Lynn Keillor’s landline telephone — her only phone — went dead on Dec. 4. She’s gone round and round with CenturyLink since, getting several reassurances her service would soon return.
It hasn’t.
“I can understand a few days, I can forgive maybe a week,” she said. “But over a month? That is absurd.”
Other CenturyLink customers in Keillor’s north Minneapolis neighborhood have had similar complaints about long outages in recent weeks, social media sites show. They have a lot of company: State utility regulators recently have been flooded with outrage targeting CenturyLink.
CenturyLink, the state’s largest landline phone provider, acknowledged the rash of outages in a statement. The company said the problems have mainly been in the Twin Cities and stem from “an unprecedented spree of copper cable thefts.”
“These incidents, which are still ongoing, have been numerous and caused such extensive damage,” the statement said. “We are having difficulty replacing the stolen material.”

The company, part of Monroe, La.-based Lumen Technologies, said thieves have even returned to some locations to steal replacement copper.
The Minnesota Public Utilities Commission (PUC) fielded 107 consumer complaints last month about CenturyLink’s landline service, 64% of them involving outages.