale services, of which there are few available.

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Talkback 8 comments

    Thankyou Telstra Anonymous -- 13/01/06 (in reply to #120127056)

    Thankyou Helstra for an even longer wait for Broadband to hit in my area.

    Hel$$$tra Anonymous -- 13/01/06

    Good old Hel$$$tra, don't you just love them... First they can't give us full speed DSL they have to cap it at 1.5mbits and then they just bullshi* you around all the time.. GOOD WORK Hel$tra!

    So whats new ?? Anonymous -- 14/01/06

    I could see this coming a long time ago.And they say that Australia is not backward.With all the profit they make they should be able to carry out these upgrades without funding.Telsta is not a service.I think its a disgrace to the country.If British Telecom were running things it would be a different story altogether.

    Why doesn't this surprise me ? Kai -- 14/01/06

    Telstra are as bad as Microsoft when it comes to sharing (and constantly complaning when they're asked to play fairly), and the Government isn't much better since they're allowing it to happen.

    I'm a taxpayer, taxpayers pay the government's wages, so we are their boss but when have they ever listened to us ?

    How's about those greedy, overpaid Telstra and Government executives take a pay cut from their ridiculous wages, put that money back into the communications infrastructure and SHARE....like good little kiddies ? nah, that'd never happen, they'll up our line rental and call costs instead, pricks.

    They wouldn't need a pay cut Anonymous -- 16/01/06 (in reply to #120127125)

    They get enough from line rental and other bullshit fees. They have plenty of money. Stop spending it on Grog, and start spending it on upgrading services!!!

    Telstra delays rural ADSL upgrades as funding cuts out Andrew Gard -- 16/01/06

    As a rural customer of Telstra I can't wait to tell them to p**s off when the new internet technology such as BPL and Wireless eventually come.

    Telstra still living in 1950, but why trap me there too ? Anonymous -- 11/02/06

    What kind of stupid phone company doesn't want people to pay them $20+ a month in ADSL line fees ?

    Why won't Telstra use some of its OWN money to fix the huge holes in its broadband network, at least while its waiting for more govenment funds.

    As for me, I have to wait years and years to get any broadband service just because I decided to live in a new house. Its costing me literially thousands in lost income due to work I cannot do for overseas clients.

    You might need to update the story. Anonymous -- 12/02/06

    Telstra are supporting the new broadband connect scheme.
    Personal comment; People are writing a lot about Telstra not providing these services and upgrades. Why can't OPTUS, AAPT, IPRIMUS who also are using their own DSLAMs in city exchanges also do this? Simple no profit in it. It is very expensive to setup and maintain rural exhanges compared to dense population centres. Is easier to have TELSTRA do the work where the costs (and in rural areas supplying at a loss) and then through ACCC assistance buy the service wholesale below cost and then resell at a profit.

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