Reblogged from Vox Political:
That’s
frustration for the Coalition government, not the public (for a
change).
If you’ve ever had to telephone a government department, you probably know
that it is about as hard as the private company operating the service can make
it. This is to enable that company to screw as much money as possible
out of you before you have said a single word to a government
employee.
The system is set so that there is only a small number of rings before a
machine picks up – this is when they start charging you – and a
recorded voice lists a series of options, from which you may choose. Then you
wait.
And wait.
They provide music for you to… enjoy, but this is interrupted at 20- or
30-second intervals by another recorded voice telling you that all operators are
busy but your call is important.
After a non-specific length of time, a human being comes on the line and
tells you that they can’t deal with your problem but will put you through to
someone who can. Then its back to the music, interrupted by the recorded
voice.
I have no idea what happens after that. I do not have the
disposable cash to pay through the nose for the privilege of listening to
‘The Four Seasons’ being ruined. If I want to hear classical music,
I’ll get Spotify or – Luddite that I am – spin a CD.
Currently, whenever I receive correspondence saying I should telephone a
government department, I respond with a letter. Now that Royal Mail is
privatised, I suppose I shall have to find another alternative when prices start
to rocket.
Fortunately, it seems Margaret Hodge and the Commons Public Accounts
Committee have taken note of the problem and action is being proposed, after it
was revealed that people have been paying around £56 million to speak to
government departments on premium rate phone lines.
How did they find out? Was it brought to their attention because of the high
volume of ‘abusive’ messages from clients who had been told their calls were
being recorded, but who still ended up screaming that they had been waiting
forever, the call had already cost them the national debt of a small developing
country and their spouse and family had given up and left them – most
probably for a telephone company executive?
Sadly, this isn’t even news. It
was reported in December 2012 that calls to HM Revenue and Customs had left
customers paying £33 million a year. Somebody calling from a mobile would have
spend £1.92 if they waited the average length of time on hold – and that is
before anyone dealt with their query.
According to the
BBC, the committee found that one-third of Whitehall numbers used by the
public were higher-rate – including those for benefit, victim support and tax
inquiries.
This higher rate means calls can cost 10.5p per minute. With the average call
costing 56p, this means calls from landlines can last around five minutes and 20
seconds and we can deduce from our own experiences that most people are
unlikely to have actually spoken to anybody human at all.
It seems possible, therefore, that the government telephone system –
certainly that used by the DWP – is designed, not as a service to “customers”
(their word), but as a means of keeping them away. Not only
that, but it also seems designed to fleece them of as much money as
possible while doing so.
“Customers of government services should be able to contact those services
easily and cheaply,” the BBC article quotes Mrs Hodge. “Charging customers
higher rates… is not acceptable, especially when the customers are often
vulnerable people.”
There was also criticism that calls took too long to answer.
In response, the Department for Work and Pensions has said it will offer a
choice between 0845 and 0345 numbers, allowing callers to choose the cheapest
line. I’m willing to bet it won’t tell callers which line that is. Also, it will
be massively over-used, leading to longer queues, so people will end up paying
just as much.
You’ll have noted that nothing was said about cutting down waiting times.
Consumer group Which? wants public bodies and companies to provide
either freephone or local rate numbers for customer service and complaints
lines, saying it is “ridiculous” to force a huge bill on people, especially when
they have to wait on hold.
It isn’t ridiculous if the phone service has been contracted out to a private
company, though – as seems to be the case with the DWP, at the very least.
In that circumstance, it’s a money-spinner – one that is about to peter out,
if Mrs Hodge gets her way. That’s why this is frustrating for the
government.
How many Conservative MPs have financial interests in the Telecoms
industry?