CLARE TD, Joe Cooney (FG) has criticised โunacceptable delays and poor customer engagementโ from eir, Vodafone and other National Broadband Ireland (NBI) providers in restoring fibre broadband services in the county since Storm รowyn.
Customers in Clare have remained without fixed broadband since January 24th which according to Deputy Cooney โis causing significant disruption for small businesses and people who worked remotelyโ.
Areas of Clare still impacted at the time of going to print on Wednesday include Broadford, Scariff, Bodyke, Lahinch, Miltown Malbay, New Quay and Kilmaley.
Deputy Cooney added that the lengthy disruption to services raises the requirement for significant investment in Irelandโs rural broadband infrastructure to โfuture-proofโ it against future storms.
Rural parts of East, West and North Clare have โa complete internet blackoutโ, he stated โwith no indication of when services will be restored,โ he said. โCommunication between NBI service providers like eir and Vodafone and customers has not been forthcoming unlike with ESB Networks, which provides estimated times and dates for the restoration of power supplies in relevant locations. The delay in restoring services is further compounded by NBI seemingly being caught off-guard without having adequate plans and contractors in place to respond to the network outagesโ.
OโCallaghans Mills native Cooney continued, โThe National Broadband Plan has been a huge success and has resulted in rural communities across Ireland being able to avail of high-speed broadband. However, the frailties in our national broadband infrastructure have been badly exposed in the same way as our electricity infrastructure has been during the recent stormโ.
โFibre has been deployed on more than one million poles, many of which have been in place for decades and which are susceptible to strong winds,โ he explained. โThe roll-out of fibre broadband across Ireland was a lost opportunity to future-proof the infrastructure, especially when you consider the โฌ2.7 billion planned investment in its roll-out. I will be relaying the urgent requirement to come up with solutions to this problem, including the need to consider to placing fibre underground, where possible, with the Department of the Environment, Climate and Communicationsโ.
โIn the meantime, I am asking NBI to engage with the more than 50 broadband providers on its network to step up efforts to restore services and to engage with customers who have been provided with little or no information over the past twelve days,โ Cooney concluded.
The Clare Echo has contacted Vodafone for comment on when their Clare customers can expect to have supply restored.