West Devon Councillors Criticise CDS Broadband Project and Airband

The recent meeting of an overview and scrutiny committee in West Devon (England) saw local councillors, as well as some residents, heap criticism on the state aid supported Connecting Devon and Somerset (CDS) programme and contracted UK ISP Airband for being “inefficient and chaotic” in their delivery of faster broadband networks.

Just to recap. The CDS scheme is a local government-led partnership which has spent many years helping to deliver faster broadband infrastructure to areas where the market has failed to invest. The scheme has already helped over 320,000 poorly served premises to access “superfast broadband” speeds (usually defined as 30Mbps+), but it’s also suffered plenty of big bumps and delays along the way (e.g. the scrapping of Gigaclear’s (here) and Truespeed’s (here) contracts, as well as the earlier rejection of BT’s Phase 2 proposal (here)).

The latest criticism, which has been covered by the Bude & Stratton Post, appears to be focused upon CDS’ various contracts with Airband (no other suppliers are named). Airband has already provided a “superfast wireless network” (FWA) to cover more than 11,700 premises in Devon and Somerset through its pre-existing contracts with CDS.

The provider is currently also delivering full fibre (FTTP) broadband to more than 6,000 premises in Central Devon, North Devon, Torridge and West Devon. On top of that, in 2020 they secured a £25.5m (state aid) Phase 2 contract (here and here) to reach over 40,100 homes and businesses in earmarked areas of Somerset West and Taunton, parts of Sedgemoor, East Devon, as well as areas of Mid Devon, South Hams and Teignbridge. This contract was originally due to complete by the end of 2024, although we haven’t seen any progress updates from CDS on this since last year.

According to the new report, councillors complained that “hundreds of homes and businesses” were being affected by slow broadband speeds and delays in work to install new fibre cables. In other areas, residents say they were having to dig their own trenches to help run the new fibre optic cables (not so easy if you’re disabled or a pensioner), had been suffering from “wifi connections dropping out up to 100 times a day” and it was stated that there had been “technology failures” on 30,000 care devices during the CDS rollout.

Cllr Isabel Saxby (Lab, Bere Ferrers) said:

“People in our area cannot wait till 2027 until technology catches up, if we do not speak up for those people, it will be 2029 or 2032 before they are connected.”

Cllr Neil Jory (Con, Milton Ford), lead member for the economy, said:

“It’s a strategic aim of ours to promote faster broadband, many rural businesses are reliant on it. It’s been a very frustrating exercise, we have pushed really hard but our over-riding impression of CDS is that it is inefficient and chaotic and left us in situation where we are not getting the service we should be receiving.”

Cllr Neil Jory also noted that, at one point, the local authority did have a dedicated “broadband officer” in place who could help related communicates and convene with CDS, as well as Airband. But it was stated that the funding for this position was no longer available, and clearly that hasn’t helped matters.

Sadly, the article doesn’t provide enough context on the complaints, which makes it hard to analyse. For example, it’s not completely clear which gripes may relate to Airband’s FTTP deployments and which are more focused upon their fixed wireless network, as the issues often end up being conflated.

Similarly, the remarks about WiFi drops probably refer to their fixed wireless network, but then the use of “WiFi” terminology could just as easily reflect issues with a separate / internal home network. As for the talk of needing to dig their own cables, it was unclear whether this was only applicable to specific properties.

The reality is that sometimes houses exist so far from the main road (e.g. farms), where the fibre runes, that it is not always economically viable for an operator to trench all the way out to them without charging hefty fees. This is when it may become cheaper for a homeowner to take the DIY approach, if they’re able. Such issues are often more likely to crop up in remote rural areas.

The article itself doesn’t include a comment from CDS (they didn’t respond) or Airband, although we have shot off our own message to related contacts this morning and hope to receive a reply. The local authority is now said to be in the process of calling on both CDS and Airband to “appear at a future meeting” in order to discuss the issues.

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