I can only assume that there was a long and particularly aggressive contract with their telecoms supplier by Mentorn (the production company for the program). I did also register a further new complaint with the BBC about this number at the point at which 0871 became officially subject to premium rate regulation by PhonePayPlus. The irony of people interested in making their point of view heard democratically being ripped off in order to do so was also surely rather hard to justify.
I think anyone who lives in the reception area of a BBC local radio station that still uses an 0845 number should be immediately registering a renewed complaint about these numbers with both the radio station itself and also with both the BBC (via
www.bbc.co.uk/complaints and by email with the BBC Trust at trust.enquiries@bbc.co.uk)
I have also been equally amazed to discover just now that the BBC's TV Licensing section have also finally succumbed to public pressure on this matter and that at
www.tvlicensing.co.uk/contact-us/question/ they now list an 0300 number of 0300 790 6131 to contact them even though this web page is rather hard to find on their website and they do everything they possibly can to give you a standard FAQ answer or make you ask them a question via a Contact Us web form instead.
Nonetheless the change has been made and I trust that Dave will therefore be extremely pleased to update all the Tv Licensing entries in the database to show the new 0300 number as an alternative for the former 0844 numbers.
However the fact that even the formerly notorious and wholly unrepentant BBC Tv Licensing department has now thrown in the towel on the more odious use of 0844 numbers (not even part of BT landline call packages) suggests that it must surely only need a small amount of further pressure to force the BBC radio stations to all move to 03 numbers. In fact I think an email to all BBC Trust and BBC Executive board members welcoming the move to 03 numbers by Question Time and TV Licensing but mourning their continued use by some BBC radio stations might well help achieve that very point.