Below is the reply from the FCO in response to my FOI request. Whilst it has answered most of my questions, it has failed to provide the geographic equivalent numbers. I will, therefore, have to make a second request.
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Thank you for your e-mail of 16 February, asking about the 0870 telephone number that we have for Travel Advice enquirers to access our call centre.
The COI actually manage the FCO contract with the call centre on our behalf and it was the COI who provided the FCO with the 0870 number in the first place.
In November 2004, COI issued an update to their guidance regarding 0870/0871 numbers, and this was revised again last week. The key statement in the guidance is:
'0870/0871 numbers are not recommended, particularly when targeting individuals as by dint of falling national call rates, these have become expensive to the caller relative to a geographic call, which can act as a barrier to communicating information that the citizen should have access to as a right. If 0870/0871 is being used then other alternatives - i.e. a standard geographical number (either in parallel with, or as an alternative to the 0870/0871 number), the web or postal mechanisms should be considered and made available.'
The full guidance can be accessed on the COI website at
www.coi.gov.uk/ccg .
The COI have confirmed that their recommendation not to use 0870/0871 is not a 'rule' but was issued as guidance only. It is important to note that this guidance is recent and Departments need time to react on established services. As the line to our call centre was set up before the new guidance was in place, and a large number of materials carry the 0870 number, the COI has recommended that the number is phased out over time rather than being immediately replaced with a 0845 number or 0800 number. In addition, as Travel Advice Section said in their e-mail to you of 23 November, our Travel Advice service is also available on our website at
www.fco.gov.uk/travel; if this is difficult for you to access, you can contact our Embassy in Washington to have the advice read out to you.
Revenue and provider
The amount the caller is charged depends on the operator the caller is dialling from, the billing option the bill payer has on their line and or/whether they are calling from a mobile. Last calendar year, the FCO received £234.80 in revenue from the 0870 number. However, in January 2005 it was £624.78, which is likely to be due to the large number of tsunami call volumes.
The provider, British Telecom, will receive the difference between what the caller is charged and the FCO receives in revenue. Typically this is between 1.12p per minute and 6.73p per minute depending of time of day of call. BT also charge FCO line rental which on average is £3.30 a month per number.
FCO Services provide two 0870 numbers, also through BT, but the FCO receives no revenue from these numbers and these calls are charged at the national rate.
I hope this helps to clarify the situation for you.
If you are unhappy with the decisions made in relation to your request you may ask for an internal review. You should write to me at the above address if you wish to complain.
If you are unhappy with the outcome of the internal review, you have the right to apply directly to the Information Commissioner for a decision. The Information Commissioner can be contacted at:
Information Commissioner’s Office
Wycliffe House
Water Lane
Winslow
Cheshire
SK9 5AF