Aussie Telecoms Giant Gives Free Use Of Public Payphones
- By The Financial District

- Aug 5, 2021
- 2 min read
Australia's largest telecommunications company Telstra Corp. announced that people are now able to make free calls across the country using its network of more than 15,000 public payphones.

Photo Insert: National Arboretum and Telstra Tower at sunset in Cranberra
The traditionally coin-operated phones will no longer require payment to send texts or make calls of up to six hours to fixed-line and mobile numbers as long as they are within Australia, in a move the telecommunications giant hopes will benefit the country's most vulnerable people.
The move is expected to cost the telecommunications company around AU$5 million ($3.7 million) a year in lost revenue, Penn told the local Australian Broadcasting Corp.
The phones have previously been made free to communities affected by natural disasters, as well as during the Christmas and New Year periods for the past five years. In 2020, nearly 600 payphones in remote indigenous communities were also made free to ensure those areas remained connected during the COVID-19 pandemic.
"Last year alone Australians made 11 million calls on payphones, including more than 230,000 calls to vital services like Triple Zero," CEO Andrew Penn said in a statement, referring to Australia's main emergency service number "000."
Penn says payphones are also a vital lifeline for thousands of vulnerable Australians, such as the homeless, the isolated, or people escaping domestic violence, often as their only link to critical support services and networks.
"During COVID-related lockdowns, we've seen domestic and family violence agencies report a 60 percent rise in new clients seeking help for the first time...It's not always easy for people in these situations to use a home phone or their mobile to get help so I hope that making payphone calls free might play a small part in helping them get the assistance they need," said Penn in a separate statement.
Telstra has been responsible for maintaining Australia's public payphone network since the 1880s, with payphone numbers peaking in 2001 at 36,000. Today fewer than half the numbers remain, with 15,076 payphones operational across the country.
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