Sky LLU is available, so at some point in the distant past Sky will have made an offer to arrange the transfer the telephony from BT to Sky (a SMPF to MPF transfer ) that would have removed BT entirely from the equation, dialtone being provided from Sky equipment not BT’s , for whatever reason that offer was not taken , but surprisingly refusal didn’t result in Sky withdrawing the ‘off net’ non MPF LLU broadband which is what they claimed at the time would happen .
It does mean that both BT or Sky can offer a combined broadband and telephone service , it’s really a case of picking one or the other .
To the point that Sky said it was BT that raised the Sky broadband cease order , via some mythical 3rd party cease team is utter nonsense, the only way Sky could lose a customer without them driving that , is if BT requested a migration of broadband , and there is no evidence of that, what's more although the OP has said they received a Sky ‘ goodbye’ communication, there has been no corresponding ‘Hello’ communication from BT , hence it’s not a migration and BT have not had any involvement in Skys cessation ,that is entirely a result of Skys own actions , so unsurprisingly any request to BT to cancel a Sky order has failed , if BT said they could cancel that Sky order presumably they mistaking assumed a migration to BT was on file ( when it wasn’t )
If this were a ‘slamming’ type migration attempt (the only way BT could cease Sky service ) the current migration OTS system (one touch switching) given the date the OP has said this happened would be used and not the previous NoTs (notice of transfer ) system and OTS doesn’t have the cancel other providers orders function, plus neither system could automate customers with SMPF arrangements anyway , and the OP has never suggested BT were trying to ‘slam’ the customers broadband supplier from Sky to BT , all the OP has said is that Sky have stated they will stop providing broadband on a particular date .
As stated , pick a provider to deliver both services , shared metallic paths are no longer supported, you can’t have BT and Sky each billing for a single service on an Openreach connection, it may be a short term hassle , the financial benefit should more than compensate for that aggravation.
In my first post I stated BT sent a letter saying the landline was being upgraded. No mention of digital voice or that they would be stopping the Sky broadband. Shortly after this letter was received Sky then contacted us about the broadband being stopped.
There has been no communication regarding the need to have both services with one provider.
From memory sky never communicated about needing their landline service - maybe a fact that this is a legacy contract from when O2 were in the broadband market.
Not sure why you need to make snarky remarks about a mythical team - I've got the number if you'd like to phone them to see if they exist.
You're very much correct, there's little point in you going over the same monologue. The OP should now be fully aware of the situation.
Hopefully, a Moderator will lock this thread soon because it's just repeating itself, that or move it to the Lounge where you can argue as much as you like.
What I think has happened is that BT retail only had your phone on their systems and no note to say Sky shared the line, (BT Wholesale held that and it is a seperate arm of the group). When upgrading to DV it changes your line from PSTN to a SOTAP service that requires a broadband connection as the phone will plug in to a router to work.
When this happened, it’s inadvertently triggered the cease of the Sky BB service when the PSTN cease order was placed, there’s no longer a working landline for Sky to piggyback on and to be fair, they should have realised this when you called them. How you still had this BT/Sky set up amazes me as it should have been ceased years ago.
As said, now you/your father need to decide which provider to go with. Personally I would stick with BT as the swap to digital voice has stated so it should avoid any number porting issues.
If your father is now going to choose between BT and Sky (for broadband and landline) stick with BT as that won't involving porting the number over and losing a number he may have used for years. It seems to go wrong quite a bit and people lose the number for ever if they try to move it to another provider.