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BT to remove half of the UK’s remaining telephone boxes

CAMBORNE, UNITED KINGDOM – JULY 24: A man uses a telephone box in Camborne on July 24, 2017 in Cornwall, England. Figures released by Eurostat in 2014 named the British county of Cornwall as one of Europe’s top ten poverty areas falling behind Poland, Lithuania and Hungary. Average wages were £14,300 compared with the UK national figure of £23,300 and £20,750 across Europe. UK government statistics show almost a quarter of people living in the Camborne, Pool and Redruth (CPR) area of Cornwall are in one of the most deprived areas of England with the highest level of childhood obesity, almost a quarter of children aged under 16 living in poverty and the lowest life expectancy. The area, which has long suffered from severe industrial decline with the demise of the copper and tin mining industries, has not shared in the wealth created in nearby tourist havens such as Newquay, Padstow and St Ives. Cornwall is the only UK county to have previously received emergency funding from the European Union (EU) and was one of the major beneficiaries of the UK’s membership of the EU due to the large amount of funding made available through the EUs Objective One and Convergence programmes. Despite this voters overwhelmingly backed the campaign to leave the European Union in the June 2016 referendum. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

By Matt Brian From engadget

The company spends £6 million a year on phone box upkeep, which includes removing human waste.

With the majority of Britons now carrying a smartphone in their pocket, demand for static, boring telephone boxes has dwindled. A small number of them have been repurposed, turned into tiny offices, WiFi hotspots and charging kiosks, but many of them remain derelict. This week, BT announced that it will do something about that, confirming that it will remove half of the UK’s remaining telephone boxes in order to focus on the units that people actually use.

According to BBC News, there are still 40,000 telephones boxes dotted across the UK, 7,000 of which are feature the iconic red design. At their peak, back in 1992, there were 92,000. BT says that its kiosks still handle 33,000 calls a day, but over a third of them are never used to make calls. “BT is committed to providing a public payphone service, but with usage declining by over 90% in the last decade, we continue to review and remove payphones which are no longer used,” a BT spokesperson told BBC News.

The removal won’t be swift, however. BT intends to phase the remaining 20,000 boxes out over the next five years. Over half of them lose money and the number of calls continues to drop by more than 20 percent each year, but the company must also repair damage, which includes the replacement of glass panes and broken receivers. Oh, and the removal of human waste. All told, those costs amount to £6 million each year and BT understandably wants to trim those losses.

IMAGE: Matt Cardy via Getty Images

For more on this story go to: https://www.engadget.com/2017/08/16/bt-scrap-half-uk-telephone-boxes/

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