http://www.lep.co.uk/news/Fury-at-39ripoff39-police-and.3186155.jp<<
Lancashire police is planning to introduce new charging phonelines.
The constabulary has confirmed it will introduce an 0845 code for its non-emergency number, which takes up to 1.5 million calls a year, following advice handed down nationally.
Today, the Evening Post can also reveal that a number of councils in Lancashire are also using the phone lines.
Although not officially classed as premium rate, the new numbers are up to 4p a minute more expensive to call from standard BT landlines and can cost up to 35p a minute more using a mobile phone.
The move goes against advice handed out by the government's Central Office of Information, which says that public service providers should keep local dialling codes.
It follows a revelation that at least four GPs surgeries in Preston had abandoned their 01772 dialling codes in favour of more expensive 0844 numbers.
A spokesman for Lancashire Constabulary said that the decision to introduce the 0845 as a non-emergency number was taken at a national level and will be in force from November.
Superintendent Bill McMahon, who is overseeing the new system, said: "This new system will help us answer calls more effectively without the caller hanging on the line for too long.
"Our target is to answer all non-emergency calls within 40 seconds, but due to the sheer volume of incoming calls, this is occasionally difficult to achieve.
"This new system means that more callers will be answered, albeit not always by someone working in their local communications room."
A spokesman for regulator Ofcom said it had just completed an investigation into how these numbers are advertised.
She said: "We have clear guidelines that all adverts for services operating 0845 or 0870 prefixes must make the cost of the call very clear. We have powers to investigate any evidence of that not happening."
Calls to Lancashire County Council now go to the Red Rose Hub, in Bluebell Way, Preston.
Assistant director of customer access at the county council Gabby Nelson said this meant people in all parts of the county paid the same, adding: "There is parity across the board."
Preston Council has two 0845 numbers, the Guild Hall box office and the payments line.
A spokesman said: "We are currently reviewing telephone services."
In Lancaster those paying their council tax by phone have to call an 0845 number since the council closed its two cash offices in 2005.
A spokesman said: "It is supplied by an external company not based in the district. A local code would not be practical."
They said the council had no intention of introducing further 0845 numbers for services.
Currently public calls to Lancashire Trading Standards are made on an 0845 number and diverted to Consumer Direct.
A spokesman for Trading Standards said: "Consumer Direct was introduced by the Government, and welcomed by Trading Standards, as a nationwide service with a single recognisable number. The cost is the same regardless of where you live."
>>