UHWI, UWI and Spanish Town Courthouse among the latest entities impacted by telecoms theft
Kingston, Jamaica – The technical team at Flow Jamaica says they are feverishly working to restore services to hundreds of residential and business customers, following extensive damage to its copper and fibre cables by vandals earlier this week.
In a release on Thursday, the telecommunications provider revealed that the malicious cuts have left the University Hospital of the West Indies, UWI Mona and Spanish Town in St Catherine without telephony services.
Approximately 750 copper-based lines on the UWI campus, which includes the hospital, have been impacted while the Spanish Town Courthouse in St Catherine is also among entities left without their services.
Michael Brown, director of technical operations at Flow said the company’s technical and engineering teams are working on deploying alternative technology to facilitate the restoration of services to the affected customers.
“We are aware of the vital need for the impacted services and so every effort is being made at this time with our technical and engineering staff working around the clock, to provide alternative solutions, in an effort to restore services in the shortest possible time,” Brown said.
The extensive damage follows the company’s largest customer-impacting incident of theft and vandalism involving hundreds of feet of copper cables in December 2022, when thieves left thousands of customers in St Andrew without their internet, cable and telephone services during the holiday period.
“Despite the company’s efforts to install security measures at our various locations, the incidents of theft and vandalism continue unabated. The incidents this week have potentially life-threatening consequences and so, even as we bear the significant financial impact of these acts, we are committed to our customers and are doing everything in our power to expeditiously restore services,” Brown stated.
The communication and entertainment company divulged that even as it treats with the fallout from the theft and vandalism of its fibre and copper cables, it continues to invest millions of dollars to restore services to thousands of affected residential and business customers. This includes both increased replacement and restoration costs. Flow has also invested significantly in an extensive and comprehensive asset protection programme.
At a press conference late last year, Flow’s VP and General Manager, Stephen Price called for the Government to revisit the ban on copper exports and to review the current legislation to allow for higher fines and stiffer penalties for perpetrators.
Price’s call was supported by several stakeholders including the Jamaica Constabulary Force (JCF), the Jamaica Chamber of Commerce (JCC), the Private Sector Organization of Jamaica (PSOJ) and the Consumer Affairs Commission Unit (CACU).