CommunityAction for People and Planet. P.O. Box 68, Motueka. Phone 021 174 0400 email : duncaneddy@yahoo.com
Line Increase Rental Slated
Nelson
Mail, 2/04/06,
by Bernadette Cooney
The
cost
of
local
toll
calls
could
be
on
the
way
down
but
charges
for
a
standard
home
line
rental
are
to
rise
next
month.
A
$2.35
increase
in
the
standard
line
rental
comes
into
effect
in
March
with
Telecom
saying
it's
the
first
in
two
years
and
is
in
keeping
with
inflation.
The
move has
been slated
by Motueka
Greypower president
John Krammer,
who says
it's a "bit
rich'' given
the amount
of local
toll boundaries
imposed from
the Motueka
calling area.
The
cost
of
a
standard
line
rental
a
month
will
rise
from
$39.85
to
$42.20.
"It's
another
example
of
profits
being
more
important
then
service.
When
it's
a
toll
call
to
just
about
everywhere
within
Tasman
district,
I'd
sooner
see
them
do
away
with
local
tolls
before
they
put
line
rentals
up,''
Mr
Krammer
said.
Telecom
made
it
clear
late
last
year
that
local
toll
call
boundaries
would
stay.
The
Nelson
Bays
calling
area
has
four
toll
regions,
making
it
a
toll
call
for
most
towns
between
Nelson,
Motueka,
Golden
Bay
and
Murchison.
Telecom
spokesman
Sean
Martin
said
the
line
rental
increase
would
not
apply
to
customers
on
Anytime,
Anytime
Plus,
Budget
Link
and
60s
Plus
call
plans.
He
said
local
toll
boundaries
could
not
be
removed
or
shifted
under
the
terms
of
Telecom's
service
obligations
as
agreed
with
the
Government.
"We
can't
remove
or
change
boundaries
if
it
meant
a
single
customer
would
be
worse
off,
and
in
Motueka's
case
some
would
be
better
off
and
some
worse,''
Mr
Martin
said.
However,
he
said
a
new
regional
calling
plan
being
trialled
in
Taranaki
may
provide
some
relief
from
the
cost
of
local
toll
calls.
If
successful the
calling plan
could be
introduced in
other regions
later this
year. "This
plan would
be optional
and only
apply to
landlines but
would offer
unlimited local
toll calls
within a
region for
a monthly
fee,'' Mr
Martin said.
The
unavailability
of
toll
call
restriction
in
Motueka,
when
a
PIN
number
is
used
to
control
homeline
toll
bars,
would
also
remain
unchanged,
he
said.
All
4309
residential
customers
on
the
Motueka
exchange
cannot
access
the
PIN
number
service,
unless
they
chose
to
re-route
via
the
Nelson
network
and
change
their
phone
number.
In
a recent
publication by
Motueka-based Community
Action for
People and
Planet, telephone
users were
urged to
use pre-paid
calling cards
to save
money on
local toll
calls. Spokesman
Duncan Eddy
said, "the
more people
who shop
elsewhere the
quicker Telecom
is going
to reconsider
its ridiculous
toll-calling boundaries.''