<p>The Department of Telecom (DoT) on Wednesday met telecom operators and asked them to address call drop problems.</p>.<p>The meeting, which comes amid the rollout of massive 5G networks in the country, was chaired by Telecom Secretary K Rajaraman and attended by telecom service providers, including Bharti Airtel, Reliance Jio and Vodafone Idea.</p>.<p>In the meeting, the DoT flagged about the rising instances of call drops and service quality-related issues, and asked operators to address the issue.</p>.<p>Operators learnt to have raised the issue of Right of Way (RoW) challenges. The industry also mentioned locations that are facing specific problems, due to signal interference or other factors, a senior official in the DoT said.</p>.<p>The department is taking a long-term view of the service quality-related matters and has asked players to identify problem areas, and make suggestions on policy interventions that could improve the call connectivity, said the official.</p>.<p>The Department is looking at legal frameworks and policy-level measures that can ensure a better quality of service, the official added.</p>.<p>The meeting assumes significance as improvement in telecom service quality is bound to cheer mobile customers, irked by call drops and patchy networks.</p>.<p>In September this year, Communications Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw indicated that telecom service quality parameters could be made more stringent and tighter, possibly to the extent of 3-4 times. </p>.<p>The minister had exhorted the industry, including telecom operators and infrastructure providers, to move "full steam ahead" on improving the quality of services in the country, now that a slew of reforms have been announced and more are being proposed.</p>.<p>"You can't clap with only one hand, both hands are needed. It cannot be that just we keep doing, what you ask. You also have to do, what we ask," Vaishnaw had said at that time.</p>.<p>"I will be requesting the Department (Telecom Department) to send a new consultation paper to TRAI for significantly increasing the quality of service parameters almost making 3X or 4X of what it is today, so whatever is the quality of service we are seeing, should now improve significantly," Vaishnaw had said at an industry event on September 14.</p>.<p>While telecom regulator Trai looks at service quality norms, the DoT's parley with telecom operators was more to do with identifying problem areas and seeking inputs on policy measures and operational interventions that can facilitate better service quality in the country.</p>.<p>Citing an example of how policy interventions can help resolve some of the outstanding issues, sources said that since faster permissions for tower deployments can improve connectivity, ensuring Right of Way alignment at the field level would be important.</p>.<p>Similarly, there are many instances where illegal boosters deployed by people, have caused interference with main towers and led to inconvenience for consumers at large, and those cases are also being identified for corrective action.</p>.<p>DoT sources said that while things have improved, there is more ground to be covered.</p>.<p>Quality of Service benchmarks are under Trai's purview but DoT has held informal discussions in the recent past with the regulator on the issue of service quality.</p>.<p>Asked if the pace of the 5G rollout and connectivity was a matter of concern, DoT sources said that Wednesday's meeting was not in relation to 5G.</p>.<p>For 5G, where rollout has just begun, quality of service is "a work in progress", they said, adding that it will be 5-6 months before measurements start.</p>.<p><em>(With PTI inputs)</em></p>
<p>The Department of Telecom (DoT) on Wednesday met telecom operators and asked them to address call drop problems.</p>.<p>The meeting, which comes amid the rollout of massive 5G networks in the country, was chaired by Telecom Secretary K Rajaraman and attended by telecom service providers, including Bharti Airtel, Reliance Jio and Vodafone Idea.</p>.<p>In the meeting, the DoT flagged about the rising instances of call drops and service quality-related issues, and asked operators to address the issue.</p>.<p>Operators learnt to have raised the issue of Right of Way (RoW) challenges. The industry also mentioned locations that are facing specific problems, due to signal interference or other factors, a senior official in the DoT said.</p>.<p>The department is taking a long-term view of the service quality-related matters and has asked players to identify problem areas, and make suggestions on policy interventions that could improve the call connectivity, said the official.</p>.<p>The Department is looking at legal frameworks and policy-level measures that can ensure a better quality of service, the official added.</p>.<p>The meeting assumes significance as improvement in telecom service quality is bound to cheer mobile customers, irked by call drops and patchy networks.</p>.<p>In September this year, Communications Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw indicated that telecom service quality parameters could be made more stringent and tighter, possibly to the extent of 3-4 times. </p>.<p>The minister had exhorted the industry, including telecom operators and infrastructure providers, to move "full steam ahead" on improving the quality of services in the country, now that a slew of reforms have been announced and more are being proposed.</p>.<p>"You can't clap with only one hand, both hands are needed. It cannot be that just we keep doing, what you ask. You also have to do, what we ask," Vaishnaw had said at that time.</p>.<p>"I will be requesting the Department (Telecom Department) to send a new consultation paper to TRAI for significantly increasing the quality of service parameters almost making 3X or 4X of what it is today, so whatever is the quality of service we are seeing, should now improve significantly," Vaishnaw had said at an industry event on September 14.</p>.<p>While telecom regulator Trai looks at service quality norms, the DoT's parley with telecom operators was more to do with identifying problem areas and seeking inputs on policy measures and operational interventions that can facilitate better service quality in the country.</p>.<p>Citing an example of how policy interventions can help resolve some of the outstanding issues, sources said that since faster permissions for tower deployments can improve connectivity, ensuring Right of Way alignment at the field level would be important.</p>.<p>Similarly, there are many instances where illegal boosters deployed by people, have caused interference with main towers and led to inconvenience for consumers at large, and those cases are also being identified for corrective action.</p>.<p>DoT sources said that while things have improved, there is more ground to be covered.</p>.<p>Quality of Service benchmarks are under Trai's purview but DoT has held informal discussions in the recent past with the regulator on the issue of service quality.</p>.<p>Asked if the pace of the 5G rollout and connectivity was a matter of concern, DoT sources said that Wednesday's meeting was not in relation to 5G.</p>.<p>For 5G, where rollout has just begun, quality of service is "a work in progress", they said, adding that it will be 5-6 months before measurements start.</p>.<p><em>(With PTI inputs)</em></p>