sherbert wrote on Mar 23
rd, 2011 at 11:15am:
We await official confirmation of what appears to be an authoritative statement.
All I have been able to glean from various sources is that this will simply be a non-emergency number for contacting the local Police Service. It will not, as originally conceived, also cover reports of matters, e.g. noise, covered by local authorities.
As this looks to be something of a re-launch, the opportunity for the Home Office to re-open negotiations with the telephone companies about the charging basis should have been taken. When granted the number, the Home Office noted the need for consistency of charging and undertook to review the charging basis when assessing the impact of the arrangements initially put in place.
As the scope and nature of the service has changed considerably, there can be no question that a further review is necessary as this goes forward.
I suspect that this item was omitted from the Ofcom consultation - Simplifying Non-Geographic Numbers - as it was seen to be essentially dead. As it appears that it will now return to prominence, Ofcom should be ready to canvass opinion in the context of its general review of NGCS, and to comment at a suitable stage.
The present call cost information for 101 sits clearly within the target area of the type of nonsense that Ofcom seeks to outlaw:-
Quote:Calls to 101 from standard BT lines cost 10p for the entire call. The cost of calls to 101 from other networks and mobiles may vary. Check with your telephone company for details.
Unless a common simple charge (or none) can be agreed then there must be a PCA. (Note: my advocacy for a PCA for this exceptional case - as is the nature of calls to 101 - must not be seen as undermining my general comments on PCAs.)
4PetesSake wrote on Mar 22
nd, 2011 at 10:01pm:
The 101 number should be classed as a non-geographic number in the same way as n 03 number.
For me the problem is with the variable nature of the charge. The cost of the call has to be met somehow, whether through general taxation or a charge on callers.
Calls to 03 numbers are paid for by the caller at the geographic (lowest) rate they pay for calls (this is generally zero for contract telephones). This is the right approach for many calls to public bodies, where it is proper that citizens incur only the cost associated with a geographical call from their chosen provider and tariff.
In my opinion, 111 should have been priced in the same way as 03 calls (indeed each area ready and able to offer such a service should have had its own 03 number). The 111 trials will be reviewed in the coming Autumn, when I believe that it may have to be reconsidered most seriously. The proposed abandonment of local NHS bodies may make it unworkable in its present form anyway.
Setting 101 at 10p per call from BT makes it cheaper than 03 for some callers at some times, but more expensive for others. The three digit numbers can be priced in any way that can be agreed between the body issued with the number and the telephone service providers; each case should be considered on its merits.
I like the idea of a fixed price per call for 101 and understand the strong arguments for why the rate should not be zero. The police do not have a turnstile at the entrance to a police station, but they do not pay your bus fare or car parking charges when you visit them.
Because of the particular nature of the 101 service, I believe that a single charge rate should be set to apply across all providers, with the necessary cross-subsidy and taxpayer contribution. Whether the appropriate figure is zero, 10p, 20p or £1 per call, it should be the same for all citizens.
If all the costs of the basic telephony (not that of the police call handling, which would be expressed in pounds per call) could be expected to be met at the fixed rate of 10p per call, across all types of telephone, I would not have a problem with this. If such a fixed price went beyond 20p and / or if significant taxpayer subsidy was required, then I would question the propriety of the project. (It seems that I will probably have to raise these questions.)