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When Suzanne Brackpool asked her telephone company for a high-speed internet connection she imagined that the engineers would solve the problem in a flash. Eleven months later, after a £40,000 operation involving a small army of engineers and three miles of cable, her request was finally granted.
BT engineers undertook 99 separate jobs requiring 50 telegraph poles to furnish Mrs Brackpool’s personal computer in the hamlet of Drymere, near Swaffham, Norfolk, with a broadband conection to the internet.
Mrs Brackpool, 43, who runs an online travel agency, had to endure nearly a year of using an internet connection 100 times slower than she needed while teams of engineers lined the roads between Swaffham and Drymere. Residents put up with road closures while avenues of telegraph poles were erected and men on cherry-picker platforms suspended lines along them.
She assumed that BT had admitted defeat when she heard that the company had logged the 99 jobs.
“It has been horrendous,” she said. “If I knew it would take 11 months then I would have probably found myself a different job. Work has been carried out on so many different dates, and there have been so many different people trying to sort this out, it could have been a Carry On film.”
Online tasks that should have taken her five minutes would take an hour because of the time it took to send and receive data along the old telephone line. She was unable to use broadband because the telephone line from Swaffham, 2¾ miles away, took such a circuitous route that that the signal was too weak. The six-mile cable, whose route weaved around land for “historical or planning reasons”, has now been replaced with a three-mile cable.
“It has been a nightmare connecting through a dial-up modem. I think I have lost a lot of business as a result. I was over the moon when the broadband was connected on Saturday.”
A spokesman for BT said that the cable had taken too long to lay, but said that part of the delay related to obtaining permission to lay a new line. “If the cable has to pass over roads then we have to liaise with the Highways Authority and there are tricky negotiations with the council to make sure that no one is endangered by the work,” he said.
The cable had been laid because it was commercially worthwhile, he said. Although Mrs Brackpool’s home, one of fourteen in her hamlet, would not be the only one to gain broadband access from the new line, the spokesman said he was not sure exactly how many people would benefit.
BT would not disclose the number of engineers involved, but it said that an array of specialist teams had been needed to erect poles and suspend the lines between them. Work began in July and was completed three weeks ago.
Ian Lazenby, the owner of Drymere Lodge Boarding Cattery, who expects to be connected to the line, said: “It is absolutely ridiculous how long it has taken to get this job done. We are only 90 miles from London and just outside the main market town and it takes this long to get broadband.”
Mrs Brackpool said that, in spite of the delay, she was grateful for the chance to improve her business. “We feel quite privileged to have all this work carried out,” she said.
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I am glad that Mrs Brackpool and the other 14 residents of that Hamlet can now get broadband. I live on an estate of about 80 houses in North Colerne Wilts, pinewood way, SN14 8QU, 7 miles from Bath city centre. We cannot get broadband. BT say it is the distance from us to our main exchange in Box, - 7 KM. But locals say, it is the aluminium cable that was laid when copper was in short supply. (It is a lot more difficult to push a signal through aluminium than it is through copper). There is another exchange in the town of Marshfield that is only 4 KM away.
In 2004 labour party conference Tony Blair said by 2008 everybody who wants broadband will have it, and that will be by choice, not by choice dependant on wealth. Can someone please tell Gorden Brown there are lots of people in North Colerne that want broadband and as yet don't have it. Our only way of getting it is by satellite which he on his PM pay may seem cheap, but to me that would be a cost I could not afford
Dave, North Colerne, Wilts
Well done BT. I could not see competitors providing this service. Too many people seem to "have a go" at BT, but I suspect they are the only company that would give this service to a rural area?
Mick Allen, Shefford, Beds
I have to say Suzanne is very lucky indeed. I work for a major ISP and work with BT Openreach on a regular basis. I have only ever come accross one case where Openreach carry out work like this. Most of the time, Openreach will visit your house, say "Yep, it ain't gonna work, bub" and declare the phone line as incapable of supporting broadband.
I have to agree with a lot of the other reviews, that if you are in a rural area, that you should help Openreach out with the cost of re-laying copper. It's not BT's fault that their engineers didn't forsee the possiblity of ADSL when they laid the phone lines over twenty years ago.
We still have it better in the UK than anywhere else in the world. Anywhere else in the world you would be given the choice of Satellite or Dialup.
If you want a modern lifestyle with teleconferencing and online-whiteboards, or whatever floats your boat, should you really expect to be able to do this whilst sharing the same farmland as the agriculturists?
Mr Nicholas Derczynski, Exeter, England
It took Me nearly a year to get our bt connection from the nearest exchange.
Excuses -We have to wait for the cable to be ordered from China and it is a slow boat that brings it over
You had shower of rain followed by- some snow fell on one day
and our Liverpool contractors dont work in inclement weather
Terry Morgan, Milford Haven, wales
I agree that poor Old BT never cease to get a beating. That said my village look far too long to get ADSL because BT operated the scheme where so many people had to register before they would install the equipment (was there ever a more cynical plot?).
This lady could have tried the 3G "mobile broadband" services offered with a fixed cost. However my experience is that unless you are slap bang in the City of London then the coverage is a complete joke (so why did the Telcos pay £20Bn for the licences?).
Simon , Tunbridge Wells, UK
I'm sure BT did all that work because of the possibility of gaining more customers is the area.
Chris , Chatham, Kent
Yes yes, aren't BT terrible?
News articles like this make me angry, because the writer obviously doesn't have any idea what he is talking about.
Does he even begin to understand the logistics involved in laying high-speed telephony and data cables that never existed before? You can't just bang some poles into the ground, and dangle some wire between them.
Dave, Manchester,
First of all the cost - $80,000 (not in UK but UK citizen), as the previous comment mentioned what about satellite? Satelite not only gets you superb results but can be shared by several households. Which leads me to think that it is just one person and her business - the travel agency. How is it that BT did not option this into the cost? How come, if she is running a business BT said she would nave this option and, she is not finding other options.
How come they offer such a thing? I have lived and travelled all over Asia and find that this is not a problem. ADSL (although not as superior as cable broadband) allows you to operate reasonably smoothly and this in many circumstances, is a shared satellite connection with anything up to 20 users, many of which share my $350 'Desktop' server for their meagre business interests.
Ms Brackpool should count her lucky stars and chide herself for being so technically inept in light of "online travel agency", and the pic depicting her as IT savvy
GlennMalcolm, Saigon, Vietnam
Perhaps I have misunderstood her comments. It sounds to me that she was frustrated that it took so long, but was grateful once it was completed. After reading comments from others about not being able to get the service, I can understand their frustrations, as to why she was able to get it. As for satellite perhaps the lady did not know it was available Most people here in the States donât know that the Internet is available vie Satellite. For what ever reason that BT did it, I say, âHat off, and a job well doneâ.
Richard, Marietta, Ga, U.S.A.
Well that's gratitude for you! BT move Heaven and Earth to get this woman connected and what do they get? This!
Huw, Swansea,
She should have used adblock and SeaMonkey or Firefox in the meantime. Eliminating all the junk from the web makes it 20x faster just by itself. Makes it work better on older PCs too! Waiting for ads to load doesn't do the user any good, so why load them at all? Just to enrich some distant ad hosting company? No thanks...
Jason Kennerly, Tempe, Arizona
BT is still running like a nationalised industry. It should be open to full competition.
Johnny Norfolk, Mileham Norfolk,
As Mrs Brackpool's need for broadband was business critical,
I wonder whether she could have made use of a Satellite Connection to the internet for a year. Quick search has turned up various 6 month contracts at about £20 a month. Also, since Swaffham is only around than 3 miles away as the crow flies, it would cost about £500 to buy equipment for a wireless link.
Jamie, London, England
Yet another huge amount of the countryside dug up and destroyed just so someone can get on the internet. Will we ever learn. She should have done as she said and got another job instead of ruining yet more of this country for the sake of personal gain.
OSJ, Rutland
OSJ, Ankara,
She should thank herself lucky. Our large village had to prove to BT that there was a high enough demand to warrant Broadband before they enabled it at the exchange (which is actually in the village)
Took a year before it was enabled.
Phill Barlow, The Wirral, England
How come that in Norfolk BT spent this amount on one person, but in the rest of the country (I only live 8 miles from Perth) we will never have cable and will be stuck with the same BT copper wires that we've always had, as BT won't allow unbundling of local loops?
David Leslie, Perth, Scotland
this work cost £40000 the customer has not paid a penny. gas,electricity and water would have charged the customer for this work but not BT, and she has the front to complain. this lady could now go to a service provider and silly BT get nothing, call this far competition!
Alice louis, suffolk,
We were regretfully subscribed to NTL for many years for telephone and TV, but had to rely on a dial up connection through AOL for our internet needs. On several occasions we requested a cable broadband service only to be told that the facility was 'not yet' available in our area, even though we live on a main thoroughfare through the city.
With the arrival of set-top boxes which provided more channels than NTL for free, and our last conversation with NTL in which we were basically told to 'deal with it'. we wished them a 'fond' farewell and switched to BT who had our broadband sorted within a week.
Fair play to BT for pulling out the stops to help Suzanne Brackpool even if it did take considerable time. NTL would simply had told her to move house
Paul Ritchie, Southampton,
The villagers of Isfield in East Sussex have been trying for many years to obtain Broadband through BT but have been told that, because there is an alternative commercial company willing to provide this service, albeit at a very expensive price, then BT are not interested!
Properties in the area are not selling once potential buyers find that there is no BT Broadband and are not willing to pay 'over the odds' for the alternative service.
Children are having to stay after school to use the school computer for their homework and farms and businesses are unable to expand again without the easy accessibility of Broadband.
Good Luck to Mrs Brackpool...........l just wish we were all as lucky as she is !!
Dr B. Penhaligan, Isfield, East Sussex, U.K