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When phone networks fail: The deadly cost of Optus’s latest crisis

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When phone networks fail: The deadly cost of Optus’s latest crisis

Screenshot 2025-10-20 at 14.14.09.png When phone networks fail: The deadly cost of Optus’s latest crisis
An eight-week-old baby and a 68-year-old woman were among those who died when Optus's triple-zero emergency service failed. Image Source: Shutterstock / Adam Calaitzis

The unthinkable happened to families across three Australian states on 18 September when their desperate calls for help simply wouldn’t connect.



An eight-week-old baby in Gawler and a 68-year-old woman in Adelaide passed away, along with at least one other person in Western Australia, after they were unable to call emergency services during Optus’s latest network failure.





Now, over a quarter of Optus’s over a quarter of Optus’s more than 10 million customers are seriously considering hanging up on the embattled telecommunications giant for good. The devastating human cost of corporate failures has finally hit home for many Australians who rely on their phones as a lifeline to emergency services.



What went catastrophically wrong


The outage occurred on 18 September when a scheduled firewall upgrade in South Australia triggered a communications outage that blocked triple-zero calls across South Australia, Western Australia, the Northern Territory and far-western New South Wales, with Optus chief executive officer Stephen Rue admitting that 'standard processes were not followed'.



For 13 gruelling hours, around 600 emergency calls across these states found themselves cut off from emergency services when they needed help most.



While regular phone calls continued to work normally, the specific systems that route emergency calls to triple-zero had failed completely.



The company has blamed human error, with CEO Stephen Rue stating that 'standard processes were not followed' and dismissing suggestions that parent company Singtel had cut spending, saying 'That's not an investment issue, that's people not following process'.



'Triple-zero availability is the most fundamental service telcos must provide to the public.'
ACMA Chair Nerida O'Loughlin, commenting on a 2024 enforcement action related to an earlier outage.



The human cost that changed everything


The statistics are stark, but behind them lie real families facing unimaginable tragedy.



South Australian Police confirmed that an eight-week-old boy from Gawler West and a 68-year-old woman from Queenstown died during the outage period. Police later said the infant’s death was ‘unlikely’ to have been contributed to by the outage.



The media also reported a third death in WA, and some outlets later referenced a possible fourth death under investigation.



South Australian Premier Peter Malinauskas was scathing in his criticism, telling reporters: 'I have not witnessed such incompetence from an Australian corporation with respect to communication worse than this'.



His anger stemmed partly from Optus failing to inform his government about the deaths before announcing them publicly.



Federal Communications Minister Anika Wells condemned the company, stating it had 'failed the Australian people' and warning: 'They can expect to suffer significant consequences as a result.'




A pattern of failure emerges


This wasn't Optus's first rodeo with emergency service failures. The company had already paid penalties totalling more than $12 million for breaches during its nationwide network outage in November 2023, which left 2,145 people unable to access emergency calls and saw the company fail to conduct 369 required welfare checks.



The pattern is troubling:


Optus failure timeline

  • September 2022: Major data breach affecting 10 million customers
  • November 2023: 14-hour nationwide outage, $12 million in fines
  • 18 September 2025: Triple-zero outage linked to deaths
  • 28 September 2025: Another outage in Dapto, New South Wales, lasting over nine hours and affecting around 4,500 users



What This Means For You


Previous Optus penalties


Optus has already paid over $12 million in penalties for emergency service failures during its 2023 nationwide outage.


Additional fines of $1.5 million were imposed for failing to register nearly 200,000 customers in emergency databases. The company now faces potentially larger penalties for the September 2025 incidents.




Customer exodus: The numbers tell the story


The polling data reveals the depth of customer anger. Twenty-seven per cent of Optus customers have considered leaving the network entirely, that's nearly three million people potentially walking away from Australia's second-largest telecommunications provider.



Perhaps more telling is that 47 per cent of surveyed customers rated Optus's handling of the crisis as 'poor or very poor', while only 23 per cent thought the company's response was good or very good.



For older Australians, who may be more dependent on emergency services and less comfortable with technology changes, this breach of trust in such a fundamental service cuts particularly deep.



Your alternatives: What are the options?

If you're among those considering a switch, here's what you need to know about your alternatives:



Telstra: The coverage king


Telstra customers have access to the carrier's entire network footprint, which covers 99.7 per cent of the Australian population with 4G. Opensignal named Telstra the best-performing network for overall coverage experience and 5G coverage specifically, though you'll pay a premium for this reliability.



Vodafone: The budget option


Vodafone covers 96 per cent of the population, making it the smallest of the big three networks. However, Vodafone tends to offer more data at slightly cheaper prices than both Telstra and Optus.



Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs)


Many experts suggest considering a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO), which leases network space from the big three. Boost Mobile is unique as the only MVNO with access to the full Telstra network.



Did you know?


Did you know?
The average Australian only uses about 12GB of mobile data per month, so you may find you can opt for a cheaper plan than your current Optus service when switching providers.



What the government is doing


The Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) has launched an investigation into the incident, with Chair Nerida O'Loughlin stating the authority will be seeking significant information from Optus.



Communications Minister Anika Wells confirmed that the government has 'accepted all recommendations from the previous Optus Outage Review and has fully implemented 12 of the 18 recommendations, with the remaining six underway', but acknowledged that 'the fact three people are dead because they couldn't reach triple-zero due to yet another network outage highlights the urgent need for more action'.



The regulatory response includes requirements for:




Government Response Measures



  • Better customer communication during outages

  • Regular testing of emergency call systems

  • Enhanced oversight of the triple-zero ecosystem

  • Improved network resilience standards





Emergency backup plans while networks fail

While investigations continue and penalties mount, practical steps can help protect you and your family:




7NEWS Australia / Youtube.



Emergency Preparedness Tips

  • Keep a landline if possible—different networks often remain operational when mobile services fail
  • Know your neighbours' phone numbers and providers in case your network is down
  • Consider a backup mobile service on a different network for emergencies
  • Keep emergency service locations and direct numbers written down
  • Ensure family members know how to access emergency services through multiple methods




What this means for your mobile service


Nearly 3 million Optus customers are considering switching providers


Government investigations are ongoing with 'significant consequences' promised


Alternative networks like Telstra offer better coverage but at higher cost


Multiple emergency contact methods reduce your reliance on any single provider


Regular network failures suggest this may not be the last disruption




The bigger picture for Australian telecommunications


This latest failure adds to Optus's 'heavily tarnished reputation after a series of incidents in the past three years, including a 14-hour network outage in November 2023 and a massive data breach that leaked the data of as many as 10 million customers in September 2022'.



The Australian Communications Consumer Action Network noted that Optus has been marked as Australia's 'least trusted brand' and will need to 'work to restore [its] relationship with Australian consumers', with 'the 2022 data breach, 2023 outage and alleged misselling to vulnerable customers' seeing the company 'plummet to become the most distrusted company in Australia'.





For telecommunications companies, the message is clear: when networks fail, people die. The question now is whether Optus can rebuild the trust it has systematically destroyed, or whether millions of Australians will vote with their feet and their wallets.



What This Means For You


The families who lost loved ones on September 18 cannot get them back. But perhaps their tragic loss will finally force the accountability and system changes needed to ensure this never happens again.



Have you been affected by telecommunications outages, or are you considering switching providers after these incidents? Share your thoughts and experiences in the comments below.


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Since 3 g was ended we have NOTHING but trouble with Telstra in regional, rural and remote areas of VICTORIA. Wireless broadband AND mobile phone coverage is intermittent; dropouts are more consistent than the coverage and Elders and vulnerable with FALL AND SECURITY ALARMS are put at unconscionable and UNREGULATED RISK because coverage is inconsistent and/or NON EXISTENT for days on end.
UNLESS OF COURSE.. we spent $1400 to $3300 on one of Telstras “boosters” and even then.. Alarm users cannot venture further than 20 metres from their homes.
Forget education, zoom meetings etc .., mobile broadband internet FAILS!

Telstra doesn’t care, Regulators are an embarassing joke and politicians do not care!

In China 2000klms inland 8 yeas ago not one internet failure.

In a rural town, in Victoria, in 2025 black spots, dropouts … Civic and corporate FAILURE ….and disaster awaits 😡
 
Since 3 g was ended we have NOTHING but trouble with Telstra in regional, rural and remote areas of VICTORIA. Wireless broadband AND mobile phone coverage is intermittent; dropouts are more consistent than the coverage and Elders and vulnerable with FALL AND SECURITY ALARMS are put at unconscionable and UNREGULATED RISK because coverage is inconsistent and/or NON EXISTENT for days on end.
UNLESS OF COURSE.. we spent $1400 to $3300 on one of Telstras “boosters” and even then.. Alarm users cannot venture further than 20 metres from their homes.
Forget education, zoom meetings etc .., mobile broadband internet FAILS!

Telstra doesn’t care, Regulators are an embarassing joke and politicians do not care!

In China 2000klms inland 8 yeas ago not one internet failure.

In a rural town, in Victoria, in 2025 black spots, dropouts … Civic and corporate FAILURE ….and disaster awaits 😡
I don’t think it’s just telcos who are failing. It’s happening across Australia in Education. Police, Housing, hospitals, building construction, defence, immigration…system failures and shortages.
How many flags does Australia have now? Is the Papua New Guinea flag being added?
If an election were to be held with BoBo and Ronald McDonald the main contenders… who would win?
 
Age of the corprate no care and no responsibility, just how much money we going to make and the fines do not penetrate the amount of profit that they make as said no body cares at the top just interested in the money
 
OPTUS HAS PUT MY MONTHLY A/C UP BY $15.00 WITH NO IMPROVMENTS ONLY 2 DAYS AFTER ALL THIER TROUBLES , (THEY DONT CARE) ....CHEERS.
 
I don’t think it’s just telcos who are failing. It’s happening across Australia in Education. Police, Housing, hospitals, building construction, defence, immigration…system failures and shortages.
How many flags does Australia have now? Is the Papua New Guinea flag being added?
If an election were to be held with BoBo and Ronald McDonald the main contenders… who would win?
Have you noticed that the premiers don’t talk about the deaths that occur because of ambulance ramping or because people are left waiting because of lack of staff in emergency, or the fact that ambulances just don’t arrive?
 
OPTUS HAS PUT MY MONTHLY A/C UP BY $15.00 WITH NO IMPROVMENTS ONLY 2 DAYS AFTER ALL THIER TROUBLES , (THEY DONT CARE) ....CHEERS.
Nor do the politicians for whom WE are obliged to vote, nor the Richly Rewarded Regulators nor the bureaucrats who inform them!😡
 
I think the`re all the same, I`m with Optus, my husband with Telstra and because of all the possibilities will keep it this way. Once again we have been forced into a situation where we have to rely on telco`s to keep our communication in good condition and we pay for it (we are their customers) and yet our wellbeing doesn`t seem to be on top of their list.
This is just another Australian owned asset (Telstra) that began it`s demise in 1997 when the LNP under John Howard began its journey towards privatisation. Since then it has been down hill, jobs lost, plant deterioration, poor services, high costs (to the consumer). All about profits over people and I don`t think penalties are going to make any difference, the current fallout and ramification for customers is just collateral damage.
 
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Do not forget yesterday AWS outage which impacted Optus data services.
 
Decades ago I was with Optus. I left then for reasons other than outage problems, but I've never returned. They only want our money and, as they demonstrated back in the day, they offered little in return. The current scandals don't exactly tempt me to consider the execrable Optus as a future possibility.
 
The smartest thing I have done in many years is dump Telstra for both phone and internet, I have mentioned this before, what they were doing to me was wrong on all levels, I had it set up for direct debit!. I don't know the payment went through until I am told, They would cut my internet off in the middle of the night when the payment didn't go through.

I would ring Telstra's local office no answer so I would have to drive 60 km to the Telstra office and get asked do I have a appointment which I replied no why don't you have a appointment because you don't answer your phone, I was then asked why I attended the at Telstra shop to which I was cut off in the middle of the night (at this point I didn't know payment was not received) I was told I was cut off because payment was not received 1 day.

This happened to me several times I got very very annoyed with Telstra to put it very mildly, So I did a search of the provider's which service this area I decided to try Aussie Broadband on of the smartest thing I have ever done.
They are cheaper than Telstra and a big plus I have not been cut off since I joined Aussie Broadband

As far as the phone I joined Southern Phones again cheaper and not a problem since I changed from Telstra a few months ago

It just seems very strange that since I changed carriers I have not had a problem with direct debit weird 😅.


OPTUS HAS PUT MY MONTHLY A/C UP BY $15.00 WITH NO IMPROVMENTS ONLY 2 DAYS AFTER ALL THIER TROUBLES , (THEY DONT CARE) ....CHEERS.


I strongly advise you to do I look at the difference carriers in your area and the price they charge for the amount of gigs you require.
That is what I did Aussie Broadband was was way out in front of the rest.if you do change carriers your new provider will do almost every thing for you cancel your present carrier ( as long as you are not undre a contract.)
I pay $95 per month unlimited high speed I could get faster but I happy with what I am getting and the best thing I have not been cut off which tells me all I need to know.
 
Don't forget.

Telstra OWNS all the telecommunication infrastructure throughout Australia!
 
I seem to recall years ago that no matter which provider you were with, if you called 000, whichever network was available would pick up that call. So it didn’t matter who you were with, call was connected. Surely in this technological age this SHOULD be something achievable!!!!!
 
To leave is their prerogative, but wherever they go, if they think this technology is flawless, they are fooling themselves. To suggest these people died purely as a consequence of this outage is absurd imo. No, I don't have Optus shares or are even a customer. I imagine if the person making the call's phone battery was flat and in the time taken to find an alternative the person died, they would get the blame, its just a crazy notion imo.
 
I went to optus when I got my first phone, why because I was always treated as dirt by Telstra, right from the land line days........I had to phone landline for about 6 mths when I phoned for help.........so what was the reply that's how it is............isn't it funny how things like that stick, oh and the girl wasn't the only one over the years with them .......wrong bills when no one was using it etc..........sky high was ridiculous and so I am staying where I am with another network........nope it's not Optus either even though they were good to me over the years, so far so good, but no matter what happens I don't think I could stomach dealing with Telstra again.....
 
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Try ringing Vodafone. They have disconnected their call centre phones. You get a message saying to go to their email address. If your internet isn't working there's no customer service at all
 
in my opinion there will always be human error. A car accident killing humans is a human error, plus so many other accidents.
Deaths will occur.
I do not approve but stop latching onto excuses.
 
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The smartest thing I have done in many years is dump Telstra for both phone and internet, I have mentioned this before, what they were doing to me was wrong on all levels, I had it set up for direct debit!. I don't know the payment went through until I am told, They would cut my internet off in the middle of the night when the payment didn't go through.

I would ring Telstra's local office no answer so I would have to drive 60 km to the Telstra office and get asked do I have a appointment which I replied no why don't you have a appointment because you don't answer your phone, I was then asked why I attended the at Telstra shop to which I was cut off in the middle of the night (at this point I didn't know payment was not received) I was told I was cut off because payment was not received 1 day.

This happened to me several times I got very very annoyed with Telstra to put it very mildly, So I did a search of the provider's which service this area I decided to try Aussie Broadband on of the smartest thing I have ever done.
They are cheaper than Telstra and a big plus I have not been cut off since I joined Aussie Broadband

As far as the phone I joined Southern Phones again cheaper and not a problem since I changed from Telstra a few months ago

It just seems very strange that since I changed carriers I have not had a problem with direct debit weird 😅.





I strongly advise you to do I look at the difference carriers in your area and the price they charge for the amount of gigs you require.
That is what I did Aussie Broadband was was way out in front of the rest.if you do change carriers your new provider will do almost every thing for you cancel your present carrier ( as long as you are not undre a contract.)
I pay $95 per month unlimited high speed I could get faster but I happy with what I am getting and the best thing I have not been cut off which tells me all I need to know.
TELSTRA ARE 93
 
  • Wow
Reactions: Monks
I think the`re all the same, I`m with Optus, my husband with Telstra and because of all the possibilities will keep it this way. Once again we have been forced into a situation where we have to rely on telco`s to keep our communication in good condition and we pay for it (we are their customers) and yet our wellbeing doesn`t seem to be on top of their list.
This is just another Australian owned asset (Telstra) that began it`s demise in 1997 when the LNP under John Howard began its journey towards privatisation. Since then it has been down hill, jobs lost, plant deterioration, poor services, high costs (to the consumer). All about profits over people and I don`t think penalties are going to make any difference, the current fallout and ramification for customers is just collateral damage.
And what do you think Labour have done since coming to office - they are in office NOW - we have had problems and - no comments from the commies.
 
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