RadioGaGa wrote on Mar 16
th, 2011 at 1:20pm:
Discovering the Census contact number is a 0300 and described as a local rate call I decided to attempt to find a regular landline number, to make my free call. Due mainly to not having any idea how long I might be waiting on the 0300 local call. When I eventually used the 0300 number I went through 4 sets of options/sample questions that I may wish to ask.
Calls to 03 numbers are charged at no more than the price of a geographic call and come from inclusive minutes where they apply for geographic calls. These are
rules set down by the regulator, Ofcom, and if your provider is breaking this then it should be reported so it can take action.
When these numbers were first introduced in 2007, there were instances of telephone companies charging 03 calls in excess of geographic ones. I have not heard of any breaches in the last two or three years; all telcos appear to be complying.
RadioGaGa wrote on Mar 16
th, 2011 at 1:20pm:
My comment about being fleeced on these array of 'local' and 'national' call rates is that it seems obvious to me that both BT and the subscriber to these calls receive revenue from them. I assumed the 0300 local call rate also carried some revenue for the subscriber.
I will assume from the emotive reply they don't, but I can't call it free via my service I have to pay local rates.
The term "local rate" implies the cost of a geographic call to someone who is local to the caller. Any one individual's "local rate" is therefore the price they pay to call a local number as determined by the tariff they subscribe to. Similarly, one's "national rate" is the cost of a geographic call deemed as being a "national" call from the caller's location.
In the vast majority of cases, local and national calls cost the same. In which case any reference to "local rate" can be used interchangeably with that of "national rate" and "geographic rate" as they are the same.
Any suggestion that there can be two "local rates" on any one tariff is absurd and the sort of word-play that users of these numbers frequently enter into.
You said your package allows you free "landline" calls. If this is all UK landlines, then it should also include all non-geographic numbers that start with the digits 03.