Those are nominal Openreach charges. The charges are peanuts and probably don't even cover the truck-roll and bureaucratic paperwork, never mind the labour costs. The plumber charges us £60 before he's even knocked on our door!
If FTTP roll-out is to be truly revenue-raising - the install cost for that final drop would have to be at least one magnitude larger. Perhaps in the low thousands of pounds per premises, with typical means-tested subsidies for low-income households.
We certainly would be willing, if not necessarily "happy" (!) to pay £3,000 for FTTP to be brought to this suburban house; in the knowledge that £3,000 would be added in amenity value to its market price.
Such a programme of rolling-out FTTP could also stimulate community involvement. The public loves to engage in fund-raisers to fulfil that perception of civic duty. Something that foolishly is missing in the political arena today. People want to play their part.
Though these sorts of programmes would be so much easier for a government-entity to do, rather than the private sector.
---
BTW it's curious how this debate always opens up a division that pits the urban-ites against the rural-ites. Can we just agree that any commodity or service that is rationed by price or availability should, first and foremost, bring benefit to the largest number of people at the lowest cost. That's before we even contemplate delivering to those expensive and isolated outliers in rural districts. That's the rule of thumb applied in every other field of provision from healthcare, to education, to highways and transport, policing, and so on.
Edited by deleted (Mon 27-Jul-15 13:38:12)