Pensioner Vera Neal, from Herne Common, says life is in danger after crash cut off phone line
00:01, 08 February 2015
A pensioner who has suffered two heart attacks says her life could be in danger because her telephone line has not been repaired since it was cut during a car crash two weeks ago.
Vera Neal, 86, has chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), which affects her heart and lungs, and keeps a defibrillator with her at home.
She uses a Lifeline device in her house in Herne Common to send an emergency message to her doctor if she needs an ambulance.
But on January 22, a red Ford Fiesta collided with a telegraph pole on the A291 Canterbury Road, leaving telephone lines in need of repair by BT.
She said: “It’s not as if they don’t know about it. They’re not helping me at all. It’s giving me a lot of anxiety I can tell you.
“I have had two heart attacks already and I’m worried because I need the telephone.
"I have had two heart attacks already and I’m worried because I need the telephone..." - Vera Neal
“I’m on my own at the weekends, so if I’m taken ill I haven’t got anyone to call an ambulance for me, which is why I have Lifeline.
“You can’t get a mobile signal out here, so if the landline telephone is down and I press the button on the lifeline, nothing happens.
“I could have another heart attack. I know I’m old, but I don’t want something like this to kill me off before my time.”
Mrs Neal added she suffered a similar problem with the anxiety of waiting while her phone line was repaired for five weeks before Christmas in 2013.
BT spokesman Emma Tennant said it is “regrettable” when accidents cause damage to telephone lines, and that every effort is being made to complete the work by the end of this weekend.
“Following the crash, engineers from BT Openreach, who install and maintain the network on behalf of all communications companies, need to replace a section of overhead cable and reset the damaged pole.
“They had hoped to have completed the work by now, but it’s going to be complex. Due to the location, three-way temporary traffic lights are needed in order for engineers to work safely and with minimum disruption to residents and motorists.”
She advised the four residents living in New Road Cottages to contact their providers to arrange for incoming calls to be diverted.
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