NFH wrote on Jan 12
th, 2012 at 9:05am:
When this is enacted in the UK, the wording will be different, at least slightly, from the above. When the relevant parliamentary bill reaches committee stage in the Commons and Lords, I suggest e-mailing the committee members with suggestions to make the wording watertight.
If I read Article 28 correctly, the relevant legislation must be published not later than 13 December 2013, with application by 13 June 2014.
It has been announced that the Treasury will be going ahead with a ban on credit card handling charges (also from the Directive) by the end of 2012. There has been no confirmation of how this will be done, nor any explanation of how this relates to the Treasury, rather than BIS. It addresses retail charges, not charges by banks, and the VAT issue which drew the Treasury to become involved in this matter is now resolved.
There is always a variety of ways open for enacting the provisions of Directives through legislation. The telephone charges issue generally falls within the province of BIS, although now that DCMS has total responsibility for Ofcom, the situation is unclear. This is further confused by the fact that Ofcom itself has not (yet) taken the power to regulate users of 084 numbers. If the Treasury is indeed going to be preparing legislation to enact the Directive, then some may ask why it does not do the full job.
As stated previously, I see this provision as largely removing the need for the 084 and 087 ranges in their present form, because a very large number of current users would not be able to use them once the effect of the Directive was enacted.
This is a factor which Ofcom must consider in the context of its forthcoming consultation. The implementation period for the regulations which will emerge from its current work will extend beyond 2014, so Ofcom must consider the effect now.
As suggested, we must be on the lookout for the enacting legislation, which could be found to be contained in wider legislation from one of three departments. This is however highly relevant to Ofcom and indeed the regulations imposed on its behalf by PP+.
Provisions of previous EU Directives have been accepted by the Commission as having been enacted through the existence of regulatory powers and policies, without fresh legislation. (I refer to a total prohibition of Silent Calls, when the original purpose of the call was for marketing - no legislation was made to enact this.) I am not sure that something so soft would wash in this case, when the boys come round to check before reporting to the Council and the Parliament in 2016, however one cannot be sure.