The report found a key cause of the outage was a problem with Optus’s 3G network.
During the outage, Optus’s 4G and 5G towers shut down, meaning emergency calls were diverted to other network’s towers — known as camping on.
But the network’s 3G base towers did not shut down, so those calls got lost along the way.
“Some devices … attempted to make emergency calls via those [3G] towers (rather than look to camp on to another network), even though no mobile service was being supplied by the Optus network,” the report said.
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The recommendations include:
- Obligate telcos to shut down their towers during outages, allowing triple-0 calls to be carried by other networks
- Establish a “Triple Zero custodian” whose sole responsible is to make sure the system is working
- Force telcos to share real-time information about outages with emergency services organisations and authorities
- Force telcos to file a timely post-mortem on major outages to the regulator and the government — including what caused it and steps being taken to resolve it, with a clear and detailed timeline
- Review the government’s contract with Telstra to run the triple-0 system, with any changes to be made within a year
- Introduce an industry-wide approach to responding to consumers affected by large-scale outages
- Establish an agreement between telcos requiring them to help each to manage and resolve outages
- Review all legislation and regulation relating to triple-0
Meanwhile, they are pushing Fixed Mobile on 4G or LTE in place of real fixed Fibre Internet; the incumbents can duopolise the mobile market, but the NBN has levelled the market on fixed Internet, except where the NBN has been sabotaged by the incumbents.