I submitted the following comment to accompany this article.
As it has not yet appeared, I will share my thoughts here:
Quote:Good piece, but a few points have been missed. See my
Public Service Campaigner blog for more information.
Some quick points:
080 numbers are only useful where the recipient wishes to bear the cost that would be incurred by the caller. Calls to 01/02 AND 03 numbers are charged at the same rate (on all phones) and this is often zero - so 080 numbers are no longer as necessary as they once were.
The Helplines Association administers a scheme whereby mobile companies waive any charge for calls to certain "charity" 080 numbers. Some government departments - notably DWP have made their own arrangements with mobile companies to waive charges on calls to particular 080 numbers.
The whole mobile phones issue is tied up with that of the "termination rate", which presently takes the place of line rental in the mobile market. This rate is gradually being reduced over time and will eventually make the cost of a 080 call from a mobile essentially the same as that from a landline. There will however be other implications of this move!
Citizens Advice has a cheek getting involved in this issue as it uses expensive "business rate" numbers itself, so that callers pay a service charge to access its services. Citizens Advice has even failed to respond to demands for it to clearly state its service charge levels, so that these can be separated from the additional premium added by call providers.
HMRC, DWP and many other extensive users of 0845 numbers - notably NHS Direct and NHS 24 - have a simple quick and cost effective remedy available to them.
The 0345 equivalent number (charged, if at all, at the same rate as a call to a geographic number) can readily be provided as an alternative to every 0845 number, running in parallel. This would avoid the expense and confusion of extensive number changes and would remove the improper levying of a charge on users of public services to provide a subsidy to the service provider.
The major current scandal is with NHS GPs and Hospitals (see my
NHSPatient blog). Directions and contract revisions should have halted all use of 084 numbers in the NHS by March 2011. The government is failing to take the action necessary to ensure that these directions and contract terms are enforced.
To add a little on the tricky subject of 080 calls.
I can see why, when the costs of mobile telephones are met properly, the cost of all 080 calls should be met by the called party.
The mobile companies themselves waive the cost of 080 calls to charities registered with the Helplines Association scheme.
Public bodies have three options when choosing a non-geographic number:
1. To meet all the costs of the call themselves. [080]
2. To impose a Service Charge on the caller. [084 / 087 etc.]
3. To allow the caller to pay for the call under the best terms available from their provider. [03]
Deliberately treating service users differently according to the type of phone service they use, their provider or their type of arrangement is totally unacceptable. The fact that some callers are able to evade the imposition of a Service Charge should not be allowed to distort the argument.
DWP has shown that where 080 numbers are used under present regulations it is necessary to make arrangements with the mobile providers to ensure that the cost is passed on properly. I believe that mobile providers have been persuaded to waive charges for calls to some public service 080 numbers e.g. when the National Pandemic Flu Service helpline was in operation. Use of 080 numbers under other circumstances is wholly unacceptable.
Where a Service Charge is imposed, it must be declared and justified. That is a duty that falls on public bodies (and private ones also) regardless of whether Ofcom attempts to impose such a duty by regulation. Much as we may wish it, Ofcom does not have the powers to prohibit any specific body (government department, agency or public service contractor) from using Business Rate numbers.
Similarly with 080 numbers, if a public body wishes to meet callers costs then it must do so without discrimination. It is not Ofcom's job to direct them in this respect. I hope that Ofcom is waiting for the situation with the reduced termination charge to resolve itself before diving in with further regulations concerning calls to 080 numbers from mobiles. Attempting to do so whilst the situation regarding who meets the costs of mobile telephony is in flux would be a little foolish.