Chattanooga Times Free Press

Local businesses affected by AT&T outage,

- BY DAVE FLESSNER

On what is traditiona­lly one of the busiest shopping days of the year, some of Chattanoog­a’s biggest retailers were forced to accept only cash on Saturday due to the lingering telephone service problems for AT&T caused by the Christmas morning explosion in downtown Nashville.

Walmart, which operates 30 superstore­s and Neighborho­od Markets in the Chattanoog­a region, was unable to process credit and debit cards due to the AT&T outages. Similarly, local Hobby Lobby stores were unable to process debit cards or gift cards on Saturday, although they were accepting credit cards.

Dillards posted a sign saying, “Our apologies. Due to the explosion in Nashville, our servers are down and we are unable to open at this time.”

The AT&T service interrupti­on, which may continue for at least another day or two, did not shut down card processing at most Chattanoog­a retailers where consumers flocked stores Saturday. But Walmart stores operated Saturday on a cash-only payment system and alerted all shoppers of the need

to pay with cash only when they entered local stores.

“Due to the AT&T outage, some of our stores are experienci­ng temporary internet outages,” Walmart spokespers­on Camille Dunn said Saturday. “This may impact our ability to process credit card transactio­ns and process returns. We are actively working with local personnel to get our stores back online and apologize for any inconvenie­nce this may cause.”

The day a fte r Christmas is typically among the top five shopping days of the year as consumers return unwanted or wrong-sized gifts or spend gift money and gift cards they received for Christmas.

AT&T said it is continuing to work around the clock to restore outages caused when a recreation­al vehicle exploded early Friday outside of AT&T’s transmissi­on building in downtown Nashville, disrupting cellular and other connection­s from Nashville to Chattanoog­a.

Nashville Fire Chief William Swann said in a news briefing Saturday he hopes to be able to restore power to the AT&T building and return AT&T’s cellular service across the region “hopefully within the next day if we are fortunate.”

“It may take one or two more days to get everything back online,” Swann said. “It is a big operation with the building itself. We’re trying to at least get the generators back in order that the mobile phones will be back in operation.”

The explosion in Nashville has knocked out AT&T cellular service to thousands of phone users in Chattanoog­a. Chattanoog­a police and Hamilton County Emergency Management Agency spokespers­ons on Saturday said they were not aware of any major problems caused by the outages. Each of Chattanoog­a’s major hospitals — Erlanger, CHI Memorial and HCA Parkridge — also indicated through spokespers­ons that there were no major problems or interrupti­ons during what is normally a slower weekend day for hospitals.

Jim Kimberly, director of corporate communicat­ions for Dallasbase­d AT&T, said Saturday the lack of phone service to AT&T customers in Chattanoog­a is a result of the Nashville explosion. Kimberly declined to provide other details about how many phone users or merchants had been hit by the outage across Tennessee.

On its website, AT&T said Saturday “our teams continue to work around the clock on recovery efforts.” The phone giant has two portable cell sites operating in downtown Nashville “with numerous additional portable sites being deployed in the region.”

“Challenges remain, including a fire which reignited overnight and led to the evacuation of the building,” AT&T said in a Saturday update on its recovery efforts. “Currently, our teams are on site working with safety and structural engineers. They have drilled access holes into the building and are attempting to reconnect power to critical equipment. Technical teams are also working as quickly as possible on rerouting additional services at other facilities in the region to restore service.”

As the FBI investigat­es the cause of the blast, city, utility and building owners are working to restore power in the blast area, which damaged at least 40 downtown Nashville structures. Douglas Korneski, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Memphis field office, said investigat­ors are following more than 500 leads called in since the FBI and other authoritie­s began investigat­ing the explosion.

But state and local officials said they have not detected any evidence of other explosives and not extraordin­ary measures are being taken to help secure other AT&T facilities, including those in Chattanoog­a.

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