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Openreach engineers trial panic alarms as incidents of abuse and assault soar

about 8 hours ago
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From scissors being brandished as weapons to verbal abuse and being trapped during a home visit, the number of reported incidents of abuse and assault on telecoms engineers is on the rise.Openreach, the BT subsidiary that maintains the vast majority of the broadband network serving UK homes and businesses, recorded 450 reports of abuse and assault in the year to the end of March.The number of incidents involving Openreach employees was up 8% year-on-year, a 40% increase on 2022-23 and seven times the volume reported almost a decade ago.Abuse and assault has for the first time become the largest cause of injury to Openreach office staff and its 22,000 field engineers.Managers believe the number of incidents is even higher, as many cases are not reported by staff.

“I used to be worried about people falling off ladders, road traffic accidents or tripping over potholes,” said Adam Elsworth, health and safety director at Openreach,“But actually we have seen a steady increase in violence and abuse,“A quarter of all the accidents we record are now someone being attacked or abused, and it is continuing to rise,And when I look at these incidents I struggle to see the rationale behind the level of escalation,”Incidents reported by engineers include being shouted at, sworn at or spat it, the blocking of vehicles, being shaken off stepladders, or pushed down stairs while working at someone’s home.

There are also reports of racial abuse, inappropriate and threatening behaviour towards female engineers, homeowners preventing staff from leaving and specific incidents such as scissors being brandished like a weapon and a customer repeatedly slamming a vehicle door on an engineer’s leg.For Openreach, around half of incidents are in public locations, 45% are at homes and the remainder occur at the company’s yards or estate.Elsworth said Openreach was trialling a “panic alarm” on engineers’ mobile phones, which connects them in seconds to a monitoring centre that has the power to directly dispatch emergency services if required.“If an engineer is at someone’s home, that is quite a vulnerable space to be,” he said.“Some of the incidents are quite disproportionate and have created a wariness among engineers.

When someone has been attacked, they are then thinking every time they knock on a door what could be coming next.“A number of these cases do get reported to police, particularly in the case of the more severe ones.It is difficult when there is a threat element.”While Openreach faces the largest number of incidents, it is also a growing issue for other telecoms operators.Virgin Media O2, which has around 4,000 employees working on its cable network and cell masts, reported 26 incidents last year covering physical encounters, verbal abuse and threatening behaviour.

However, so far this year the reported number of incidents is up significantly, tracking at a rate that would mean the number doubling for the full year.Sign up to Business TodayGet set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morningafter newsletter promotion“Our frontline teams work tirelessly to provide reliable mobile and broadband services millions of customers rely on every day,” said a spokesperson.“A single incident of abuse or threatening behaviour is one too many, and we’re committed to ending workplace violence and keeping our people safe.”At Sky the number of incidents involving engineers in the field reached 99 last year, although the company said it was not seeing any upward trend this year.Sky said it was back to pre-Covid levels of incidents after an increase during the pandemic, with a peak of 392 reported incidents in 2021.

The newly-formed VodafoneThree collated about 40 to 50 incidents, while BT-owned EE did not reveal numbers but said that the figure was low.Last month, the major telecoms companies were among 100 co-signatories of an open letter from the Institute of Customer Service (ICS) calling on the government to amend the crime and policing bill.The bill will make it a standalone offence for assault on a retail worker, the sector that has been the most vocal about the safety and security of staff.As it stands the bill does not offer any protection for customer-facing workers across other sectors – including telecoms and infrastructure – with the ICS estimating that about 60% of the UK workforce operates in some form of customer-facing role.“You hear about the situation in sectors such as retail, trains, public transport but telecoms is a bit of a forgotten child in this,” said Elsworth.

“But when you are talking about engineers in someone’s home, well that’s quite a unique challenge.”
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Trump steps up attacks on Fed’s independence amid interest rates row

Donald Trump called on top Federal Reserve officials to seize control from its chair, Jerome Powell, if he fails to cut interest rates, stepping up his extraordinary attacks on the central bank’s independence.The US president called Powell “a stubborn MORON” in a series of critical social media posts on Friday, days after the Fed held rates steady for the fifth consecutive time.It comes as Trump faces heightened questions over the impact of his aggressive economic policy, and the White House presses forward with plans for a fresh wave of tariffs next week.Hours before the federal government released data which underlined a significant deterioration in the jobs market, Trump again broke with precedent to pin blame on the Fed – and urge it to change course.“Jerome ‘Too Late’ Powell, a stubborn MORON, must substantially lower interest rates, NOW,” Trump wrote on Truth Social, his social network

about 14 hours ago
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Barclays follows HSBC in exit from banking industry’s net zero alliance

Barclays has become the second UK bank to withdraw from a UN-backed net zero target-setting group, claiming that a wave of defections by international lenders meant it was no longer fit for purpose.It marks a fresh blow for the Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), after HSBC left in early July. It came months after a wave of exits by US banks, which departed in the run-up to Donald Trump’s inauguration in January.Lenders and other finance firms have come under fresh pressure over their green commitments as a result of Trump’s return to the White House, which caused a climate backlash as he pushed for higher production of oil and gas.The UN environment programme’s finance initiative, which is led by banks, required members to ensure their lending, investment and capital markets activities would lead them to hitting net zero emissions targets by 2050 or earlier

about 23 hours ago
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Labour MPs urge Thames Water to recover £2.5m paid to executives in April

Thames Water should claw back £2.5m in bonuses that were paid to executives in April, 27 Labour MPs representing constituencies served by the utility have urged.The MPs said it was “disgusting” that the company was hiking water bills “to pay for executives’ failings when those same executives were receiving multimillion-pound bonuses”.In a letter to Thames Water’s director of corporate finance, Fred Maroudas, they called for the company to scrap its next planned round of bonuses in September and reinvest the money into water infrastructure.The letter from 27 Labour MPs in areas served by Thames Water, coordinated by Yuan Yang, the MP for Earley and Woodley, set out demands for the company, including resolving the most severe cases of pollution and failure highlighted by their constituents

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US adds just 73,000 jobs in July amid pressure from Trump’s trade war

The US economy added 73,000 jobs in July, far lower than expected, amid ongoing concerns with Donald Trump’s escalating trade war.Forecasters surveyed by Bloomberg had predicted the July jobs report would show a drop in added jobs to about 109,000. The unemployment rate rose to 4.2% from 4.1% in June

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Trump to blame for high cost of living, Americans say in new poll

Americans are struggling financially, grappling with debt and the rising cost of living, and are blaming the Trump administration and corporate interests for worsening economic outlooks for working families, according to a new poll.Six out of 10 Americans place blame on the Trump administration for driving up their cost of living, according to a poll conducted by Morning Consult for the Century Foundation, which asked 2,007 Americans how they are managing the high cost of living in the US economy, who they think is to blame and what are the solutions.Sixty three per cent said Trump had had a negative impact on grocery prices, and 61% said he had had a negative impact on the cost of living. Nearly half, 49%, said the Trump administration had had a negative impact on their finances. Nearly eight out of 10 Americans, including 70% of Republicans, fear that Trump’s tariffs will increase the price of everyday goods

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Car finance scandal: UK supreme court poised to rule on hidden commissions

The UK’s highest court is poised to give its verdict on the £44bn car finance scandal, which could pave the way for millions of motorists to claim billions of pounds in compensation for mis-selling.The supreme court judgment, which will be handed down after financial markets close at 4.35pm on Friday, will decide whether or not to uphold a finding by the court of appeal in October that hidden commissions paid to car dealers by lenders were unlawful.That ruling, based on test cases, said making such payments to brokers who arrange car loans without disclosing the sum and terms to borrowers was unlawful. The lenders involved in the case – FirstRand Bank and Close Brothers – appealed against that decision to the supreme court

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Amazon fails to calm tariff worries with worse-than-expected financial outlook

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How will Australia’s under-16s social media ban be enforced, and which platforms will be exempt?

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Met police to more than double use of live facial recognition

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Zuckerberg claims ‘superintelligence is now in sight’ as Meta lavishes billions on AI

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Wall Street delighted with Microsoft as it spends $100bn on AI

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YouTube to gauge US users’ ages with AI after UK and Australia add age checks

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