Outage outrage: Optus leader’s future in question

September 22, 2025 03:30 | News

Optus’s boss has staked his leadership on the embattled telco avoiding another triple-zero outage disaster.

As the fallout continues from the provider’s catastrophic outage – linked to four deaths – chief executive Stephen Rue offered a guarantee Optus would not let a similar thing happen in the future.

His assurance came despite a barrage of criticism of Optus for failing to implement recommendations from a review into a similar national outage that crippled the network.

Optus boss Stephen Rue
Optus boss Stephen Rue says action will be taken “to ensure that this does not happen in future”. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)

About a third of the 18 review recommendations stemming from the 2023 outage, which resulted in fines totalling more than $12 million, are yet to be implemented.

Early investigations into Thursday’s incident appeared to show established processes were not followed, with a botched firewall update blocking hundreds of triple-zero calls from Optus customers in South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory.

But Mr Rue leaned on an independent investigation into the incident when asked how Optus could be trusted in the future after failing to implement recommendations from the previous outage.

“We will do an independent review, we will make the facts public, and I can assure you, we will be implementing everything,” he said.

“What I can assure you is that actions are and will be taken to ensure that this does not happen in future.”

Optus CEO Kelly Bayer Rosmarin
Kelly Bayer Rosmarin resigned as chief executive of Optus following an outage in 2023. (Lukas Coch/AAP PHOTOS)

Former Optus chief executive Kelly Bayer Rosmarin resigned in the wake of the 2023 outage before Mr Rue took over in 2024.

Two customers contacted Optus call centres early on Thursday morning before the outage was fixed after more than 13 hours.

A review uncovered three more calls over the issue but “red flags” were not raised because call volumes were normal, Mr Rue said.

An eight-week-old boy from Gawler West, north of Adelaide, was among four deaths linked to the fault.

But SA Police said the outage was “unlikely to have contributed” to the boy’s death because his grandmother immediately used another phone to contact triple zero after her initial call failed.

AAP News

Australian Associated Press is the beating heart of Australian news. AAP is Australia’s only independent national newswire and has been delivering accurate, reliable and fast news content to the media industry, government and corporate sector for 85 years. We keep Australia informed.

Latest stories from our writers

Don't pay so you can read it. Pay so everyone can!

Don't pay so you can read it.
Pay so everyone can!

Pin It on Pinterest

Share This