NBN rollout: Broadband battlers get their dues

 

NBN Co listens to Gungahlin, Springfield residents.

Residents of the Canberra suburb of Gungahlin and Queensland suburb of Springfield have been thrown a broadband lifeline by the Government after the areas were named as second-release sites for the national broadband network.

It comes less than a week before Telstra is due to front a community meeting in Gungahlin to discuss the area's broadband problems.

The ACT suburb has been the subject of a long-running and vocal campaign by residents who say they suffer inferior internet speeds, particularly in "peak" times of the day.

NBN Co chief executive Mike Quigley today confirmed the residents' campaign in Gungahlin had been a factor in the decision to roll out fibre there from the second quarter of 2011.

The campaign had fairly recently switched from lobbying Telstra to upgrade remote integrated multiplexer (RIM) technology to lobbying the NBN for priority fibre rollout.

"It's clear Gungahlin has a problem," Quigley said.

"It has a bunch of RIMs serving large parts of Gungahlin [and] they cant provide broadband [speeds] so it makes good sense - if you're going to pick an area in the ACT - to pick one that's got a problem with broadband today."

It is as yet unclear which 3,000 premises in Gungahlin will be served by NBN fibre as part of this phase of construction.

Quigley said today that NBN Co would be consulting with local councils before deciding which streets are to be covered.

Telstra's area general manager based in Canberra, Chris Taylor, will meet with Gungahlin residents on Wednesday July 14 at the Palmerston Community Centre from 7.30pm.

Gungahlin Community Council president Alan Kerlin paid tribute to some of the suburb's lobbyists including Russ Gillon (ACT Broadband) and ACT Senator Kate Lundy.

"Many voices were more likely to get listened to," he said. "I think what it gives us is a light at the end of the tunnel."

Kerlin said some residents had also benefited in the past couple of weeks from a series of DSLAM upgrades by Telstra.

However, many located in older suburbs were still limited to dial-up internet, he said.

Springfield issues

Residents of the Springfield area, meanwhile, have only recently reported being connected to ADSL services - with some waiting two years for internet service providers to offer the service in their area.

Some had reportedly resorted to writing to Senator Stephen Conroy, to their local members and to telcos searching for a solution to the problem.

Several threads on the Whirlpool Broadband Forum are dedicated to the lack of broadband infrastructure at Springfield Lakes.


NBN rollout: Broadband battlers get their dues
"@David, you're quite right that the Gungahlin fiasco had nothing to do with privatisation per se. But it may have had a lot to do with a monopolist mindset where the train of thought seems to ..."
By anonymous
 
 
 
Comments: 4
SciHacker
Jul 9, 2010 12:01 AM
I'm not holding my breath. But, oh well, it might actually happen.

It is kind of amusing (ironic/sad) ... considering the sale of Telstra (or whatever) resulted in the scrapping of the broadband trial in Palmerston in 1996:
http://www.katelundy.com.au/2010/04/23/the-history-and-issues-around-broadband-in-the-gungahlin-area/
" Telstra for scrapping their then Gungahlin broadband project, which way back then in 1995, was a project they were putting forward which would put fibre to the home of 5000 new homes in Gungahlin."

Right now, (as a stopgap) I'm using a tethered iPhone - sometimes it gets up to over 1MBps ... usually a deal less (especially around evening time!) (120kbps right now!). It fills a gap while I finally decide what "broadband" (slightly less narrowband) service to use (gigabit spoils one for everything!).

So some 15 years later ... we might finally get (decent) "broadband" ... I could cry! 8-)
David Havyatt
Jul 9, 2010 10:37 AM
If you have enough grey hair - or possibly not much of it - the name Gunghalin strikes fear into your heart.

When we first started to play with the word "broadband" in the early 1990s, when the now Deputy Chair of the ACMA and others reported on comunications futures, when Telstra and Optus started stringing HFC networks around the country - the new suburb of Gungahlin was promised broadband.

It was going to be Telstra's pin-up case of the wonders of an all fibre network. The account team in Canberra was out to impress the Government with just what Telstra could do - to both win corporate business and aid in the regulatory battle.

One of these days some of the warriors who were more directly connected to that exercise might report on what went wrong - other than just the fac that fifeen years ago the electronics wre roughly twenty times more expensive. I think the presumption that it was privatisation that killed the project is simply wrong. In reality it was more a classic case of a corporation selling a vision before they worked out the detail - a feat Telstra repeated in 2005 with their FTTN proposal.

It isn't just the years of putting up with RIMs that the Gungahlin residents are being compensated for. The name of their suburb would be a perfectly good slang term for referring to any pie-in-the-sky proposal that promises lots and has no hope of delivery.

In that usage Gunghalin is the antonym of NBN.
Mordd
Jul 9, 2010 1:59 PM
"It is as yet unclear which 3,000 premises in Gungahlin will be served by NBN fibre as part of this phase of construction.

Quigley said today that NBN Co would be consulting with local councils before deciding which streets are to be covered."

I think he means consulting with the ACT government, as last time I checked Canberra didn't have any local councils.
anonymous
Jul 9, 2010 5:37 PM

@David, you're quite right that the Gungahlin fiasco had nothing to do with privatisation per se.

But it may have had a lot to do with a monopolist mindset where the train of thought seems to have been "we don't have to upgrade access for Crace exchange, so we won't."
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