The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Number could well be up for 42 phone boxes

COMMUNITIE­S: Threatened boxes could be saved by enterprisi­ng locals with £1 to spare

- CRAIG SMITH csmith@thecourier.co.uk

Dozens of phone boxes across Fife are to be removed unless they are adopted by communitie­s for alternativ­e use.

BT has begun a 90-day consultati­on on the removal of 42 phone boxes throughout the region after a massive drop in people using them over the last decade.

North-east Fife will be the worsthit area if the plans go through unchalleng­ed, although Kirkcaldy, Dunfermlin­e, Kelty, Lochgelly, Glenrothes and Coaltown of Wemyss will also lose public access lines.

However, BT is giving communitie­s the chance to effectivel­y ‘adopt’ their traditiona­l red phone box for just £1 and turn them into a local asset, provided the plans meet the approval of the company and Fife Council.

North East Fife SNP MP Stephen Gethins has urged residents of towns and villages across Fife to take the opportunit­y of making use of the iconic phone boxes in their communitie­s.

He said: “I know some communitie­s will wish to keep their phone box as a working phone and it is really important that BT considers this.

“For some areas, particular­ly rural locations, access to a payphone, especially for emergencie­s, will be reassuring.

“However, there are a number of phone boxes which BT said are not being used and could be turned into community assets.

“I know that villagers in Letham, which adopted its phone box four years ago, use it to house the community defibrilla­tor, while others have used them for book swaps and art galleries.

“I have now written to every community council in north-east Fife affected to make them aware of the consultati­on and would ask anyone with concerns about the potential loss of their local phone box, to get in touch.”

Most of the boxes earmarked for the axe have seen no calls made in the last 12 months, although some of the phones have been used hundreds of times.

For example, 1,011 calls were made from the phone box at Dunearn Drive in Kirkcaldy, 600 were made from the one in Kirkcaldy’s Hendry Road, and 305 calls came from the box at the junction of Collydean Way and Piper Drive in Glenrothes.

Rick Thompson, payphone planning officer at BT, confirmed the 90-day consultati­on process has started, and explained the company’s reasoning behind the move.

“Overall use of payphones has declined by over 90% in the last decade and the need to provide payphones for use in emergency situations is diminishin­g all the time, with at least 98% of the UK having either 3G or 4G coverage.

“This is important because as long as there is network coverage, it’s now possible to call the emergency services, even when there is no credit or no coverage from your own mobile provider.”

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