Slip causes fault impacting 111 calls, mobile, internet services in Golden Bay
Photo:
Nelson Tasman Civil Defence
A severed fibreoptic cable is behind a mobile phone and internet outage across large parts of Golden Bay, in Tasman, which has also affected 111 calls since early this morning.
It comes as the Tasman region extended a state of emergency for another week after it was besieged by rain and floods at the weekend and was on Thursday expecting more heavy rain.
Chorus technicians found a fault on a fibre line running over Takaka Hill caused by a slip, that resulted in an estimated 1150 households in Golden Bay losing internet and mobile coverage for most of Thursday.
Technicians found a severed cable at Uruwhenua Bridge on State Highway 60 and were currently working to repair it and restore services, including emergency calls to the 111 system.
Chorus said the fault impacted 350 copper connections and 800 fibre connections.
It brought in technicians from other areas to help find the fault as quickly as possible in difficult weather conditions.
"Our field teams have quickly mobilised to the fault site and are working to identify the cause of the outage," it said in a statement on Thursday.
"Priority will be given to faults that affect multiple customers or involve medical or emergency needs.
"Additionally, because Chorus' fibre network supports many of New Zealand's mobile towers, restoring mobile coverage is also a focus."
Chorus apologised to affected customers for the inconvenience caused by the outage and said it appreciated everyone's patience while it worked to restore connections as quickly and safely as possible.
"While we are focused on restoring affected connections quickly, our priority is the health and safety of our staff, contractors and the public."
Nelson Tasman Emergency Management said earlier on Thursday it was aware of the fault on the Chorus communications network and advised anyone with an emergency to still try ringing 111.
"Currently, the 111 network is intermittent as the issue is being worked on, and we hope it will be resolved soon but, in the meantime, if you have an emergency please keep trying.
"People should still try to call 111 if their mobile network is down."
The Telecommunications Forum chief executive Paul Brislen said people with no cell phone coverage in Tasman should still try to call 111 if they needed to in an emergency, because another mobile network provider might carry the call.
"There's no damage to any of cell phone towers or to the power supply so once that fibre fix is completed that should reconnect all of those phones and all of those cell phone towers," he said.
Civil Defence said Golden Bay residents should ask a neighbour for help in an emergency if they can't get through to 111.
Civil Defence controller Alec Louverdis said with the fault now being worked on it was expected a temporary fix should be in place before the end of the day.
He said there were few alternatives to calling 111 for people who needed emergency services.
To make temporary repairs contractors would have to use an excavator which meant there might be some interruptions to traffic, however traffic management will be in place.
"In the meantime, if you do have an emergency situation and can do so safely, make your way to the Takaka Fire Station which is staffed and has resources and communications."
The Tasman District Council said on Facebook it was aware of the fault and reassured residents the situation was being resolved as quickly as possible.
Meanwhile Emergency Management Minister Mark Mitchell said he had asked his officials to work closely with Chorus to restore the services for Golden Bay.
He said a lot of planning had been done in preparation for the weather and he expected to be heading back to Tasman tomorrow, "depending on what unfolds in the next few hours".
"The constant message is: please don't go into flood waters because they are dangerous," Mitchell said.
"Update yourself regularly on information, and please follow any instructions, especially from our first responders, or even if there are contractors and road workers out there and they block a road. They're doing it for a reason."
Mitchell said the government's focus was on the immediate response but was also assessing what additional support would be required.
Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero
,
a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Live: SH3 at Awakino Gorge, SH4 closed overnight due to slips, flooding
Nelson, Tasman and Marlborough remain in a state of emergency for the next seven days after being lashed by wild weather. MetService has issued heavy rain warnings for Bay of Plenty and northern Gisborne, while heavy rain watches are in place for Great Barrier Island and the Coromandel Peninsula. State Highway 3 at Awakino Gorge has remained closed overnight after heavy rainfall, surface flooding and slips. State Highway 4 is closed between Whanganui and Raetihi. State Highway 45 at Ōkato has reopened after being closed yesterday. NZ Transport Agency Waka Kotahi is urging drivers to avoid any unnecessary travel overnight and take extra care, if travelling around the region. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Tasman residents relieved as latest storm passes, recovery expected to cost millions
Tasman locals breathed a collective sigh of relief on Thursday after another bout of heavy rainfall came and went without further damage. Photo: RNZ / Mark Papalii A Tasman woman says she is "at peace" with the prospect she may never return home after she was forced to flee aboard her neighbour's tractor during last week's storm. She is one of many wearied locals at the top of the south who avoided further strife on Thursday, when another bout of heavy rainfall came and went without any dramatic exacerbation of the existing post-flood crisis. It leaves the region with a monumental recovery following the storm, dubbed by local authorities as a "one-in-100 year event ". Sarah Jacobs was preparing to go to work last Friday before the nearby Motupiko River burst its banks and engulfed her Korere home. "There was water around us, there was no getting out," she said. She and a friend escaped when her neighbour arrived in his tractor amid the raging torrent. "That was the last I saw of my home. I had to leave my five cats inside," Jacobs said. Upon returning home, she discovered she had lost most of her possessions. "Going home for me personally was heartbreaking. If there was a bigger word to use, I'd use it," she said. "Mud and silt met me as soon as I opened the door and a good foot of water has gone through there. I have nightmares of what my cats went through. "I've lost a lot, all my furniture is to be thrown away." Recovery from the storm is expected to cost millions. Photo: RNZ / Mark Papalii In the interim, her cats were being sheltered temporarily at the SPCA. After "running on adrenaline" over the past week, Jacobs admitted she was starting to tire. She told RNZ she had accepted that she may never return to the same house. "Long-term going forward, I can't rebuild where I am. Both my neighbour and I realise that," she said. "My place has been standing for 40 years. "I've been making peace myself this week that I can't return there to live. I hope I can restore it as a summer bach or something." Rural Support Trust Nelson/Tasman chair Richard Kempthorne said the recovery for the hardest hit would "take years". "Clearing silt and debris is probably at the top of the list," he said. "That's from farmland, horticulture and orchards. "Any streams that have been blocked need to be cleared, culverts need to be cleared, roads need to be repaired. There's a huge amount to do." Rural Support Trust Nelson/Tasman chair Richard Kempthorne. Photo: RNZ / Rebekah Parsons-King Earlier this week, the government unlocked extra support for flood-affected farmers and growers, making up to $100,000 available to support and co-ordinate recovery efforts. Kempthorne said the recovery would "cost millions of dollars". Energy levels among those impacted could also be waning, following an initial burst of energy during the initial emergency. "They'll potentially be feeling a bit flat," Kempthorne said. "Thinking 'my goodness, where do I start?'. That's the biggest challenge for people to be able to actually look at the damage they've got and think 'what can I do, what do I need to do and where do I need to focus?'". Whilst people tend to their properties, officials were already closely looking at the frailties in the emergency response. Thursday's phone and internet outage in Golden Bay meant some people were unable to call 111. It follows similar problems around Wakefield and lower Wai-iti over the past week. Telecommunications company Chorus blamed the problem on a severed fibre-optic cable at Uruwhenua Bridge on State Highway 60, which knocked out connections to about 1100 homes. Chorus told RNZ it was too soon to say what cut the cable, but it would be investigating. Tasman mayor Tim King described the situation as "a bit of a bloody nightmare". Tasman Mayor Tim King. Photo: RNZ / Samantha Gee "Immensely frustrating for both the people affected and those who are trying to respond in terms of getting out messages and contacts. "The impact of not having communications with both friends and family in these sorts of circumstances is more than frustrating and annoying. "So many people rely on this system and it's something we're going to have to look hard at post this event." For some spots at the top of the south, last month marked its wettest June since records began back in 1941. MetService confirmed more than 250mm of rain fell in Blenheim across the month, whilst about 220mm fell in Nelson - a record for both areas. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
2 hours ago
- RNZ News
Calls for government to prioritise upgrades to emergency phone-line
Loss of the 111 emergency services is nothing new. Photo: Supplied/ Unsplash - Árpád Czapp The head of the Telecommunications Forum wants the government to look at prioritising upgrades to the 111 emergency phone-line. Along with mobile and internet coverage, the service was lost in Golden Bay for most of the day on Thursday, after a slip cut a fibreoptic cable. Eight-hundred fibre connections and 350 copper phone-line connections were brought down in the morning, and repairs to the cable weren't completed until mid-afternoon. All but 20 copper connections had been restored by 4.45pm and were confirmed restored less than an hour later. The Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) said extreme weather could impact communications networks. "Telecommunications providers are working hard to restore the services that have been impacted," it said. "Technicians are on the ground to repair telecommunications equipment that has been damaged and generators are being deployed to the area to serve as a back-up power supply." Telecommunications Forum chief executive Paul Brislen told RNZ the loss of the 111 emergency contact service was nothing new. "111 isn't a separate network, it is simply a phone number on the phone network," he said. "It is carried in a slightly different way to all other phone numbers, but it is just a phone call." People caught without service had a range of options. "The 111-calling connection is quite smart, so even if your phone says you've got no signal, if you need to make an emergency call, you should absolutely try," Brislen said. "What it'll do is find any network, so if you're with Spark or One or 2degrees, and that network isn't available, it will find one of the others. It'll even connect via Wi-Fi to a landline connection, if you have Wi-Fi calling capability on your phone." However, if the call failed, the whole network was likely down and people should try something else, instead of calling again. "As has always been the case, you move to a place where there is a phone that you can use," Brislen said. "In the old days, before mobile, that meant driving over the road to somebody else or going next door, or heading into town, if you were remote. "With mobile service, of course, quite often, you can find connectivity at the top of the hill or not too far away." Tasman Civil Defence urged those who could not connect to 111 to travel to the nearest police or fire station. Brislen said the 111 emergency line needed upgrading, particularly its ability to receive messages other than voice calls. "In this day and age, you've got a lot of devices that will make contact with the call centre," he said. "Various car models will call, if they have an accident. "If you drop your phone, when you're on your motorbike, it will ring for help - that kind of thing happens all the time. "We've got this whole new wave of modern technology coming through, being used already by consumers, and it's very hard for the call centre to accept those inputs. Text messaging would be an absolute case in point - sometimes you're not able to make a phone call, but a text message will get through." He said the problem was not needing higher speeds, but rather upgrading the police-led call centre. Police documents last year revealed the outdated system caused deaths and injuries . The previous Labour government in August 2023 scrapped a project to replace it and the coalition has so far declined to restart it . Brislen said an upgrade would be a "very complex and very expensive programme of work". "I'd encourage the government to have a look at prioritising that and making the call centre into more of a 'contact centre', so that you can communicate more directly with emergency services, when you need to. "Making the decision to spend the money on a call centre for police may or may not be seen as frontline [or] vitally important, but I think probably we're reaching the point now, where you have to say it absolutely is." RNZ has sought comment from Emergency Management Minister Mark Mitchell. On the upside, MBIE said the phone networks were bringing in new technology to connect via satellite, saying this would "significantly improve the resilience of telecommunications networks". "All the mobile network operators are working with satellite operators to deliver satellite-to-mobile voice calling, allowing ongoing connectivity even when terrestrial networks are down." Brislen said the low-Earth orbit satellite technology would hopefully allow text messages and voice calls, via satellite, direct from a mobile phone, which was "sort of the golden egg... the holy grail of these things". "Starlink, for example, is one of the early players in that market," he said. "You'd be able to get a call up to a satellite or bounce a call off the satellite, even if you've got problems with the equipment on the ground in many cases. "That is really incredibly useful in events like this. "In that scenario, you should be able to make an emergency call from anywhere you've got clear line of sight with the sky." Telecommunications network companies like Chorus were constantly upgrading cables and particularly the fibre networks. "They now are looking at a programme of work," he said. "Instead of a point-to-point connecting to cities, you do a loop, so if half the cable is knocked out, for example, all the traffic is connected via the other side of the cable." The companies had providing a resilient and reliable network as part of their business model, and Brislen said they took that role "very seriously". "The key is to have multiple different types of networks that don't have a single point of failure. We've got four in New Zealand - we've got fibre, mobile, fixed wireless connections and now this new one of satellite. "No one single technology is perfect for all situations, but having that mix of four different technologies means, hopefully, one way or another, the call will get through." Brislen rejected the suggestion copper lines networks were still needed, noting New Zealand would phase them out "by the end of the decade". "It's not very resilient at all," he said. "It is seven times more likely to to be damaged in an event. "How copper lines work, you're sending an electrical signal up and down them, and when that gets wet, it basically short-circuits the entire connection, so they're very, very prone to breaks, they're very prone to damage during a weather event, in particular. "They cost more to repair and they take longer to repair as well, so all around the world, copper is being phased out. It's had its day and it really just doesn't deliver any of the things we need. "It's not fast enough, it's not mobile enough and it's not resilient enough." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.