http://www.dailymail.co.uk/money/news/article-2167553/Thousands-hassled-unwanted...Thousands still hassled by unwanted cold callers... despite Government scheme to block them
By Daily Mail Reporter
PUBLISHED: 08:39, 2 July 2012 | UPDATED: 09:50, 2 July 2012
The Information Commissioner is receiving thousands of complaints a month about telemarketing calls
Thousands of households are still being hassled by unwanted cold callers, despite signing up to a new Government scheme designed to stop them.
Telemarketing firms are flouting the service designed to allow the public to block cold calls, an inquiry has revealed.
Not a single fine has been imposed on an offending company for at least 18 months, it found. This is despite thousands of complaints being lodged with the Information Commissioner each month.
Around 17.5 million phone numbers are registered with the Telephone Preference Service – a scheme designed to prevent UK-based companies from making unwanted cold calls.
Industry rules say telemarketing firms should crosscheck their database to ensure those who have asked not to be cold called are left in peace.
But Mike Lordan at the Direct Marketing Association, which runs the TPS,
told a Panorama investigation to be broadcast tonight on BBC1 that some companies were ignoring the rules.
He said: ‘Companies are not abiding by legislation and we should be seeing enforcement against those companies who are persistently breaching legislation.’
Richard Lloyd from Which? also told the programme: ‘Even if you have signed up to the telephone preference service now, it won’t make a jot of difference to those companies that are buying and selling that information you gave to that website maybe years ago.’
Panorama says the UK public receive up to three billion marketing calls a year.
One of its undercover reporters secretly filmed staff at Central Claims Group, based in Bury, near Manchester, allegedly tearing pages out of the phone book and calling people at random.
In a statement to Panorama, Central Claims Group said it took its legal and regulatory obligations very seriously and did not condone any lapses.
It said it had ‘informed all employees that using the ordinary telephone directory or introducing themselves as anything other than Central Claims Group will be regarded as gross misconduct warranting summary dismissal’.
A spokesman for the Information Commissioner’s office said that until this year, it did not have suitable legal powers to act.
Although it now has the power to impose fines of up to £500,000, it said that enforcing the rules was not easy given the vast amounts of money that companies which flout the rules stand to make.