Whitehaven in Cumbria will become the first town in the UK to lose its
analogue TV signal when it is switched off tomorrow.
BBC2
will be the first station to go, and all other channels will be tuned out by 14
November to be replaced by digital channels.
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The area comprises 25,000 households, all of which have been bombarded with
information about the switchover.
"We have been seeing an unprecedented amount of set-top box and hard disk
recorder sales," Craig Carruthers, an employee at Whitehaven's
Currys
Digital store, told the
BBC.
"People are aware that they have to do something rather than be left with a
blank TV screen.
"It is going to give Whitehaven a name now, and I think people are quite
happy that our town will be the first for something, rather than London or
places like that."
However, a survey by
Digital
UK found that almost 10 per cent of Whitehaven residents have not upgraded
their equipment to receive the digital signal.
The whole of the UK will lose its analogue signal by 2012. The government has
promised special help to citizens over 75 and those with significant
disabilities if they are on Income Support, Job Seeker's Allowance or Pension
Credit.
Mary Bradley, director of
Age
Concern in North West Cumbria, said: "Age Concern and other organisations
have worked tirelessly to try and reach as many people as possible to ensure
switchover is a success.
"I urge everyone to help by checking to see whether their relatives, friends
and neighbours are experiencing difficulties, and if so, whether they have the
support they need."
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