Australia news live: NSW police informed of latest Optus outage when welfare check sought | Australia news

Australia news live: NSW police informed of latest Optus outage when welfare check sought | Australia news

NSW police not informed of latest Optus outage until welfare check sought Josh Taylor NSW police were first informed of the latest Optus triple zero outage when the telco asked police to do a welfare check on those in the Dapto area. Optus confirmed overnight that an issue with a mobile phone tower in Dapto…

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NSW police not informed of latest Optus outage until welfare check sought

Josh Taylor

Josh Taylor

NSW police were first informed of the latest Optus triple zero outage when the telco asked police to do a welfare check on those in the Dapto area.

Optus confirmed overnight that an issue with a mobile phone tower in Dapto had affected calls in the area between 3am and 12.20pm on Sunday, including nine triple-zero call failures.

A police car with a triple-zero sign
Photograph: Bianca de Marchi/AAP

A spokesperson for NSW police confirmed the first they were informed of the outage was when Optus made the request to conduct welfare checks on those who had attempted to dial triple zero. The spokesperson said:

On the morning of Sunday 28 September, NSWPF received a request from Optus to conduct welfare checks on a number of callers in the Dapto area that had attempted to contact Triple Zero and were unable to connect.

Four welfare checks were referred to police. None required an emergency services response and no further police action was required.

Optus has had opt-in real-time notifications for outages for emergency services since the end of June, ahead of mandatory notifications coming in November. The company previously argued providing such notifications would be a “huge burden”.

Optus was approached for comment.

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NSW domestic violence offenders could be forced to report dating app profiles and activity to police

High-risk domestic violence offenders in New South Wales may be forced to inform police when they use dating apps under new protections for abuse survivors, AAP reports.

The courts have been given the power to impose serious domestic abuse prevention orders to restrict the behaviour of perpetrators in NSW for up to five years.

These powers have just come into effect but were part of a package of domestic violence reforms that passed the NSW parliament a year ago.

Conditions could include scheduled reporting to a police station and requirements to notify police when they begin new intimate relationships or create and use dating profiles.

The orders apply to offenders convicted of two or more domestic violence offences that carry maximum jail terms of at least seven years, and people who have been charged with a serious domestic violence offence against a relative or a current or former intimate partner – even if they’re acquitted.

People found to be in breach of these orders can be fined $33,000 or face a prison term of up to five years.

1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732)
Lifeline 13 11 14
Men’s Referral Service 1300 766 491

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