A whole town has lost Telstra mobile coverage for four days, and counting, forcing frustrated locals to ask for IOUs from businesses after the EFTPOS system collapsed and businesses lost thousands of dollars.
Create a free account to read this article
or signup to continue reading
The telecommunications chaos started in Harden on the south-west slopes on early Friday, and Telstra was still struggling on Tuesday to get services back up and running.
On its website it said ADSL services would not return until September 25, and 4G and 3G systems were out until further notice.
Hilltops Council on Monday said it had no idea what had happened or when services would be restored, and it had been left in the dark.
Harden’s 2000 citizens struggled to communicate with each other with no emails as well. It had some sad consequences as well - a family could not inform relatives of a death of a loved one.
A simple broken part in a transmission tower was believed to be behind the extraordinary situation. It took out the Telstra base station as well.
Tempers boiled over at Harden’s IGA store when customers were told they could only pay in cash.
They were told to go to a Bendigo Bank ATM up the street which was also knocked out by the blackout.
Lost patronage is costing the store thousands of dollars a day. Meanwhile, locals asked businesses on Saturday morning if they could do IOUs without cash.
The local service station only handled cash and manual imprints on cards with a $60 limit.
You couldn’t also get a bet on at local pubs or play Keno.
At Harden Motel, Alison Doberer found herself in the middle of the chaos as a large golfing tour was underway from Sydney. All her guests forced to pay in cash and then unable to contact loved ones while away. People just turned up at the door without ringing through for bookings.
“It’s caused a lot of angst and basically we have been left in the dark on when systems will return,” Ms Doberer said.
“There’s been nothing from Telstra, we haven’t heard a peep."
“There is no end date to when disruptions will stop. It was very difficult for the golfers who came down from North Rocks for a tournament who couldn’t contact wives or partners.”
A medical conference was cancelled in Harden on Monday and a truck driver who passed on his vehicle to a Harden man for their weekly run couldn’t contact him and luckily was able to track him at his home early in the morning so he could take on the goods in the truck.
Journalist Jody Potts from the Harden-Murrumburrah Express was placed in the terrible position of losing a loved one and then not being able to contact relatives about the death.
“A lot of elderly people, and there are many in Harden, have got rid of their landlines for mobiles, so how do they call people?” Mrs Potts said. “It’s unbelievable.”
Telstra said in a statement to The Land: “We are sorry for the disruption to services at Harden caused by a hardware failure, and understand the frustration this can cause.”
“Services are being progressively restored today (Monday) and we thank our customers for their patience.”