I have just received back this load of quite unbelievable and totally unapologetic claptrap under the name of Roger Sawyer, Deputy Editor of the PM program. I very much doubt he did more than finally send it out under his name having read it (presumably in ignorance of real phone call costs) as several of the misleading points are straight off the propaganda street long used by Capita run and staffed BBC Information to lie to the public about the BBC's 084 and 087 phone numbers.
1. He still refuses to apologise for the 0870 is "cheaper than a stamp" analogy even though I pointed out an 01/02/03 phone call would be free. It appears they may even still carry on making such claims on PM therefore.
2. He claims the BBC doesn't make any money out of the numbers. This is another blatant lie as they either get a big outgoing discount on their own calls from Cable & Wireless they would not get without the incoming 084/7 revenue stream and/or get cheaper line rental and switchboard equipment out of Cable & Wireless they would not get if Cable & Wireless was not earning the revenue share. He even says they could take a rebate on the calls and don't. In which case why don't they immediately use 03 then.
3. He perpetrates the old longstanding Capita/BBC Information lie that on an 0845 number they are charitably sharing part of the call cost with the caller. But as an 01/02/03 call to the BBC would be free how can they share a part of the cost of nothing then? If they are really paying to receive their 0845 calls their Finance Director needs to be fired for gross incompetence.
4. He perpetrates the old lie that they use 0845 purely so as to not have different call costs from different parts of the UK as this would be unfair. This despite the fact that no major telco including BT has had local call pricing for at least 3 years now. Also again it ignores the point that 03 is the same to everybody but free at the weekends and/or all the time for those on call packages.
This is quite unbelievable. I am going to reply exposing his lies and copying all members of the BBC Board, BBC Trust, Eddie Mair and the producer and editor of the PM program.
Quote:-------- Original Message --------
Subject: FW: 0870 - Cheaper Than The Cost of A Stamp - Gratuitous and Inappropriate Comments
Date: Thu, 17 Apr 2008 14:10:55 +0100
From: Roger Sawyer <roger.sawyer@bbc.co.uk>
Dear Mr __________,
Thank you for your email.
Eddie Mair said calls "cost no more than 8p a minute from a BT line... ...cheaper than a stamp".
Calls do cost no more than 8p a minute from a BT line. Such a call - provided it does not go on for more than about three minutes - does cost less than a Second Class stamp.
You mention mobile phones and the additional costs they incur. A few points. There is no rule that listeners are obliged to call us the instant they want to make a comment... they are perfectly welcome to wait until they are at home and can call us from a landline at their leisure. We also find that people who want to contact us to comment instantly by mobile phone do so by text message. Also, it is the mobile phone providers who charge extra for calls to certain numbers, not us.
Calls, because they take the form of listener monologues rather than dialogue, are usually short and to the point and callers don't seem to mind the cost. For the vast majority of callers, it is much, much cheaper than sending a letter (which many people do) and cheaper than sending a text message (which, again, many people do).
The BBC does not make any money out of 0870 numbers. They are regulated by the BBC's own internal editorial policy team and externally by Icstis, the official regulator. A rebate is available to organisations who use 0870 numbers - but the BBC has waived its right to this in return for better telephone services for the audience.
We have at PM looked at the provision of either an 0800 (free) or 0845 (cost shared between BBC and listener) number instead of the 0870 number for the PM Letter line. The issue was whether our budget was better spent on making programmes or in funding a letter line. We do not subsidise people who write in and people who send texts. Nor do we subsidise people who don't have broadband and have to use a telephone dial up to send email and therefore incur costs there . So we decided not to subsidise the letter line from our programme budget.
The BBC has been looking at using 03 geographic numbers. I don't know what is beign decided on this. The reason we do not provide an 0208 number is that it is felt it could put people off who are calling from outside London.
In conclusion, Eddie mair's comments were not, in my view, gratuitous or inappropriate. They were accurate and helpful.
Yours sincerely,
Roger Sawyer
Deputy Editor
PM/Broadcasting House