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DIARY:   Ruminations, Occasional thoughts & happenings - as they arise

Letter to BT Chairman - 12 December 2003

Yesterday I posted a letter to Sir Christopher Bland, Chairman of BT Group plc, about Broadband Internet connection in Northern Ireland.  The content should be self-explanatory so I will say no more.

Text Box: Michael O’Shea,  36 High Street, Ardglass, Co. Down, N. Ireland BT30  7TU        Tel/fax  028 44 841436      
Email: mike@o2c.org    www.o2c.org    www.ardglass.net
Wednesday, 10 December 2003

Sir Christopher Bland,
Chairman,
BT Group plc,
BT Centre,
81 Newgate Street,
London  EC1A  7AJ


Dear Sir Christopher Bland,

What would you think of the business acumen of the Directors of a large Company (selling high quality furniture for example) who put a notice in each of its chain of shops saying:

“It will not be possible for customers to buy our WONDER SUITES until 400 or so potential customers have registered an intent to purchase this product”?

I would be amazed if you did not smile at the thought of such a ludicrous marketing ploy, unless, of course you appreciated that the company felt no compulsion to engage in positive marketing, as it was already making huge annual profit without exerting itself in normal business activity – perhaps even more than last years’ BT’s three billion pounds (£3,157,000,000) profit before tax.

Does this shrewd marketing policy strike a chord? Is it not traditional BT strategy, like the reluctance to introduce  unmetered dialling in 2000?  If not, why does your company create such a lunatic marketing hurdle for its customers in Northern Ireland, never mind the rest of the UK?

I am one of thousands of existing BT NI customers who gaze with disbelief at the figure of ‘400 expressions of interest’ set as a ‘trigger’ before Broadband internet connection will be made available in my locality.

It is staggering that your Company should arbitrarily set such an artificial hurdle within my community, a monstrous imposition that BT – a company in a monopoly position – should impede in this way the rational development of local industry, business, education and the growth of worldwide human communication.

BT ought to make Broadband immediately available throughout Northern Ireland, ploughing back to the community some of the profits that we have helped your company to generate.

The cost of actual work required at each exchange is quite low – about £20 to £30 thousand per Exchange I speculate - relative to the BT turnover of almost nineteen billion GB pounds (£18,727,000,000) during the year ended April 2003.  No use BT crying about an inability to meet the required capital expenditure costs. They are tax deductible and amount to only a tiny fraction of the BT profit of three billion pounds over this single 12-month period.

The provision of a Province-wide broadband service is vital to our community, not something that should be manipulated in the interests of BT shareholders.

I repeat my question: ‘what type of business is it that will only stock an item if 400 or so potential customers say they might buy it?’ It makes business sense to stock the item required.  The demand for Broadband will only increase if it is actually available! 

I am not here suggesting risk-taking entrepreneurial action – merely rational, efficient business management – due from a company that claims to be “committed to making a difference in society.” with “a major programme of investment designed to improve the quality of life and well-being of the communities in which [it] operates,” and also that “the central theme of [its] activities is improved communications.”

You also state in your PR material – and I hope that it is not merely ‘blurb’, that:

“We have learnt that one of the best ways for us to fulfil our commitment to human dignity is to enhance the positive impact our products and services can have on human rights.

Freedom of expression is a fundamental human right, and a critical means of promoting human rights in general. Greater access to communications technology can be a source of openness in otherwise closed societies; it provides an extremely fast, efficient and mainly safe means of managing and communicating information, and can be invaluable to organisations dedicated to human rights.”

The people of Northern Ireland need such access to high-level communication, completely apart from business logic.  It goes against all business sense to hold a captive customer base to ransom by setting an artificial and totally unnecessary hurdle - any such requirement is ridiculous - but in the light of our human need to communicate with each other within Northern Ireland and with the international community the requirement is destructively inhibiting.

You state that you “intend to be the best provider of communications services and solutions: for everybody in the UK “

In this part of the UK we wait to be convinced.

BT must make Broadband immediately available throughout Northern Ireland. 

Yours sincerely,

Michael O’Shea 


I wait with interest to receive a reply.

The reply!

Letter acknowledging the above 15 December 2003

15 December 2003 
Attention Margaret McKiernan Assistant to BT Chairman & Chief Executive

Dear Ms McKiernan,

re: Broadband Availability

Thank you for your 12 December acknowledgement of my letter of December 10th.  As an email to the office of the BT Chairman & Chief Executive could scarcely be more appropriate I trust you will forgive the absence of a hard copy reply.

I really do hope that the substance of my letter to Sir Charles will be investigated, for my 'difficulty' is not exclusively mine. Thousands of people who live and work in isolated areas throughout the UK are affected.

In Ardglass, County Down, despite the fact that some £4 million worth of fish is annually landed, processed and exported, plus the presence of a few small business and farming concerns, the 'trigger' of 400 confirmed interests in broadband via the Ardglass Exchange is most unlikely to be met - ever - even though the service is essential to many.

BT, to be consistent with it's avowed social concerns, should immediately activate such small Exchanges throughout the UK but especially In Northern Ireland, where our social, political and economic needs are great.

It would, I believe, be a dereliction of duty and social responsibility by BT to fail to make broadband immediately available..

Thank you for your attention.

Yours truly,

Michael O'Shea

PS: AS a matter of courtesy I should draw your attention to the fact  that I have, and am forwarding copies of this correspondence to Oftel & Ofcom, to Government Ministers directly concerned with telecommunications & industry, to Leaders of NI Political Parties, and to the News Media. (see CC below)

CC: 
"Minister Education & Skills" <dfes.ministers@dfes.gsi.gov.uk >,
"Minister Culture" <tessa.jowell@culture.gsi.gov.uk >,
"Government eService" <edemocracy@e-envoy.gsi.gov.uk >,
"Secretary of State Trade & Industry" <mpst.hewitt@dti.gsi.gov.uk >,
"Oftel" <broadcasting@oftel.gov.uk >,
"OFCOM" <contact@ofcom.org.uk>
"SINN FEIN" <info@sinnfein.org >,
"UK UNIONIST" <contactus@ukup.org >,
"SDLP" <sdlp@indigo.ie >,
"ALLIANCE" <david.ford@allianceparty.org >,
"DUP" <ianpaisley@dup2win.com >,
"NI UNIONIST" <info@niup.org>,
"BELFAST TELEGRAPH" <newseditor@belfasttelegraph.co.uk >,
"Daily Mail IT" <it@anm.co.uk >,
"Down Democrat" <terry.mclaughlin@downdemocrat.com >,
<E-editions@mailonsunday.co.uk >,
"Irish Independent" <editorial@unison.ie >,
"IRISH NEWS" <n.doran@irishnews.com >,
"IRISH TIMES" <newsdesk@irish-times.ie >,
<jcnews@jc.gn.apc.org >,
"Anne Mallon" <anne.mallon@bbc.co.uk >,
"Linda McAuley" <linda.mcauley@bbc.co.uk >,
"Mirror" <mirrornews@mgn.co.uk >,
"News Independent" <newseditor@independent.co.uk >,
"News of The World" <ricky.sutton@news-of-the-world.co.uk >,
"news@britishnews" <news@britishnews.co.uk >,
"NEWSLETTER" <editor@newsletter.co.uk >,
"NI PRESS OFFICE" <press.nio@nics.gov.uk >,
"Martin O'Brien" <martin.obrien@bbc.co.uk> ,
"Press Association" <www@padd.press.net >,
"DOWN RECORDER" <editor@thedownrecorder.com >,
"Sunday Mail" <editors@dailyrecord.co.uk >,
"Sunday Telegraph" <stnews@telegraph.co.uk >,
"Sunday World" <news@nthsundayworld.com >,
"TalkBack" <talk.back@bbc.co.uk >,
"The Sun" <news@the-sun.co.uk >,
"The Times" <home.news@thetimes.co.uk >,

Email Letter from Mr Craig Cowie, BT Broadband Contact Centre

To: "Michael OShea"
Sent: Monday, December 22, 2003 3:11 PM 
Subject: Re: I have a query about BT Broadband - directed to Sir Christopher Bland 

Dear Mr O'Shea
BT Wholesale has decided to rollout broadband on a financially responsible basis. This means they will only build ADSL in those places where they believe there is sufficient demand to justify the investments. With this in mind, they have thought carefully about the number of pre-registrations needed for each exchange. Considerations like the expected rise in customers after the upgrading of the exchange are part of the calculations before deciding on a trigger level. When a target is set of, for example, 400, there are actually 800 customers needed to return the investments. BT does not to want to make exceptions for certain areas and lower their trigger levels without a sound financial reason. Not only would this create a financial risk, but they also feel it would be unfair towards people on other exchanges. Due to a review of costs in January 2003 some trigger levels have been lowered. 

Yours sincerely, 

Craig Cowie  BT Broadband Contact Centre 

For all of the latest information about BT Broadband please visit www.bt.com/btbroadband British Telecommunications plc Registered office: 81 Newgate Street London EC1A 7AJ Registered in England no. 1800000. 

My emailed reply to Mr Cowie:

Dear Craig Cowie, 
Thank you for your input. 
    You say  "BT Wholesale has decided to rollout broadband on a financially responsible basis." You mean by this, presumably, financially responsible to BT shareholders. BT has a much greater, broader, responsibility to the British and Northern Irish population. I need not repeat the grand declarations of community responsibility that this monolith corporation outlines in its promotion publicity. 
    As a company that has been created by Government selling of national Post Office resources there is an ambient, permanent duty to take into consideration factors that go beyond the norms of commercial profit. The money that I personally have had to pay over the past fifty years is an investment in a concern that I and millions of my fellow citizens have made - including yourself no doubt. 
    You state that "BT does not to want to make exceptions for certain areas and lower their trigger levels without a sound financial reason". Finance is important. There is no doubt about this. I would expect BT to behave responsibly. I am not a shareholder, but my brother is, and I know that he would prefer to receive a slightly less return on his investment if he, and others in our locality, could have an immediate practical return in terms of greatly improved internet access - affecting all levels of business and community activity. 
    Those who have laboured as salesmen on behalf of BT, gathering up customers for your company, might be slightly miffed to discover that they have been so employed, without remuneration, but that is the penalty for being suborned by a company whose ONLY consideration appears to be that measured on a financial scale, regardless of high-flown claims that social and moral responsibility are also an ingredient. (I refer you to your website.) 
    The "financial risk" involved in upgrading remaining local Exchanges is minimal. The notion is ridiculous, given BT profits. I have absolutely no time, no patience, with BT protestations, as expounded by yourself, and I have no doubt that Government, the people and Ofcom will express this impatience in the very near future, in a most effective manner. 
    You, Mr Cowie, are, no doubt, a dedicated company servant, but I would ask you to stand back and look honestly at the situation. A few years ago BT was proposing to offer Broadband at about £300 per connection. Hounded by outside agencies this cost has been massively reduced, to less than £18 per month by some ISPs. Some difference! Provided Exchanges are updated of course. 
    Be alert, keep watching the situation - via my website at www.o2c.org\diary1.htm  for example. There is much more afoot than appears at the moment. 
Yours with best wishes, 

TOP  
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FROM: btbroadband@bt.com <btbroadband@bt.com>12 January 2004 12:23
TO: Michael O'Shea <mike@o2c.org

Dear Mr O'Shea

Thank you for your comments, I understand this must be very frustrating time for you and I am sorry BT Broadband can do nothing further to aid you. I would again like to thank you for your comments as they have been very useful.
Yours sincerely,
Louise Dawson
BT Broadband Contact Centre
Ref;167005

From: "Michael O'Shea" <mike@o2c.org>
To: <btbroadband@bt.com>
Cc: "Ardglass Development Association" <ada@ardglass.net
<ada.ardglass@btinternet.com
"ALLIANCE" <david.ford@allianceparty.org
"Margaret McKieran, Assistant to BT Chairman & Chief Executive McKiernan" <cceo@bt.com>,
"OFCOM" <contact@ofcom.org.uk
"Eddie McGrady MP MLA" <e.mcgrady@sdlp.ie
"Gerry & Parricia Murtagh" <gerald_p_murtagh@hotmail.com
"Gerry O'Shea" <gerry.oshea@btinternet.com>

Yes, Louise Dawson,
There is one more thing you can do for me.
I would be most obliged if you will check the following data:
1/ Number of BT landline connections on the Downpatrick (Co. Down) Exchange.
2/ Number of BT landline connections on the Ardglass (Co. Down) Exchange.
THEN: correlate these numbers with a 'trigger' level of 300 for Downpatrick
and a 'trigger' level of 400 for Ardglass.
All in the community will be interested in the calculations involved, in the
light of the BT claim that 'trigger' levels and financially responsible
investments are carefully assessed in relation to each Exchange.
Yours faithfully,
Michael O'Shea

TOP  


Letter from Marnie O'Neill, BT Northern Ireland - 24 December 2003

TOP      Reply to Marnie O'Neill, BT Northern Ireland  

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(Letter above copied to Ofcom & Others - as follows)
From: "Michael O'Shea" To: "OFCOM"

 Cc: "Margaret McKieran, Assistant to BT Chairman & Chief Executive BT" , , "Ardglass Development Association" , "BELFAST TELEGRAPH" , "Down Democrat" , "Press Association" , "DOWN RECORDER" , "Minister Culture" , "Minister Education & Skills" , "Eddie McGrady MP MLA" , "Secretary of State Trade & Industry" , "ALLIANCE" , "DUP" 

Dear Ofcom people,
I call your attention to the ongoing correspondence between myself and British Telecom. A copy of my latest letter, to BT Northern Ireland, is attached. Other correspondence can be viewed on my website www.o2c.org/bt&broadband.htm.
I have genuine concerns about the behaviour and procedures adopted by BT and I would be most grateful if you will support my request for information as outlined in the last paragraphs of this my most recent letter (copied for information to other interested bodies and individuals).

Thank you for your help,
Michael O'Shea, 36 High Street, Ardglass, Co. Down, N. Ireland BT30 7TU --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Letter from Marnie O'Neill BT 23January2004

Reply to M. O'Neill BT 13 February 2004

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Letter from Marnie O'Neill BT 5 March 2004

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Letter to Marnie O'Neill BT 9 March 2004

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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email: mike@o2c.org  personal web: www.o2c.org  village:  www.ardglass.net