Source: Daily Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/fairdealfordrivers/2619938/DVLA-makes...DVLA makes £9million from motorists who check on licence applicationsBy Christopher Hope, Home Affairs Editor
Last Updated: 9:56PM BST 25 Aug 2008
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The DVLA received more than £8.7 million in revenue from phone calls to 'premium' 0870 mumbers made by motorists concerning the renewal of their licence and other related services.
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The disclosure comes after it emerged the same Government body made £9 million in revenue from selling motorists' personal details to wheel clamping companies.
The Daily Telegraph has been campaigning for a fairer deal for motorists at a time when drivers are facing rising fuel prices and changes to vehicle excise duty that will leave most with higher car tax bills.
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Mark Prisk MP, the Conservatives' shadow minister for consumer affairs, said: "Motorists will be shocked that a government agency is making money from their essential calls.
"It is bad enough being fleeced by Gordon Brown at the petrol pumps. To be charged higher phone rates for renewing your driving licence, just adds insult to injury."
A spokesman for the DVLA said it introduced 0870 numbers in 1999 "to address the imbalance that meant customers phoning from other parts of the country paid more than those phoning from near Swansea where we are based".
She continued: "The DVLA is now committed to transferring all its 0870 to 0300 numbers. The cost to members of the public in calling 0300 numbers is expected to be no more than that of calling normal geographic numbers.
"DVLA does not make money from its telephone lines, any revenue collected goes back into providing valuable services to the public."The spokesman declined to say how much revenue came from the 0870 numbers in other years.
There was outrage earlier this year when it emerged that, for just £2.50, private clamping and car parking firms can buy the personal records of any motorist caught staying too long on their property.
Last year alone, the DVLA earned revenues of £3.7m by selling the names, addresses of more than 1.3 million registered vehicle keepers to private firms. The government body has extracted £9million through the practice since 2002.
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