|
|
Anyone had any dealings with ERIS MEDIA https://www.erismedia.co.uk/
I cannot quite workout, what they actually do.
|
|
|
Company number 10605270.
Look them up at Companies House. Far from impressive, re both the accounts and the staffing levels. Maximum 4 in the latest published accounts?.
Their claim in "About" is utterly laughable. The team at Eris has built up unrivalled expertise in ensuring a seamless transition from pre-fibre through to completed installation and onwards marketing to the leaseholders or occupiers As for what they do, it reads to me like their target customer is a builder building a new estate and all house purchasers have to buy FTTP from Erin. With not a lot of success.
The owner also has another company, Cove Property Consultants. In debt at June 2021.
Five previous companies dissolved.
Connections: OnePlus 8 Pro on Three 4+ (LTE)/5G and at home Three Mobile, with (Three)ZTE MF286D router giving about 113/20Mbps.
===========================================================================
“I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning.” (Plato)
|
|
|
Thanks, this company are "involved" between my landlord and Openreach who are seeking a wayleave to install "Fibre" in the building that I reside in.
Has been ongoing for >14mths.
|
|
Register (or login) on our website and you will not see this ad.
|
|
|
|
What’s their “involvement” it has to be asked?
|
|
|
According to my landlords agent, Simarc, Eris Media are handling the wayleave request from Openreach.
|
|
|
According to my landlords agent, Simarc, Eris Media are handling the wayleave request from Openreach. What can be so hard for them to take more than 14 months to achieve it, [censored] the lot of them.
|
|
|
According to my landlords agent, Simarc, Eris Media are handling the wayleave request from Openreach.
So Openreach have outsourced wayleave processing to them by the sounds of it.
|
|
|
No....Eris are handling it for Simarc. It looks like it could be a money making system, for both Eris and Simarc.
|
|
|
|
Oh [censored] that for a joke. How much leverage have you got with the landlord?
|
|
|
None!!! They will do anything that makes money.
|
|
|
The wayleave negotiations could be complicated by the fact I implied, that ERIS could cease to exist before long. Openreach might not be too happy negotiating with them.
I suggest anyone who hasn't looks them up at Companies House as I did, and examone the Accounts PDFs (for free) and the boss man's existing other company and the " dissolved" list.
One thing we can be sure of, the broadband prices are unlikely to be "competitive"!
How are you posting here anyway? ADSLx, or mobile?
Connections: OnePlus 8 Pro on Three 4+ (LTE)/5G and at home Three Mobile, with (Three)ZTE MF286D router giving about 113/20Mbps.
===========================================================================
“I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning.” (Plato)
|
|
|
According to my landlords agent, Simarc, Eris Media are handling the wayleave request from Openreach.
So Openreach have outsourced wayleave processing to them by the sounds of it.
I would say that whoever owns the land has agreed that Eris Media should handle the wayleave request. If Eris Media are not being helpful Opereach as a Telecoms company should use "Code Powers" to gain acces for their infrastructure.
Michael Chare
|
|
|
How are you posting here anyway? ADSLx, or mobile?
Virgin Media installed 2018.
Would be good to have an alternative to V.M.
|
|
|
According to my landlords agent, Simarc, Eris Media are handling the wayleave request from Openreach.
So Openreach have outsourced wayleave processing to them by the sounds of it. I would say that whoever owns the land has agreed that Eris Media should handle the wayleave request. If Eris Media are not being helpful Opereach as a Telecoms company should use "Code Powers" to gain acces for their infrastructure.
Code Powers? For a residential broadband wayleave - unlikely - would be seen as an abuse of code powers. If the freeholder is refusing to engage then additional recourse could be via the provisions on the newly minted Telecommunications Infrastructure (Leasehold Property) Act (TILP)
However if they’re responding / negotiating already then as it’s private property Openreach can’t just use carte blanche Code Powers in a bully boy approach. It’s still difficult.
|
|
|
Code Powers? For a residential broadband wayleave - unlikely - would be seen as an abuse of code powers. If the freeholder is refusing to engage then additional recourse could be via the provisions on the newly minted Telecommunications Infrastructure (Leasehold Property) Act (TILP)
However if they’re responding / negotiating already then as it’s private property Openreach can’t just use carte blanche Code Powers in a bully boy approach. It’s still difficult. The Telecommunications Infrastructure (Leasehold Property) Act inserts an amendment into the Code powers mainly to benefit Multi Dwelling buildings that may well help the OP.
Michael Chare
|
|
|
It sounds to me like the whole estate is "private". One leaseholder who initially sold access to VM.
The OP may or may not know whether I'm right, or whether it's just the leaseholder of their block.
In any case, I reckon ERIS is a bad bet. Nothing happened for two years, then a half million investment by someone, and most of that now gone. Unless the March 2022 accounts show a great improvement. But those aren't due till the end of December.
Connections: OnePlus 8 Pro on Three 4+ (LTE)/5G and at home Three Mobile, with (Three)ZTE MF286D router giving about 113/20Mbps.
===========================================================================
“I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning.” (Plato)
|
|
|
Code Powers? For a residential broadband wayleave - unlikely - would be seen as an abuse of code powers. If the freeholder is refusing to engage then additional recourse could be via the provisions on the newly minted Telecommunications Infrastructure (Leasehold Property) Act (TILP)
However if they’re responding / negotiating already then as it’s private property Openreach can’t just use carte blanche Code Powers in a bully boy approach. It’s still difficult. The Telecommunications Infrastructure (Leasehold Property) Act inserts an amendment into the Code powers mainly to benefit Multi Dwelling buildings that may well help the OP.
The TILP Act would only help if the landlord/freeholder was being unresponsive or failing to communicate with the telco. This is where there are provisions made to “get them to the table”. The big problem in the industry was unresponsive freeholders/landlords. It doesn’t sound like that’s the problem in this case.
There is nothing in TILP that expressly forces or commits the landlord/freeholder to give their permission if they are already in discussions / communicating already with the freeholder. If the freeholder refuses to give permission they generally can’t be forced to. It is after all their private property.
|