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Telstra’s ADSL2+ roll out welcomed by Liberals, no credit to Labor

7 February 2008 03:47PM
Tags: senator | billson | welcomes | telstra’s | adsl2 | decision | credit | labor

Shadow Minister for Broadband, Communications and the Digital Economy Bruce Billson has welcomed Telstra's belated decision to switch on and make available a higher-speed broadband network.

However, Senator Billson said Labor’s “claims of some specific new action or decision by the Rudd Government that 'unlocks' the higher-speed ADSL2+ network is simply self-serving nonsense”.

“The Rudd Government needs this spin to look like it is doing something while Minister Conroy finds his way through his broadband muddle and Telstra needs an excuse for needlessly denying access to higher-speed broadband to 2.4 million consumers,” he said.

“Beyond the spin value to the Rudd Government and Telstra, and the belated service option for broadband users, this 'announcement' deserves to be filed in the broadband bulldust bin along with much of the preposterous posturing that has dominated broadband debate in recent years.”

According to Senator Billson, the facts reveal that there is nothing about the regulatory regime that has changed and the 'letter of comfort' mirrors repeated assurances provided by the former Minister and ACCC prior to the election.

“Following the ACCC's Fixed Line Review, the ACCC and the Liberal Party agreed that there was no compelling case to include ADSL2+ in the declared service category accompanied by the pricing and regulatory constraints Telstra feared,” he said.

“Given the repeated reassurances from the previous Government and consistent public statements by ACCC Graeme Samuel, Telstra CEO, Sol Trujillo, accurately characterises the claimed impediments to the ADSL2+ roll-out as 'artificial'.”

The fact that there was no compelling case to 'declare' the ADSL2+ service was a settled issue between Telstra, the ACCC and the former Government. Prior to the election, Telstra held out on acting on this settled and repeated reaffirmed view until other pricing and regulatory issues concerning its fibre-to-the-node plans were resolved to Telstra's satisfaction, said Billson.

“Senator Conroy should come clean on what was really 'the deal' that gave rise to Telstra's decision.

Telstra activated its ADSL2+ network in late 2006 but chose to limit the availability of the faster speeds over its copper-wire network to areas where telco competitors offered faster speed services. In areas where no competitors were offering higher-speed services, Telstra simply choose to adopt a position not to activate ADSL2+ capacity for consumers,” he said.

Expanded availability of ADSL2+ is a welcome albeit belated move by Telstra - but claims that it follows a removal of a 'regulatory impasse' engineered by Telstra and the Rudd Government is simply a 'kumbaya' concoction, claims Billson.

   


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Thoughts on this article? Add a comment below.
Comments: 8
bulldust maybe, but finally some action after years of stagnation under successive incompetent Liberal ministers.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by DaveFeb 7, 2008 4:26 PM
here we go again the liberals have been blaming the labor party from every thing from boils to blackheads for the last 11.5 yrs
take defeat in honour.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by selwyn g noffkeFeb 7, 2008 4:50 PM
here we go again the liberals have been blaming the labor party from every thing from boils to blackheads for the last 11.5 yrs
take defeat in honour.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by selwyn g noffkeFeb 7, 2008 4:50 PM
My God, have you looked at Telstra's ADSL2+ plans and pricing, there outrageous.

I don't think that's what the either side of politics has in mind when talking about affordable high speed broadband.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by MarkFeb 7, 2008 5:30 PM
Senator Billson don't start. The abject failure of you Government is well known to the Australian people and for this you should hang your head in shame.

Howard and Coonan will be remembered for disasters also, one being the donation of one thousand million dollars of hard working Australian taxpayer money to a Company 50% owned by the Singapore Government for the duplication of an existing system.

Lie low Senator Billson the Australian people know our dismal record and reject it and you.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by Sydney LawrenceFeb 8, 2008 10:53 AM
Exactly what is the point of the shadow minister?
Afterall, Senator Conroy stated a number of times that all he did was offer a letter of comfort to telstra. He has gone on to say, repeatedly, that his letter was simply one which restated the position of the ACCC, and that any ruling by him would have no recourse in the law.
So WHY does Bruce Billson believe that restating what Senator Conroy has said REPEATEDLY represents some sort of a failure on the part of Labor? If anything the shadow minister's comments are in themselves little more than a pointless anti-Labor spin on a success for the new government.

It seems to me that the shadow minister is simply bitter (and embarrassed) that Telstra has finally agreed to enable the exchanges, (even if their plans are of ridiculous price) and that all it took was a little 'comforting' in the form of a legally meaningless letter, surely something that the Liberals could have done if they had the competence.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by BruceFeb 12, 2008 2:02 AM
Sydney Lawrance is a PAID TELSTRA SHILL from Telstra's propaganda website.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by Tell The Truth TelstraFeb 12, 2008 11:16 PM
Bruce Billson is NOT a senator, he is the member for Dunkley in the lower house of Federal Parliament.
iTnews - comments icon Posted by PeterFeb 13, 2008 8:23 AM
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