Chorus GM in charge of UFB, RBI rollout resigns
Chris Dhyrberg resigned over Christmas and will stay on for another three months, the company says.
Chris Dhyrberg resigned over Christmas and will stay on for another three months, the company says.
Chorus' executive in charge of building its taxpayer-funded broadband programmes will leave the telecommunications network operator at the end of April.
General manager of network build Chris Dhyrberg resigned over Christmas and will stay on for another three months, the company says in a statement.
Mr Dhyrberg has been responsible for the rollout of the ultra-fast broadband fibre network and the company's joint venture with Vodafone New Zealand to deliver the rural broadband initiative.
"I accepted Chris' resignation with much regret. He's been with Chorus since our inception and has been heavily involved in all aspects of the RBI and UFB programmes," chief executive Mark Ratcliffe says.
"He's worked incredibly hard over an extended period, and all of us at Chorus owe him a vote of thanks for that."
Mr Dhyrberg's resignation comes as Chorus digs in over the Commerce Commission's draft ruling on how the network operator prices its copper lines, which Chorus says will deter consumer take-up of fibre and stymie investment.
Responsibility for the UFB and RBI builds will go to GM of infrastructure operations Ed Beattie, the company says.
Chorus was spun out from Telecom as a separately-listed company last year to free up the telecommunications company from its regulatory burden and allow the network operator to successfully win a billion-dollar subsidy to build a nationwide fibre network and rural broadband system.
Some 80 percent of the network company's revenue is still derived from the ageing copper network and is subject to the Commerce Commission's pricing review.
Chorus shares fell 0.7 percent to $2.86 on Tuesday, and have shed 2.7 percent this year.
(BusinessDesk)