sherbert wrote on May 8
th, 2011 at 11:57am:
japitts wrote on May 8
th, 2011 at 11:36am:
I've no problem with a 10/15p fixed-price call given all the peripheral benefits of a national-number.. .
So you keep saying, but most of us here on this site do.
We are right to think firstly about our personal situations. Many of us rarely have cause to call the Police and some would be happy to pay whatever is demanded if the need for contact were great enough. Those who call through BT have no problem at all with a 0845 number, indeed for some it is cheaper to call than a geographic number.
If the way forward were to be decided by considering only the interests of the majority who rarely call the Police, but fund them through their taxes, or the largest group of users taking their telephone call services from a particular provider (i.e. BT), then a rather perverse outcome could result.
The Home Office and the Police Services have to look at the situation more broadly in determining what course to follow. We may wish to apply ourselves to this debate.
Those who oppose a proposal to meet the cost of the connection (i.e. the direct costs of the telephone companies, plus a fair margin for overheads etc.) by a universal fixed charge per call to a single number covering all of England, may wish to suggest their preferred alternative.
The status quo includes a different (rarely known) number for each local service and mobile callers paying up to 41p per minute. This leads to improper pressure being placed on the emergency services, due to unnecessary calls to 999. Wider public awareness of an alternative to 999, with an equitable rate of charge, would undoubtedly relieve some of this pressure.
With efforts to use limited money more effectively being demanded, there may be savings to be made by having all incoming calls answered in call centres, possibly on a "shared service" basis. Furthermore, many would argue that spending the money necessary to make every call "free to caller" could not be justified in the present situation. The particular nature of this service, as against others, makes the inequity resulting from the many different rates that apply to calls to Geographic Rate numbers seem unacceptable. Use of a national three digit number opens up all of the possible options for funding, which do not exist otherwise.
Is the opposition to the single national number, or to the proposed method of funding? Is the status quo thought acceptable, or are there other alternatives that opponents would wish to propose? I am keen to know the answers to these questions; it is however for each of us to comment as we wish.