-------- Original Message --------
Subject: BBC 0870 to 03 Nmbr Change - Illogical Retention of Premium 084 & 0871 Numbers Including Question Time?
Date: Wed, 11 Jun 2008 22:09:02 +0100
To: michael.stock@bbc.co.uk
CC: tim.davie@bbc.co.uk, mark.byford@bbc.co.uk, mark.thompson@bbc.co.uk, jana.bennett@bbc.co.uk
Dear Mr Stock,
Incoherent and Illogical Proposals to Retain BBC 0844, 0845 & 0871 Phone Numbers (including BBC Question Time Audience Line), Whilst Moving 0870 Numbers to 0370, Will Fail To Be Understood by The Public or To Allow The BBC To Regain The Moral High Ground Over Its Phone NumbersThank you for your reply to my email. However this latest news that you have provided that only the BBC's 0870 prefixed phone numbers are to be changed to use the 0370 number range in which they will then cost no more than calls to normal priced 01 and 02 prefixed numbers (even on landline and mobile phone inclusive packages) and that many other BBC numbers currently beginning 0844, 0845 or 0871 are to be left exactly as they are and continue to attract premium rate charges for calling them is very unwelcome indeed and also seems entirely illogical and quite irrational on the BBC's part. The reasons for such an apparently inexplicable, inconsistent and utterly incoherent approach on the BBC's part to its phone number policy are very hard to fathom indeed and I cannot understand why you personally would have agreed to put forward such an illogical proposal to the BBC Board, especially given your own undoubted considerable expertise in the workings of these numbers as demonstrated by your own longstanding position as a Board Member of the Contact Centre Association (see
www.cca.org.uk/about/Board%20Members.asp) and the BBC's position as part of the Foundation Partner Group of the CCA along with its major call centre partner Capita.
As best I can now see it the BBC is being forced to do something about its 0870 numbers by later on this year (2008) as by that stage measures introduced by Ofcom will eventually mean that it will no longer be possible for the BBC and/or its two business partners involved in receiving phone calls from the public (Capita and Cable & Wireless) to continue earning revenue share on receiving calls from the public but as a result of unfortunate regulatory failings by Ofcom many members of the public will still not enjoy or be guaranteed the same low prices when calling 0870 phone numbers as they can be certain of when calling numbers starting with 01, 02 or 03.
As a result of this the BBC has rightly decided to move away from 0870 and to adopt 0370 numbers where the public are guaranteed to pay only normal national rates for phone calls and to have the calls included in their bundled minutes call plans. But if the BBC wishes to restore public confidence that calling the BBC will only cost the price of a normal phone call to a licence payer's friend or relative then why has it chosen to blow this confidence completely out of the water by leaving in place phone numbers where this will continue not to be the case and that will continue to be charged at wholly extortionate rates as high as 40p per minute by unscrupulous telecoms providers (especially mobile phone operators) who seek to take advantage of the fact that technicalities in Ofcom's regulations allow them to charge more than for calling a number starting 01 or 02 by charging an utterly ridiculous rate to call these numbers, whilst also knowing at the same time that many members of the public still wrongly believe these numbers only cost the same to call as a number starting 01 or 02.
I am very disturbed indeed to hear that you were in effect economical with the truth when using me as a sounding board for the
www.saynoto0870.com campaign last Autumn when testing your proposal that the BBC might switch to using 03 numbers. Your obvious economy with the truth was in failing to proactively mention to me that the BBC would not be ensuring that any of its many numbers starting 0844, 0845 or 0871 were also moved to the 03 number range.
Unfortunately your apparent attempt to hide this fact from members of the Saynoto0870.com campaign, albeit by a process of omitting to mention that your proposals did not cover those number ranges rather than by supplying actively misleading information, will go down very badly indeed with our campaign. I cannot believe that the BBC is still planning to assault the intelligence of the acutely politically aware viewers of Question Time by having David Dimbleby use siren like smugness to suggest that they call a number range (0871) just about to be transferred to the premium rate regulator (Phonepayplus - formerly ICSTIS) in order to participate in future shows. I also cannot see any logic or reason why BBC radio stations and some other programs and services (such as tv licensing) should continue to charge stealth premium rates of up to 40p per minute to call them from mobile phones on numbers that are also excluded from landline and mobile phone bundled minutes and/or inclusive call packages.