Vulnerable person cut off from landline and broadband for weeks

TalkTalk service was cut off when the road was dug up and Openreach has not fixed it

I am writing on behalf of an 84-year-old friend who lives alone. Just before Christmas, on 21 December, his landline and broadband both stopped working, and, ever since, we have been trying to get him reconnected. It seems that the road was dug up and the workmen managed to mix up the phone lines. All his landline calls are going to another house’s voicemail.

We called his supplier, TalkTalk, and someone was sent out on New Year’s Eve. We were told that the road will have to be dug up again, but nothing has happened.

There is no one else around to help and I cannot create a support bubble with him as I have an elderly mother. He has had no landline or internet for all of this time. I have also contacted the local paper and the local MP as I am running out of ideas.
CC,
Beaconsfield

Guardian Money has had several pleas like this over the past few months and we have helped several older readers – and at least one GP – to get reconnected by speaking to Openreach, the BT division that manages the telecoms infrastructure on all of the phone companies’ behalf.

Openreach engineers have been working in difficult conditions throughout the pandemic and their contribution needs to be recognised. Within a few hours of us calling, it swiftly got on the case and restored your friend’s service. You are both very relieved.

Meanwhile, with your friend’s permission, it’s worth you speaking to TalkTalk to explain his situation, as telecoms firms are often unaware that a customer may be vulnerable. You should also apply (on his behalf) for £8-a-day compensation for his lost service. It kicks in two days after the customer reports any loss of service if the problem remains unfixed.

We welcome letters but cannot answer individually. Email us at consumer.champions@theguardian.com. Please include a daytime phone number. Submission and publication of all letters is subject to our terms and conditions

Contributor

Miles Brignall

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Broadband services cut off despite the lockdown
One reader couldn’t cancel a transfer after their house move was put on hold, while another was switched without their consent

Miles Brignall

25, May, 2020 @6:00 AM

Article image
Crossed wires: villagers perplexed by phone line mix-up
Rousham was cut off after a lorry crash but repairs led to a new mum ringing someone else’s husband

Anna Tims

08, May, 2021 @6:00 AM

Article image
Every time I contact TalkTalk I get a fake email from scammers
It seems the phone company is still having problems with data breaches

Miles Brignall

14, Jun, 2017 @6:00 AM

Article image
Sky-high charges, but broadband customers trapped in lockdown
Trying to cancel a contract is near impossible with providers incommunicado

Anna Tims

14, Jun, 2020 @7:00 AM

Article image
BT took an age to install our community centre’s superfast broadband
After six months and 15 visits by Openreach technicians BT still left us without a working connection

Miles Brignall

18, Oct, 2021 @6:00 AM

Article image
Talktalk runaround when it came to our broadband
We have received only an intermittent connection but now it’s charging us for leaving

Miles Brignall

07, Sep, 2015 @6:00 AM

Article image
I was driven up the pole by a nine-month wait for BT broadband
A reader has a poor mobile signal in a rural area and had every excuse in the book for the delay

Miles Brignall

21, Feb, 2022 @7:14 AM

Article image
BT broadband user charged £5,000 after exceeding usage limit
My grandmother unwittingly bust her allowance – and the charges add up to thousands

Rebecca Smithers

04, Feb, 2018 @7:00 AM

Article image
Openreach kept us waiting nine months to install broadband
Delays have cost us £2,000 in travel costs because we can’t work from home

Miles Brignall

13, Mar, 2023 @7:00 AM

Article image
TalkTalk customers hit out at ‘outrageous’ broadband price rise
People who thought they were locked into fixed-rate contracts face increase of £24 a year

Miles Brignall

10, Apr, 2021 @6:00 AM