For some time, the analogue-to-digital transition has been discussed mainly as a telecoms change happening in the background. But this week’s government telecoms modernisation package suggests the issue is now moving into a more formal phase — one shaped not only by network upgrades, but by stronger expectations around customer protection, vulnerable users and how critical services are handled during change. The new government collection, published on 24 March 2026, brings together a written ministerial statement, the Fixed Telecoms Modernisation Charter, the PSTN Network Operator Charter and the Non-Voluntary Migration Checklist as part of a broader framework for fixed and mobile telecoms modernisation.
That matters for adult social care because this has never been just about replacing a phone line. As we highlighted earlier this week, the real issue for many providers is whether any part of their service still relies on older infrastructure, whether that dependency is fully visible internally, and whether critical systems will continue to operate safely and reliably as wider connectivity changes take place. In care settings, that can extend well beyond telephony into telecare pathways, alarm connections, lift lines, emergency call points and other communications-linked systems that may have been in place for years without being reviewed in the context of digital migration.
What makes this week’s update especially significant is that it strengthens the official framework around the issue. The Fixed Telecoms Modernisation Charter describes fixed telecoms infrastructure as being in the process of a “once in a generation, multi-decade long upgrade” and says the industry will take further steps to ensure customers remain safe during current and future modernisation. The government’s wider collection also makes clear that these charters and protocols are intended to protect consumers and prevent disruption to critical national infrastructure during fixed telecoms changes, not just the original PSTN migration alone.
For adult social care, the most important point is that telecare and vulnerable-user protections are not sitting at the edges of this framework. They are central to it. The government’s telecommunications modernisation collection says the PSTN Charter and separate Network Operator Charter set out voluntary commitments to protect vulnerable people as they are moved onto digital services, while the Telecare National Action Plan says no telecare user should be migrated to digital landline services without confirmation that a compatible and functioning telecare solution is in place.
That shift in emphasis is important. It reinforces the idea that, in care, infrastructure change cannot be treated purely as a technical upgrade or a provider-side telecoms matter. Where resident welfare, emergency escalation, continuity of response and site resilience are involved, the issue becomes operational. It becomes about confidence that dependencies have been identified, that compatibility has been checked, and that providers are not discovering hidden vulnerabilities too late in the process. That is where the conversation starts to move away from telecoms administration and into leadership, risk and readiness.
This is also why the new Non-Voluntary Migration Checklist matters. Published on 24 March 2026, it sets out the steps telecoms companies should take before proceeding with fixed telecoms migration without a customer’s active consent, specifically to protect customers who may require additional support. On its own, that may sound procedural. But in practice, it tells the market something more important: this is now a managed and more tightly structured transition, with formal expectations around how providers must approach customers whose circumstances make migration more sensitive.
For care providers, the practical takeaway is not alarm, but visibility.

