999 fault: BT took three hours to report emergency line fault to authorities, says minister

Jun 27, 2023 at 1:01 AM
999 fault: BT took three hours to report emergency line fault to authorities, says minister

It took virtually three hours for a fault with 999 to be reported to the federal government by BT, in response to a minister.

Issues with the emergency line have been reported on Sunday and lasted for a number of hours, with some callers unable to get by way of to handlers.

The authorities was requested about what occurred within the House of Lords on Monday.

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Sunday: 999 technical fault ‘regarding’

Technology minister Viscount Camrose instructed colleagues the error was first observed by BT at 6.30am on Sunday morning, however the authorities was not knowledgeable till 9.20am.

The challenge has now been absolutely resolved, and each Westminster and regulator Ofcom have launched inquiries.

BT has apologised “sincerely” for the difficulty, which was lastly resolved on Sunday night.

The disruption went on regardless of the telecoms big turning to a back-up system.

Lord Hogan-Howe, who headed the Metropolitan Police between 2011 and 2017, referred to as for the removing of BT from the 999 course of.

He stated the one purpose the corporate was wanted was to direct callers to the service they required.

“Why don’t [fire, ambulance and police] answer them together?” he requested.

“Why don’t we remove the cost that BT imposes on the whole system that appears has not worked very well on this particular occasion?”

Viscount Camrose. Pic: House of Lords
Image:
Viscount Camrose stated inquiries would ‘enable us to study classes’. Pic: House of Lords

The former Labour MP Ruth Smeeth, who’s now Baroness Anderson of Stoke-on-Trent, stated: “This is an incredibly disconcerting event. We all rely on the 999 emergency number as our ultimate safety net at the height of distress and vulnerability.

“Any failure within the system will undermine religion in our emergency provision. We are seemingly very lucky that there was no main incident.”

Highlighting the separate inquiries into the incident, Lord Camrose said: “The mixture of all of these will enable us to study classes to enhance future resilience of the system.”

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He added: “I understand that [BT] informed the government as quickly as it was practically possible for them to do so.

“One of the areas they’ll look into as a part of the inquiry is whether or not that ought to have been, may have been, quicker.”