UK telecoms regulator said that as operators assess which public call boxes to decommission, "clearer, stronger" rules were needed in places where they are still a lifeline
Overall use of public call boxes, however, has fallen in the last two decades, from about 800 million minutes in 2002 to seven million minutes in 2020.
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The UK telecoms regulator on Tuesday outlined proposals to save thousands of public telephone boxes from closure, despite near blanket ownership of mobile phones.
Some 96 percent of UK adults now own a mobile phone, while signal coverage has improved across the country, changing the way people make calls.
But Ofcom said that as operators assess which public call boxes to decommission, "clearer, stronger" rules were needed in places where they are still a lifeline.
It said some 5,000 phone boxes would be protected from removal if they are deemed vital to local communities where mobile network coverage is poor.