Posted: 2022-10-15 20:16:40

At a house in the remote Kimberley, a woman waves her phone in the air for hours trying to get a signal to pay a bill.

A man has his bank account shut down due to a dodgy phone line which raises suspicions about scammers.

And at a picturesque farm, families faced with sudden, shocking deaths are unable to phone an ambulance.

These scenes are playing out in regional Australia, where residents unable to access phone and internet services struggle to keep up with a world moving rapidly online.

The latest data shows 11 per cent of Australians are "highly excluded" from digital services, meaning they do not have access to affordable internet or don't know how to use it.

That equates to about 2.8 million people.

A man sits outside at dusk talking on a public telephone
A converted refrigerator houses the public payphone at Drysdale River Station in remote WA.(ABC News: Erin Parke)

So how are they coping as government and bank services move online?

"It's becoming a major issue for people living in communities where they can't access online services, and it became very apparent during the COVID pandemic," RMIT University researcher Daniel Featherstone said.

"It's limiting people's ability to participate in society and access services that they need for their lives – we're talking about some of the vulnerable, low-income people in the country not able to access the services designed to assist them."

Rates improving but some falling behind

Digital connectivity is a fancy phrase describing whether people can access affordable internet that they understand how to use.

National data shows rates are steadily increasing, but there are groups in society falling behind.

A graph with brightly coloured lines.
The Australian Digital Inclusion Index, funded by Telstra, is run by RMIT and Swinburne Universities.(Supplied: Australian Digital Inclusion Index)

People in capital cities are more likely to be online than those in regional areas, and unsurprisingly, low-income earners struggle to connect.

There are different reasons for the digital divide – many older Australians lack online literacy, while in some areas a lack of infrastructure limits options.

Emergency contact a concern

One example is the Mimbi community, on Gooniyandi country in remote northern Western Australia.

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