Bill is a signal it’s time for telcos to do better

ONE of the most frequent complaints I hear is about appalling phone and internet coverage.

Fred, a stone fruit grower from Woorinen, has put up with weak, slow, unreliable and sometimes non-existent mobile coverage for years.

As a small business owner, Fred has had to spend enormous sums to attempt to resolve these issues. Sadly, much of this investment has resulted in little improvement.

Living between two major phone towers, he often has to leave his own property to be able to conduct a virtual meeting with overseas clients. At times he’s had to stand on a chair or climb on a roof to be able to get any signal.

He is not alone. If you live in Walpeup, you endure the same inconvenience.

It’s simply not good enough.

The pandemic has exacerbated these issues. Home-schooling students are enduring disrupted learning in their virtual classrooms because their internet drops out. Teachers struggle to conduct online classes because they can’t get reliable reception at home.

While the Coalition Government has invested $15 million to address connectivity in Mallee, many people remain disadvantaged, fundamentally because telco companies have not been held to account for their deficient service.

This week I supported new legislation that seeks to right these wrongs. This reform will hold telecommunications companies accountable for their poor coverage. Executives will personally be liable for poor customer service and failure to meet the needs of customers.

Rural residents often live a long distance from emergency services, and when an emergency occurs we simply cannot afford poor connectivity to prevent access to emergency services.

Under the proposed Bill, telco companies will also be financially liable for preventable deaths caused through their inaction. Under this legislation, negligence will no longer be tolerated.

We still have a long way to go to ensure every Australian has access to reliable connectivity wherever they are, but this government is working together to deliver vital measures to make sure that we get there.

Digital Editions


  • Second Malle branch for One Nation

    Second Malle branch for One Nation

    AS One Nation surges in popularity across the country, the right-wing populist party’s Mallee supporters voted to establish a second branch in the region at…

More News

  • Shore to be a grain day

    Shore to be a grain day

    A SPECIAL culinary experience will be held on the banks of Ouyen Lake next month with the return of Lake and Grain. The long-lunch event, organised by volunteer-run Ouyen Festivals…

  • Taking life one stitch at a time

    Taking life one stitch at a time

    COME rain or shine, members of the Mildura Embroiderers and Textiles Group, a branch of not-for-profit Embroiderers Guild Victoria, always have spare thread, scissors, or a shoulder for each other.…

  • The cost of living hits harder in the regions

    The cost of living hits harder in the regions

    Jade Benham Member for Mildura LATLEY, almost every conversation I have seems to come back to the same theme. At the supermarket checkout. At markets, sport and events on the…

  • Number of Australians living with dementia growing

    Number of Australians living with dementia growing

    IN 2026 there are an estimated 446,500 Australians living with dementia, a figure projected to more than double to over one million people by 2065. In Victoria, there are an…

  • Peeps into the Past – 1 to 7 February: Has fangs

    Peeps into the Past – 1 to 7 February: Has fangs

    PRESENTED by Mildura and District Historical Society and compiled by Judy Hyde for Mildura Rural City Council Libraries. 100 YEARS AGO SCHOOL: Work was resumed at the Merbein Central State…

  • Brighten up your life

    Brighten up your life

    HAVE some DIY fun around the house this weekend with inspiration from these new titles at Mildura Libraries! The Easy Lunch Box The Australian Women’s Weekly ANOTHER year begins and…

  • Good vibrations guaranteed

    Good vibrations guaranteed

    WILL Szyskza thinks he does a good job of channelling Brian, Dennis and Carl Wilson when harmonising for the Australian Beach Boys Show, which is coming to Mildura Arts Centre…

  • New initiative for soil diseases

    New initiative for soil diseases

    THE Grains Research and Development Corporation has recently launched a new initiative aimed at addressing economic strain from soilborne crop diseases. The Soil-Borne Disease Initiative is a five-year program that…

  • Courses open for farm leaders

    Courses open for farm leaders

    RABOBANK is encouraging farmers from Australia and New Zealand to apply for two of their Business Management Programs aimed at providing participants with key industry insights. The Executive Development Program…

  • Wine producers call for intervention

    Wine producers call for intervention

    AUSTRALIA’S winegrape producers’ association has warned that the sector is entering a structural crisis as global demand continues to spiral. In their pre-budget submission for 2026-27, Australian Grape and Wine…