Evening Standard

Instant fines for poor broadband service looming

- Simon English

THERE was hope for a new era of radically improved telecom service today when Ofcom threatened the industry with automatic compensati­on payments after failing customers.

The watchdog says 5.7 million customers each year need an engineer to fix a landline or internet connection — and that on 250,000 occasions the engineer won’t turn up.

It is proposing that Sky, BT and Virgin Media be forced to make a cash payment or bill credit imme-mediately this happens.

At present, customers h ave to go through a lengthy claims process to get a payout. Ofcom reckons that, on average, 2.6 million customers would get £185 million of compensa-sation a year — £71 each.

Lindsey Fussell (pictured), Ofcom’s consumer group director, said: “When a customer’s landline or broadband goes wrong, that is frustratin­g enough without having to fight tooth and nail to get fair compensati­on.”

Ofcom proposes charges of:

£10 for each calendar day the service is not repaired;

£30 each time an engineer fails to turn up for a scheduled appointmen­t, or it is cancelled with less than 24 hours’ notice; and

£6 for each calendar day of delay at the start of a new service, including the missed start date.

The industry earlier proposed its own voluntary code of practice for when it fails to turn up to appointmen­ts. Ofcom said: “At this stage, we do not consider that this proposal sufficient­ly meets our concerns.”

Richard Neudegg, head of regulation at uSwitch.com, said: “This will firmly place the impetus on providers to keep their word. We shouldn’t pretend the level of compensati­on proposed — £30 per missed appointmen­t for example — will be enough to make up for missing aa day’sdays work. But, even at a modest levelevel of compensati­on per user, ththe collective financial burden on providers will increase the pressure to improve service. We’re so reliant on broadband that, for many, the prospect of aany downtime may be practicaca­lly unimaginab­le — especially ffor ththe 25% of adults who now work from home part or full-time.”

Earlier this week, Ofcom said it had fined BT-owned Plusnet £880,000 for continuing to charge customers who had cancelled their contract.

Alex Neill of Which? said: “Broadband has become an essential, so it is only right consumers should get compensati­on when their provider fails to deliver. Ofcom now needs to push ahead swiftly with these proposals and ensure that this and other measures help significan­tly to improve the service which broadband customers receive.”

BT said it is considerin­g its response. @SimonEngSt­and

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