I've been accused of NIMBYism on another thread, by one of the most senior and respected members of this Forum. I've started another thread here, because the original thread was a simple question by a newcomer. I suspect I'm about to put my head in the lion's mouth, so I don't want to cause a big digression over there.
NIMBYism is a pejorative term and lazy generalisation that is very easy to throw around, and on a Forum such as this it's an easy point scorer and is usually going to meet with widespread assent. Preaching to the converted, after all. But Forum members are not representative of the general public, as we occasionally try to remind ourselves. There are generally (at least) two sides to any question, and the opinions and values of folks on here are not necessarily those of the ordinary public.
When Swish built here in 2021-22 they caused widespread disruption: almost all our footways and driveways were dug up at some point, there were piles of pipes and rubbish on every street corner, and temporary traffic lights everywhere meant getting around was often a nightmare. My next door neighbour was so annoyed by it all that he declared he would never do business with them, and he hasn't. He still has FTTC and is content with it - no, he doesn't "complain about how bad his internet is". I disagreed, and signed up with Swish, because I valued a faster, more reliable connection, and for me the installation upheaval was worth it. But I don't think my neighbour is a NIMBY - he just has different values, he doesn't weight a better connection as highly as I do.
The point of raising the eunetworks build is that the Swish fibre build experience is still fresh in people's memories, and now this winter we've been through it all again. eunetworks are not done yet, and there is much grumpiness about it. Villagers are going to be extremely annoyed if OR (or any other comms company) turn up in a few months and do it all for a third time. I know, I see them and talk to them on a daily basis. @Pheasant and others may be able to rationalise this as all for the greater good and view all naysayers as NIMBYs, but most people don't see it that way.
Personally I hope OR will come here asap. I hope that they'll be able to do most of their build by pulling fibre through their existing ducts and not digging, but for me, even if they do dig, almost any disruption would be worth it. I want an alternative to Swish that I can have some confidence will still be there tomorrow morning, and right now I don't have one. But I can understand the viewpoint of those who think that enough is enough and the benefit does not justify the pain. Do I or the Telcos morally have a right to ignore their point of view?
Last year EE and Three (as MBNL) applied to build a 5G mast in my village. We can't get 5G, and 4G isn't great (I typically get around -120dBm indoors, only just useable, but I use VoWifi and don't need data at home so it doesn't matter much). The proposal was not for a couple of those discreet monopoles that pop up all over the place these days, but for a 20m Meccano gantry with 8 antennae, straight from a North Korean industrial estate, to be sited on the village green in the middle of the village. Much as I would like 5G here, I sided with the protesters that 5G wasn't worth this horrendous eyesore and loss of amenity. There are alternative sites - we proposed a bit of waste ground by the allotments less than 200m away that I'm sure would have been almost as good for their purposes. So I don't think that every proposal for comms infrastructure necessarily needs to be blindly accepted. There are always tradeoffs. Does that make me a NIMBY?
Actually that last question doesn't matter. I learned long ago that name calling is the last resort of those who have no argument or who have lost the argument. I will listen to reason, but if you simply brand me with labels I will take no notice whatsoever.



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