Dollar
Deals
– You see these commercials constantly on television. Even though the
commercials all say 99¢ for Up To 20 minutes, most of us only hear the
99¢, not the up to. What this really means is that
you can spend up-to 99¢ for a one minute, three minute or five minute
call, making the cost as high as 99¢ per minute. Again, you have to
really pay attention to the fine print.
Billing
Games – Everyone
bills the same way…right? Not really, and it can make a big difference
to your pocketbook. Some plans bill in full minutes, other bill in smaller
increments, thirty or six second blocks. How does this affect me you ask?
Here’s how it can impact how much you pay for a call.
Let’s
say you make a call that is 3.2 minutes long. On a full minute plan you
pay for a 4-minute call. The company adds the additional time to the call
and then they bill you. Let’s create an example: suppose company A
charges 7¢ minute and bills in full minutes, while company Z charges 8¢
per minute, but bills in six second increments. Here is how much you would
pay for the 3.2-minute call.
Company A: 3.2 minute call is rounded to 4 minutes X 7¢ = 28¢
Company Z: 3.2 minute call is billed at 3.2 minutes X 8¢ = 26¢
As
you can see, company Z actually offers a better deal on this call. The
more you look at all these deals, the more you realize that even subtle
differences can really impact how much you pay for long distance calls
over a year’s time.
Understanding Your Phone Bill and Other
Information
PIC
Freeze-
(Preferred Interexchange Carrier) to keep unscrupulous companies from
switching (also known as slamming) your phone number away from your
preferred long distance company, you can freeze your choice with your
local telephone company. Simply call your local phone company and tell
them you want to freeze your PIC. Now the only way your company can be
changed is if you personally call the local phone company and let them
know you want to change. They will usually let you create a password to
protect from someone pretending to be you calling them and asking to make
a change.
Are you being charged for
your dial-up Internet calls?
If you have a local dial-up
number for your Internet connection, and it is considered to be in your
local area, you need to make sure that the calls are not routed as long
distance calls.
Have you been switched to
the carrier you selected?
LEC's (local exchange
company) also known by most as their local phone company, can take up to 45 days to switch you to the new long distance
service you requested. Meanwhile, you will receive bills from your old
company until the switch occurs. You need to call your LEC (whoever
supplies your local service) and insist that they make the switch to the long
distance carrier you prefer right now. If you have chosen a long distance
carrier and you feel that it has been long enough for your LEC to switch
your services over, simply dial 1-700-555-4141. This is a recording that
will tell you who is carrying your long distance service. If the 700 test
says something other than the carrier of your choice, you should call your
LEC.
Are you being charged for
dialing a 10-10- number?
If you don't actually use a
long distance service but instead rely on dialing 10-10- numbers before
your long distance calls, you need to see if you are being billed a
monthly service charge on top of the call itself.
Are there any 809 area code calls on your bill?
If you have an 809 area code
call listed on your bill, you probably need to question it. The 809 prefix
leads to an international call. Those calls may cost you upwards of twenty
dollars a minute. Some companies have been known to send out offers that
say you won a car and then direct you to call a number to claim the prize.
Many times this involves calling an 809 number. When you call this number,
you are calling internationally. You can ask your local phone company to block
international calling.
Did you make all the
calls listed on your bill?
You may be shocked to learn
that some long distance companies will either accidentally or purposefully
add random calls to your bill - calls you may not have made at all. Look
at each call and ask yourself if you know who the number belongs to. If
you don't, it may be a call you are being charged for but never made. Call
the company and verify if it was a call you made. If not, have them credit
the call.
Taxes
and Charges – Sometimes
it seems as if there are more taxes and fees than actual calls on your
phone bill. What are all those taxes for? (The government likes to call
them fees.) Well, it can very from state to state or even city to city,
but here are the most common taxes and fees appearing on your bill.
USF
– (Universal Service Fund) This fee is charged by the federal government
and is used to provide basic phone service to people who are unable to
afford phone service. It is also used to provide funding to schools and
libraries to connect to the internet and to each other.
PICC
–
(Preferred Interexchange Carrier Charge) This is a fee your local phone
company charges all long distance companies to connect to them. This fee
appears on the your long distance phone bill. This money is collected and
sent to the local phone company.
SMS
–
(Service Management System). SMS is a national clearinghouse for all 800
numbers. Think of them as the holding company that manages the status of
all 800 numbers. This is where long distance companies go to see if an 800 number is
available and where previously used numbers are stored. This fee only
applies if you have an 800 number. SMS charges all long distance
companies a monthly fee
to manage and maintain a national database of all 8XX numbers.
Taxes
–
Depending on where you live you can expect to pay city, county, state, and
federal taxes. If you use a travel card to make calls outside of your home
state, you may find taxes charged from the state(s) you made calls from.
When
you look at all the fees and taxes on your bill, it can become pretty
overwhelming trying to understand it all. Hopefully, this information will
prove to be helpful.
How do you protest your
bill?
You can first call the
company that sent you the bill. If you want to file an informal complaint
with the FCC, you can do so by telephone at 1-888-CALL-FCC and toll-free
at 1-888-TELL-FCC, or FAX at 202-418-0232, or email at fccinfo@fcc.gov,
or fill out an online complaint form at www.fcc.gov/cib/ccformpage.html.
Service
Options – Today
there are many ways people can communicate. We list some of the most
popular communication alternatives available. Since most people are
already familiar with email (after all, you are reading this on the
internet), pagers, and voice mail/answering machines, we want to focus on
some of the lesser known technologies and how they might benefit you.
VOIP – (Voice over internet protocol) This service can
work in a few different ways, but the two most common are over your phone
or computer. When using a phone, you are typically given an access number.
You dial the access number, then a code, then dial the number that you
wish to reach. The local phone company sends this call to an IP provider
instead of sending it to a traditional long distance company. The call is
then routed over the internet and is received by the called party.
On
your computer you need to load voice type software that allows you to use
the service. Many companies use their own proprietary software, so you may
not be able to use it to call all of your friends on their computers
unless they support the same protocol. Some services allow you to call
standard telephones as well. These calls are also carried over the
internet.
The
two biggest issues with VOIP are quality and reliability. Sure this can be
an inexpensive way to communicate, but at what level are you willing to
sacrifice quality with savings. Because the calls go over the internet,
reliability is an issue. You know how bad the internet can be sometimes
and since you are trying to send voice over the same networks, it is not
uncommon to experience poor voice quality, echo, and calls terminating in
the middle of a conversation. Most people just won’t tolerate voice
service at this low level.
The
other issue is quality. Remember, the call is being sent as a data stream
and not analog voice. With IP, voice is sent in packets just like data.
With data this is no big deal because the packets don’t always arrive in
order, but are organized at the other end. With voice, you can’t do this
and make the voice sound intelligible. Each packet must be received in
order. To do this requires a great deal of bandwidth, which requires large
sums of money to guarantee the quality of sound, and there goes your savings and then some.
The
good news is that technology is starting to effectively deal with quality
of service issues. It won’t be too far in the future when VOIP could
become a common and quality way to communicate. However, since the local
phone company carries the first and last miles, and they will surely at
some point start charging for the service, VOIP may lose its pricing
advantage in short order.
Unless
you are a large company building big private networks capable of properly
handling voice and data over the same fiber, calling as we do today is
still the most reliable and cost effective way to communicate.
DSL
– (Digital Subscriber Line) There are many types of DSL service. The
most common are ADSL, SDSL, and HDSL. This service allow you to have high
speed internet access using existing copper wire already supplied by your
local phone company to your home of office. Up until recently you could
only send or receive information at speeds of up to 56/64K without
ordering an expensive T1 circuit or ISDN. Now you can use that standard
copper to achieve speed that can meet or exceed T1 technology, for a
fraction of the cost.
A
company, such as Longdistance.com, can take the copper that goes from your
computer to your local phone company and convert it to a high-speed data
line. Once the data stream from your computer reaches the local central
office, it is handed over to a DSL provider who “treats” the circuit
to allow for high bandwidth transmission. The line is then sent to the
nearest internet access and now pages that used to take minutes to load
now only takes seconds. It transforms the internet experience. However,
DSL speed can be limited by how far your phone line is located from
your local phone company’s central office. The more distance between you
and your central office, the slower the speed.
Right
now, you can live up to 50,000 feet from your local central office and
receive DSL service. However, the fastest speed you can get at this
distance is approximately 128K. If you live only a few thousand feet from
the central office, you can get speeds of 1.5M or more. Also, you need a
copper line that is free of coils and bridges. Your DSL provider will be
able to determine the quality of your local copper and determine what
speeds are available.
ADSL
is usually used for the home or very small business. The speed is a little
slower primarily by the way the signal is sent and how many people the DSL
provider allows to share the same lines to the internet. The other DSL
services are more expensive, but they allow for faster speeds and there is
less congestion due to the way traffic is engineered by the DSL provider.