Vigilantes threaten rough justice on aerial NBN cables

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Vigilantes threaten rough justice on aerial NBN cables
"Why are they threatening the "Lobby for Underground cabling" when they are against overhead cabling?"
 
Aug 26, 2009 11:17 AM
Tags: vigilante | justice | nbn | cable | aerial | broadband | haberfield

Trucks and 4WDs roam the streets with hooks.

Senior members of a national lobby for underground cabling claim to have received threats from angry residents that they will tear down any NBN cables hung overhead in their streets.

The group, Cables Underground, said it "does not advocate violence" and had attempted to counsel irate callers.

But it warned "these are only the ones with whom we come in contact" and said there were likely others that would escape its counseling and potentially vandalise an aerial rollout.

"It is highly predictable there will be a substantial electoral backlash," the assistant secretary of Cables Downunder, Greg Bleazard, said in a submission [PDF] to the Senate Select Committee for the NBN.

"One [caller] threatened to attach a beam and hook to a heavy truck and to drive it down the street tearing down any cables he comes across.

"Others have threatened to throw a hook over the cable and to then pull it down with the aid of a four wheel drive."

Earlier today, iTnews reported on a community group in Sydney's inner west that warned the Government against a repeat of Optus' hybrid fibre coaxial cable rollout in 1995.

The Haberfield Association successfully prevented Optus from stringing up aerial HFC cables in the suburb.

Cables Downunder said it coordinated the actions of independent community groups in the Sydney metropolitan area during the Optus rollout, but had since expanded its scope to become a national lobbyist.

Much of its work was cooperative and "behind the scenes" with local government authorities, Bleazard said.


 
Comments: 10
Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
jamontoast
Aug 26, 2009 1:08 PM
But only if they hit the wire at 88 mph...

1.21 GIGAWATTS!!!!! GREAT SCOTT!!!!
HyRax
Aug 26, 2009 2:18 PM
So people are prepared to vandalise cables, but not speed cameras? What a backward world we live in.
AkiraDoe
Aug 26, 2009 2:54 PM
I call shenanigans. We're supposed to believe that the assistant secretary of a lobby group about keeping cables underground is telling the truth?

Are there really that many backward hicks in this country? It's a few cables...
Tenoq
Aug 26, 2009 4:35 PM
In other news, NBN Co threatens to NOT fix torn down cables.

See what the neighbourhood thinks of said vandalising residents when they have no fixed-line phone, no internet and none of the next-gen services delivered via FTTH. Perhaps said hooks will be attached to said vandal and used to tear them a new one.
anthonywr
Aug 26, 2009 4:38 PM
What a bunch of sooks these people are.
I hope you accidently hook onto power lines instead and fry your arses.
disappointedhorse
Aug 26, 2009 7:36 PM
There appears to be a link between trucks, 4wds and vigilantes. I propose we ban them.
Johnny
Aug 26, 2009 7:43 PM
They shouldn't string more cables up in the air they should dam well bury them!

I agree with these people upto the part where they start being idiots (i.e tearing down a cable).
adss_man
Aug 27, 2009 8:38 PM
The type of aerial optical fibre the NBN will use will most probably be ADSS -all dielectric self supporting fibre. There's heaps of it hanging all around NSW & Victoria. Most wouldn't even of noticed it because it can be installed near to 200mm from low voltage cables.
If these people want to take out the cables then there's a good chance they will take themselves out with it.
RogerH
Aug 28, 2009 8:07 AM
One ot two cables may be ok, and hardly noticed along with the power lines and other rubbish on poles. But a look at some American cities have 10 or 15 fat, ugly cables and their control boxes strung along the roadside. Driving along the coast road in Hawaii - beautiful scenery ruined by cables. Please bury them before our streets look like black-spaghetti factories.
Kamikaze
Aug 28, 2009 10:30 AM
Why are they threatening the "Lobby for Underground cabling" when they are against overhead cabling?
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