Hambleden residents who have fought for years to obtain broadband service from British Telecom are boiling mad over their discovery one comparatively recent arrival to the Oxfordshire village near Henley-on-Thames managed to get service shortly after moving in a year ago. It turns out the “lucky” resident chosen to participate in a very limited trial of so-called “broadband enabling technology” is none other than the chairman of the company providing the service.
Sir Michael Rake managed to obtain the only broadband connection in the rural community as part of what the company called a pilot trial to test out the commercial feasibility of new technology to extend broadband service to more rural locations across Great Britain.
Of course, the “new technology” is reportedly little more than an extender for DSL service that is capable of delivering 1Mbps service on Britain’s aging copper telephone wiring.
The neighbors are furious anyway.
Some have been trying to get broadband service installed for at least five years to no avail. Hambleden is just one of many rural communities bypassed by BT broadband.
Gary Ashworth, head of Abacus Recruitment told the Daily Telegraph: “It stinks of corruption. The chairman of BT is given preferential treatment over long-serving customers. I run a business and we probably have 1,000 BT lines. Clearly there is preferential treatment if you happen to be the chairman. I think it is a disgrace.”
Ashworth inquired if he could participate in the “BT trial.” BT promptly said no, saying he’d have to wait until 2010 at the earliest.
“Sir Michael Rake is the only person allowed to participate in the trial in our area. He moved into the village a year ago and surprise, surprise, he has got broadband,” Ashworth complains.
Although Rake can enjoy the benefits of broadband as a trial participant, BT was willing to extend Ashworth broadband service, if he ponied up £68,000 for the installation.
While the chairman of BT browses the web today at his Hambleden estate, the company admits wiring the entire community would not be profitable.
The Daily Mail interviewed Paul Goodman, the Tory MP for Wycombe, who said “the lack of broadband in the Hambleden Valley is a very serious problem for my constituents.”
“Unless all BT staff members are entitled to participate in the trial on exactly the same terms, I think some of my constituents will find this very strange,” he told the Daily Mail.
The government has promised to underwrite broadband expansion into rural areas by 2012 with revenue earned from a 50p surcharge on phone bills.
For clarification, what the chairman got was the technical equivalent of a T1.
“All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.”
George Orwell, “Animal Farm”