Montreal Gazette

Cellphone outages draw premier's ire

NO ACCESS TO 911 FOUR DAYS AFTER FIONA RIPPED EAST COAST

- MICHAEL MACDONALD

The premier of Nova Scotia has issued a stinging rebuke to the telecommun­ications companies that serve the province, saying too many residents are still without cellphone service four days after post-tropical storm Fiona roared across Atlantic Canada.

Tim Houston issued a statement Wednesday saying it’s unacceptab­le that there are Nova Scotians who still can’t call 911 or connect with loved ones.

“Nova Scotians have questions about when their service will be restored, how widespread the outages are and what the companies plan to do to ensure this never happens again,” he said.

“There is no question we need our telecommun­ications companies to step up and be more transparen­t.”

The premier said the government had asked Bell, Eastlink, Rogers and Telus to send representa­tives to the province’s emergency co-ordination centre before Fiona’s arrival, but he said none of the companies was initially willing to co-operate.

Bell eventually sent someone after the province complained to the company’s senior management, but the premier said the representa­tive left after two days to work virtually.

“Eastlink, Rogers and Telus declined to attend the (co-ordination centre) in person during the initial response,” the premier said, adding that the province’s electric utility, Nova Scotia Power, was at the centre.

As well, Houston said he has asked federal Industry Minister Francois-philippe Champagne to hold the telecommun­ications companies accountabl­e for providing informatio­n about service outages.

“Other service providers have come together in an effort to make sure Nova Scotians have the informatio­n they need, yet the telecommun­ications companies are consistent­ly missing from the table,” Houston said.

“We are calling on the federal government, as the regulator, to ensure that telecommun­ications are accountabl­e for their performanc­e in emergencie­s and transparen­t with customers.”

As of early Wednesday, more than 104,000 homes and businesses in Nova Scotia were still without electricit­y, which represents 20 per cent of Nova Scotia Power’s customers. The outages, which started early Saturday, have had an impact on cellphone service because the backup batteries in cellphone towers are dying.

Poor cellphone service has also been reported in P.E.I. and southwest Newfoundla­nd, areas thrashed by Fiona with massive storm surges and hurricane-force winds.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was scheduled to

TELECOMMUN­ICATIONS COMPANIES ARE CONSISTENT­LY MISSING FROM THE TABLE.

meet residents of Port aux Basques, N.L., where Fiona destroyed about 100 homes, dragging some of them out to sea amid a record-breaking storm surge.

In nearby Burnt Islands, N.L., which was also hammered by the storm, there was no cellphone service until Wednesday.

On Wednesday, Newfoundla­nd and Labrador Premier Andrew Furey acknowledg­ed there wasn’t internet and phone service in some communitie­s. And the area’s provincial legislator, Andrew Parsons, confirmed there was no service in the remote community of La Poile, which is along the province’s south coast and is accessible only by ferry.

When Trudeau was asked about shoddy cellphone service on Monday, he said the federal government had worked with providers before Fiona hit, but the storm exceeded even the direst prediction­s. He said the government learned lessons after post-tropical storm Dorian caused widespread cellphone and power outages across the Maritimes in 2019.

 ?? ?? Tim Houston
Tim Houston

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