Source: Yorkshire Post
http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/BT-drops-charges-for-some.4860349.jpBT drops charges for some high-cost numbersPublished Date: 09 January 2009
By John Roberts
TELECOM giant BT is to scrap its charges for 0870 and 0845 numbers at the centre of a row over public services profiting from them.
Calls to these numbers from a BT landline currently costs 5.8p per a minute but from next week they be included free of charge in customers' call packages.
However, campaigners opposed to the use of high-cost numbers dismissed the move as insignificant as it does not apply to 0844 or 0871 numbers – which are used by many GPs.
Organisations using numbers which begin with 0870, 0871, 0844 or 0845 can share the extra revenue made with the calls provider. More than 200 GPs surgeries and three hospitals in Yorkshire have been criticised for using these numbers which can cost significantly more than normal local calls.
BT announced yesterday that it will scrap its charges for all 0870 and 0845 numbers, which will cost the company £24m.
As well as public services, 0870 and 0845 numbers are also regularly used by banks, building societies and insurance firms.
BT said it was the first UK telephone company to make the numbers free, adding that some competitors charged up to 10p a minute for a daytime 0870 call.
However, campaigners say the BT move will have no significant effect as it does not apply to 0844 numbers – used by more than 50 doctor's surgeries in West Yorkshire and Wakefield-based Mid Yorkshire NHS Trust.
The saynoto0870.com group also claim that 0845 numbers will not be free and will continue to create revenue with money paid from an increased BT rental charge instead of an extra charge for each individual call.
Group spokesman Dave Lindsay, of Doncaster, said: "Even for BT customers these calls will not be free. They will only be covered by the increased charge paid for an inclusive package.
"If this announcement is mistakenly used to make use of 0845 numbers appear more acceptable, this will severely disadvantage the poor who are unable to rent a BT landline and have to use pay-as-you-go mobiles to contact NHS Direct and others, and thereby suffer a greater surcharge on top of higher charges for all calls."
John Petter, managing director of BT's consumer business, said: "We know that the public is frustrated by having to pay higher charges for these numbers, even though BT's rates were cheaper than our rivals, so we worked out a way to go further and include calls to 0870 and 0845 numbers in our call packages.
"These numbers are widely used by banks, utilities and even NHS Direct, and our customers spend 30 minutes a month on average calling these numbers. We hope we have taken a sting out of the price of these calls, but also removed one of those irritations that customers believed was an unfair anomaly."
Which? Magazine last year named and shamed companies and public bodies using these numbers.
Now it has renewed calls for high-cost helplines to be scrapped.
The magazine's principal researcher, Ceri Stanaway, said: "Which? has long said that customers should not have to dial expensive numbers to contact customer service and support helplines, and we're pleased to see that 0845 and 0870 numbers will now be included in BT call packages.
"But there will still be lots of people that don't use BT for their phone calls, or BT customers who have to make an 0870 call that isn't covered by a call plan. These people, plus anyone who rings helplines on 0844 or 0871 numbers, will still often be paying far too much for the privilege."