SilentCallsVictim wrote on Jul 30
th, 2009 at 10:47am:
derrick wrote on Jul 30
th, 2009 at 10:16am:
I just wish you would stop referring to ANY call as a "local" call, (including your terms, "RingLocal" and, "THE ALTERNATIVE LOCAL 118 SERVICE"), as there is no such term, and in fact breaks the Consumer Protection Act 1987 Part III,Misleading price indications!
All numbers beginning 01/02/03 regardless of distance are charged at the same rate as your originating telco, this has been the case since July 2004, i.e. they are charged as a mobile does!
This point is true in general, but not totally accurate. A service and a call can be "local", the question is about a "local RATE".
The distinction between "local" and "national" calls does still exist and is applied to some landline tariffs, however the vast majority of residential landline callers presently pay the same for both types of call. Talk Talk has recently re-introduced the distinction with its "free local calls" offer. There is no indication of anyone else copying this, however the possibility cannot be ignored.
For the time being, and in general, there is no such thing as a "local call rate". That is the term that must not be used.
The following is a quote from; -
http://www.asa.org.uk/cap/news_events/news/2005/hanging+on+the+telephone+on+and+... and whilst it is a few years old the contents still applies. In other publications similar advice is given!
"Consequently, the CAP Copy Advice team advises:
•
Marketers should not describe 084 and 087 numbers as ‘local’ or ‘national’
• Marketers should not be silent on price
• Marketers are unlikely to know the maximum charges for calling their services made by non-BT phone companies (largely because there are so many of them and their prices change reasonably frequently). If they do, they should state the maximum cost of the call or price per minute (ppm)
• Those marketers who do not know the maximum cost charged across the different phone companies should state the cost (either per minute or per call) for BT customers. For example, marketers could claim “Calls to 084XX from BT landlines will cost 5p pm "
With TalkTalk, they are just muddying the waters,(as BT do), and is related to an area and,I think, relates to people opting in to that scheme which I understand makes those 'local' calls inclusive of their call package(?), but anyone on TalkTalk will still call 01/02/03 numbers for the same cost irrespective of distance!
The very small percentage that "local" relates to is so inconsequential that it is not relevant and Ofcon, ASA, CAP etc all tell that the term should not be used, you know this yet continue to trot out the misinformation!
From East Sussex TS; -
http://www.eastsussex.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/735C4641-4E0A-48DA-BA19-8A5007CE0AB6/0... "For the small minority of BT customers who remain on BT standard rates eg. residential 'light user' customers), '0845' is still charged at local rate and '0870' at national rate.
However, for most callers, including those on BT together and most other landline, cable, mobile and VoIP providers, it costs more to call '0845/0870."
Again historical re the date of the pamphlet, but still relevant under Consumer Protection Act 1987 (Part III) Misleading Price Indications