Barbara
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A number of points - 1) I take exception to the claims in some posts that only old people don't want to use DD, the implication being that they are too old 9or not intelligent enough) to understand them - THIS IS NOT THE CASE and I find the inference quite insulting. Many, many people of all ages either have personal experience of DD going wrong or know of others who have.
2) It should be remembered that the people who use BT or whoever are CUSTOMERS and, as such, should have a CHOICE! BT are NOT doing them a favour by letting them have a phone or phone line, the customer is doing BT a favour by using them and paying them for a SERVICE! I am sick of people fogetting that.
3) The point made by the landlord illustrates my point, that is is ALL for the convenience of the person providing the service, not the customer. IF customers choose to use DD, fine, if they do not, that choice should also be respected. As I said in my first post on this matter, DD hands control to the bank/company. If I use SO or pay a bill when I get it (the inference that only people with debt problems do this is way out of order!), that should be my right of choice. With DD, if a mistake is made with a decimal point or in the bill itself, it is such a problem to resolve (see my posts under Orange Shop for example), if one cancels a DD to resolve a problem, technically one is in breach of contract (ref Consumer Direct), often, if an overpayment is taken, the company will only reimburse it to the account not to the bank account of the wronged customer (eg Orange will not refund overcharges to a bank account only an Orange account). This could leave a customer overdrawn & facing bank charges through no fault of their own and hundreds of pounds out of pocket for months while the overpayment works through the system.
One of the main platforms of the sayno campaign is, surely, customer choice - the choice to use a telephone number, as a customer, which best suits them. This should, in my view, apply to payment methods.
A last point - sometimes, customers are led to believe that they have to pay by DD but may find challenging it brings the response that you can pay by another method if you choose. An example was our endowment policy - we were paying by DD because we thought we had to, when we were caught in the underperforming policy trap, we did not want to continue this as it allowed them to raise the premiums as they wished, we challenged it & now pay by SO so we fix the premium by MUTUAL agreement (& we got the mis-selling resolved as well!)
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