NGMsGhost wrote on Dec 8
th, 2012 at 8:27pm:
Please forgive the short quotes
[quote]Why Not?
Indeed; we agree. Ask your MP.
Quote:The trouble is I doubt that anyone in the Police will have even bothered themselves about this question.
As the providers of roaming services in the UK will be the parties to the agreement that sets the 15p rate for their own direct customers, it is a question of whether their provision of roaming services to users of foreign networks is covered by the agreement.
(I am happy to privately share the details of my Home Office contact, who will be able to answer this question. One could approach ACPO directly.)
Quote:I was talking about foreigners roaming in the UK with their mobiles and needing to call 101 (now widely advertised) and not Brits in Spain.
There is no standard EU 116 number for non-emergency contact with the Police. That is why 101 was needed. If 101 is not supported whilst roaming in the UK, a visitor using their own phone would need to know the relevant geographic number, which is the same as they would use from home.
I agree that we are thinking about situations which most of us would regard as an emergency for a visitor. The situations in which 101 is needed are however classed as non-emergency. Having to use data roaming to look up the number of the local police service on the internet, or pre-loading it into a list of useful numbers before travelling, is the sort of additional effort that someone may be expected to have to go through.
(This is fair enough if the visitor is intending to visit a local Police museum and wants to enquire about opening times or translation services, but not if they have to report that their luggage has been stolen, before contacting their insurance company.)
Quote:Three Police forces ridiculously continue to have a non geographic only means of contacting them.
If these are not 03 (geographic rate) numbers, then they are in breach of Home Office directions. I had understood that they had all been dealt with, by local members of this forum.
So long as these geographic numbers are published and available for those who begrudge paying the standard rate for a 101 call, in the same way that any other telephone number is made available, then I would feel content. (That is not to deny my disagreement with the decision not to use taxpayers' money to fund all 101 calls.)
Quote: Perhaps you would care to direct me to BT's consumer website document where the cost of calling 101 or any other non standard number that a domestic telephone caller may need to call (on a BT landline) can be easily found in a friendly layout?
I cannot. That is one of many points that need to be made about the appalling quality of BT's consumer price information.
Quote:I wonder to whom exactly you may be referring.
Pursuing the fair telecoms campaign requires us to be in touch with lots of technical detail, as well as public policy, political and media matters.
I believe that we are in total agreement about the fact that many of the calls that have to be made to 101 should be handled by the 999 service, or some other “free to caller” service. If this were so, then the remainder of 101 calls would probably best be dealt with using geographic rate numbers - local for the relevant local service, 03 where needed to avoid a sense of bias within an area, or perhaps a single national 03 number. I feel the same way about 111, but that is a purely personal view, which may spark another debate.