I am currently working on a comprehensive table of costs for calling 101 from major providers. If anyone else is doing the same then perhaps we should compare progress by PM / Email - it is not easy!!
I am also making considerable progress in verifying the extent of the truth behind the Windsor Telecom announcement. I have nothing to report as yet.
bazzerfewi wrote on Mar 26
th, 2011 at 9:24am:
I have just contacted Virgin Media ... At far as I can make out the charges are as follows
Connection charge 9p
Call Charge 10p
Virgin Media is actually simple, because its charges are published in the normal way.
Page 53 of
Calls from home UK Non-Geographic calls shows the Charge Band for 101 to be "FF31".
Page 11 of
Calls from home residential tariffs shows FF31 to be a fixed-fee call at 10.22 pence per call.
There appears to be some commonality here, as most telcos applied the 2.13% increase to VAT inclusive rates in January to all "set" charges.
japitts wrote on Mar 25
th, 2011 at 3:45pm:
A test call (measured in seconds) I made to 101 yesterday from my Orange mobile, is showing on my unbilled usage as 8.5p.
If this is exclusive of VAT, then it would confirm a fixed fee set at 10p per call when the VAT Rate was 17.5%.
bazzerfewi wrote on Mar 26
th, 2011 at 10:29am:
I have been in contact with a number of telecom companies and it appears that the 101 10p service is a wolf in sheeps clothing
...
How can this be right
To answer the question, it is probably not right!
I can confirm the general experience of telco telephone enquiry staff having very poor detailed information available to them and no understanding of tariffs or the UK telephone system. They are in no position whatsoever to provide accurate advice on call costs where the issues are in the slightest complex.
To be fair, no such service is offered, as the IVR menus generally do not include an option for enquiries about call costs, other than queries about charges already raised on a presented bill.
Because telcos are obliged to publish all call charges (at least to their customers), one is best to pursue published information, for those who do so with public access through the internet. This may not be easy either, but it does enable one to hold the publisher accountable.
bazzerfewi wrote on Mar 26
th, 2011 at 9:24am:
... I will stress again if I cannot contact the police without being charged very expensive crazy rates for the call I will not contact them at all
We are each fully entitled to our personal views and to behave in whatever way we wish.
On the issue of public policy, it appears that the English Police services are prepared to sign up to the idea of having a common non-emergency number. We can criticise, but we may have to accept this decision as having been made. This leaves the question of how the telephone call element of the cost of the service should be funded, given that each Police service will fund its call centres in the same way as it funds other costs.
One option is for calls to be "free to caller" so they are paid for by taxpayers (national or local) in general or perhaps by the customers of each telephone company. Commercial sponsorship is another option; this is often regarded as acceptable by Police services, but I have considerable doubts. If there is to be a charge, this could be fixed per call or a rate per minute. Telcos could have the option of bundling the charge into package fees.
I can personally see a good argument for having a common charge for all calls to this particular service. What may appear to be crazy and expensive for a landline user with a call inclusive package may not be so for someone calling from a Public Payphone or PAYG mobile. (I have yet to discover exactly what the current, or proposed, situation actually is.)
If a common charge were to be put in place, I can fully understand the resentment that would be felt by those who believe that they have paid for all of their telephone calls, at being treated in the same way as those who have not paid anything in advance. There is indeed a strong argument for those who pay most tax being entitled to a better service from the Police than those who pay little tax.
(I hope that readers can recognise irony
)
I am inclined to believe that if a common call charge can be set at a reasonable level to enable calls to be self-funding across the board, then this is probably the best way forward. (I must stress that these views apply only to this particular service. I do not commend the same approach for telephone access to public services in general.)