NGMsGhost wrote on Jul 31
st, 2013 at 10:50am:
I find it quite incredible that someone who claims to campaign publicly and actively against the misuse of these numbers by GPs can really still be saying that people who have them were just hoodwinked in to it and it isn't their fault. We all know perfectly well …
I have never understood your lack of clarity of mind in not putting the blame for the existence of these numbers where it primarily lies. Namely with the firms that have them who are stupid and cynical enough about their customers to think they can get away with it. They only do so because they think their customers are captive and can be taken for granted.
I do not share the belief in the competence and dishonesty of businesses required to accept the analysis which appears to have been made without any engagement with them. What explanation has Squire Furneaux offered?
Because I am primarily focussed on achieving a better future, rather than whingeing about the past, I am concerned with responsibility, rather than blame. Responsibility for the current use of an inappropriate number rests squarely with the user, who can take action to get it changed. The continuing malpractice of the telcos can be addressed in some cases, but drying up their market also has an effect.
I believe that the latter is what has finally happened with Daisy and Surgery Line - but we have more work to do with the GPs who have failed to change their numbers. It is obvious that (at least some) fault lies with the former NEG, but I am not interested in a witch-hunt amongst (possibly former) practice and PCT personnel, I just want whoever is now responsible to take up the offer of penalty-free migration as soon as possible.
I recall that there was a case of an MP who got conned into using a 0845 number for her constituency office - but it was swiftly changed. (This was perhaps 3 or 4 years ago and I cannot recall the detail.) This is rare, because generally an MP would want a visibly local number for their constituency office. They are provided with (usually 020 7219) DDI numbers on the Westminster system for their parliamentary offices.
This answers the point made, although it does not resolve anything - one has to look at each case on its merits. I struggle to accept the argument that there is a fundamental moral difference between a GP (or indeed any business) that has adopted, or actively chosen to retain, a 084 number in the last 10 or more years, and one which has not. Have those who have switched away undergone a total moral transformation, or are they now subject to pressure which does not apply to others and did not apply to them previously?
Responding to some minor points made in reply #3.
I am pleased to agree that this ad-carrying site does not provide an adequate vehicle for campaigning on this issue. It does indeed have an implicit interest in the continuation of the misuse of numbers and could be said to promote inequity by enabling those who are unhappy about this to evade the problem for themselves, rather than press for change for all. (There is nothing wrong, or immoral in evading the problem or aiding evasion, it simply makes no contribution to campaigning. I would be happy to revise the latter view, if anyone could offer evidence of a case where repeated use of alternatives was proved to have caused someone to abandon an expensive number. )
Use of the split charge for telephone calls is a highly questionable practice in principle. It is however well established, stoutly defended and supported by current legislation. I am not aware of any active serious proposal for its abolition. In the light of this current reality, the fair telecoms campaign holds the clear view that it is only acceptable where the Service Charge levied is clearly declared and justified; where the Service Charge cannot be justified, it must be removed. This principle applies regardless of the number range - 084/087/09.
Similarly, we believe that the Access Charge added by the telephone company should be clearly declared. This is obviously essential if the Service Charge is to be declared, but it has a merit of its own.
We agree that there are serious issues regarding security and authorisation, especially in relation to extending the limits of the Service Charges that can be imposed on users of landlines. As "smart" mobiles are used for a variety of other financial transactions, there are wider related issues already raised in that context. As a landline is generally under control of a household, whereas a mobile is generally a personal device, the issues are separate.
We do not agree that this point is restricted only to "084/7 covert premium rate services", it is far more serious when the levels of Service Charge are greater.
(I will address the issue of the disagreement over alternative numbers and compulsion, and the bizarre suggestion about not allowing people to dilute their views, in a separate posting.)