
If it's landline copper phone, it's kind of hard for a provider to see the lack of customers off hook. The electrical circuit being open is expected until the customer picks up the load/off hooks the phone. On Wed, Dec 11, 2024 at 11:54 PM John Neiberger <jneiberger@gmail.com> wrote:
Yep. I finally found some contacts at Lumen who ran it up the chain. I also did report it to the Colorado PUC. I'm still confused about how so many homes and businesses could be without service and Centurylink wouldn't know about it. It's a small town, and I'm starting to think everyone thought that the phone company must know about it because there so many affected, so no one bothered to call them. I don't know. None of it makes any sense. But at least we have someone scheduled to drive over there tomorrow and check it out.
John
On Wed, Dec 11, 2024 at 9:08 PM Evan Moyer <evmoy15@gmail.com> wrote:
Have you tried filing a complaint with your state's public utility
commission? POTS service is usually regulated by them.
Just a thought
On Wed, Dec 11, 2024, 7:52 PM John Neiberger <jneiberger@gmail.com>
wrote:
I apologize for using NANOG for this, but I need to get some traction on a telephone outage affecting a large number of homes in a small town that Centurylink seems to be unaware of. The affected customers have had no phone service for days and none of them know what's going on. Centurylink customer service says there are no outages in the area and just want to dispatch a tech to an individual home rather than escalate this as the emergency that it is. This is a rural area with poor cell service, so many of these customers have no alternative. I'm particularly concerned that many of the affected customers would be unable to reach emergency services, and haven't been able to for 3-4 days already.
If someone has a contact at Centurylink that can escalate this, please contact me off-list.
Many thanks! John Neiberger