Telus

Telus Outage Report in Spiritwood, Saskatchewan

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Telus offers phone, internet and television services, as well as mobile phone and mobile internet service through Telus Mobility. Telus internet service uses DSL technology. Telus TV relies on satellite or internet television (IPTV). Telus' mobile phone network supports CMS, HSPA and LTE.

Problems in the last 24 hours in Spiritwood, Saskatchewan

The chart below shows the number of Telus reports we have received in the last 24 hours from users in Spiritwood and surrounding areas. An outage is declared when the number of reports exceeds the baseline, represented by the red line.

Telus Outage Chart in Spiritwood, Saskatchewan 03/12/2026 11:05

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Most Reported Problems

The following are the most recent problems reported by Telus users through our website.

  1. Internet (51%)

    Internet (51%)

  2. Phone (22%)

    Phone (22%)

  3. Wi-fi (10%)

    Wi-fi (10%)

  4. TV (7%)

    TV (7%)

  5. E-mail (6%)

    E-mail (6%)

  6. Total Blackout (5%)

    Total Blackout (5%)

Community Discussion

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Telus Issues Reports

Latest outage, problems and issue reports in social media:

  • BowTiedCocoon BowTiedCocoon (@BowTiedCocoon) reported

    Close friend is a program manager at Telus (largest network in 🇨🇦). He told me their supplier (eg Cisco Meraki) were pulling 25% *price* increase on all components starting today Supply chain CHOCK incoming … 💀

  • StockSniperDrew dias (@StockSniperDrew) reported

    @MattCundill @Rogers I switched majority of my lines to @telus because of this and I’m a lot happier with their customer service. Sadly my business lines are still with Roger’s currently but I totally agree with you

  • DavidWeslake David Weslake (@DavidWeslake) reported

    @1_2_question @yegwave Absolutely, and victims of any crime will need to sue Telus and Bell if it's found that any criminals sent text messages or made phone calls on their systems. Internet service providers will need to be sued if any criminal activity was carried out using their services.🤔

  • White_Whippet The_White_Whippet (@White_Whippet) reported

    @ryangerritsen @Bell Switched to Starlink this December. The internet is great and I have no regrets. Hardest part was cancelling the services because of the crappy incompetent barely English speaking agents at Telus. I don’t ever plan to switch back to any crap Canadian Cartel Communication company.

  • Nachiketd1981 Nachiket (@Nachiketd1981) reported

    @TELUS worst customer service for mobility. I’ve been promised some plan on lower prices but they changed the plan on a higher prices without me knowing. Every agent on phone says they don’t know how it happened and they don’t know. Not fair Telus.

  • bijboutique1 bijboutique (@bijboutique1) reported

    @telus @TELUSsupport your techs didn’t even try and put the new sensors where the old ones were. Like not even close. How much more damage do you need to do to My house?

  • bijboutique1 bijboutique (@bijboutique1) reported

    @telus @TELUSsupport your customer service guy is telling me that the tech is telling me it is a $50 charge for the panel installation but customer service is saying I have to pay the $50 for for installation charges that I have already been told I’m not paying. So…fraud.

  • MadLadMarcin Section 52(1) Constitutional Supremacist (@MadLadMarcin) reported

    @snarkywhiteguy @JimMurp77852985 @dodiez8 Plus a free mini offer once you've had service a month. They're really making it hard to stick with the telus bell or rogers.

  • OmniAeronautica iPilot🅰️ (@OmniAeronautica) reported

    @TyrellCorpe That is still weak logic. If AST were just the “better design, worse execution” story you’re implying, major operators would simply wait for Starlink’s supposedly superior roadmap. Instead, in just the last week, AST added or advanced deals with Orange in Europe, TELUS in Canada, Taiwan Mobile, and AXIAN in Africa, all around the MWC window. These are not casual observers. These are MNOs making commercial decisions with capital, spectrum, regulatory, and network teams involved. Orange specifically signed with AST for direct to device collaboration in relevant markets, while TELUS said AST service is planned to support texts, calls, and data on ordinary smartphones in remote Canada. And your O2 point actually undercuts your own argument. O2 choosing Starlink for a limited service in the UK does not prove AST’s architecture is inferior. It proves one operator wanted an earlier, narrower commercial offering. Reuters reported O2’s launch with Starlink as Europe’s first smartphone satellite service, while Vodafone, O2’s rival, is still planning its own AST based service. That is the market telling you these are different tradeoffs, not a clean win for Starlink. So no, it is not “straightforward.” The straightforward mistake is pretending sophisticated carriers are committing folly by signing with AST instead of waiting for Starlink. They understand the architecture, capacity path, and partnership model better than social media tourists do.

  • BoredinFtMac Michael Livingstone (@BoredinFtMac) reported

    @GlobalCalgary Audio trouble on Telus Optic tv and antenna. Breaking up.