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- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!telecom-request
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 02:06:35 -0500
- From: Monty Solomon <monty@proponent.com>
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: Phone Customers Face Dialing Changes
- Message-ID: <telecom12.858.10@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 12, Issue 858, Message 10 of 13
- Lines: 78
-
- From {The Boston Globe} 11/13/92.
-
- Taking steps to replenish the depleted supply of area codes, New
- England Telephone Co. said yesterday it would begin phasing in several
- dialing changes in February.
-
- The changes will eventually permit phone companies to use area codes
- that don't have "0" or "1" as their middle numeral, freeing up 640 new
- possibilities nationwide. The additional area codes are needed to
- create new telephone lines, which are in scare [sic] supply bacause
- [sic] of the rising use of computers, facsimile machines, pagers and
- cellular phones.
-
- But for that central reprogramming to work, customers will have to
- learn new dialing habits, New England Telephone said.
-
- Today, callers dial some calls in their area codes with seven digits,
- while other calls require "1" plus the seven digits.
-
- But by 1994 area residents won't have to add a "1" before before [sic]
- making a call in their own area code. Customers will still have to
- add that digit when making calls to other area codes.
-
- That change will take effect Feb. 2, 1993, in western Massachusetts
- exchanges of Wesfield, Russell and Monson. Next year the new
- procedure will spread throughout the 413, 603, 802, and 401 area
- codes. In 1994 residents in 617, 508, and 207 will hear the calling.
- New England Telephone provides phone service in every New England
- state except Connecticut.
-
- The switch won't change local calling areas or rates. "A toll call is
- still a toll call," Cronin said.
-
- Another change over the next couple of years will include a shift in
- the dialing for operator-assisted and calling card calls. Under the
- new plan, customers will have to dial "0" plus the area code and the
- number even if they are dialing within the same area code.
-
- New England Telephone said that its effort to establish a uniform
- dialing pattern for all its customers coincides with similar programs
- elsewhere in the nation.
-
- By 1995, besides the new area codes, the changes will free up an
- additional 152 local exchanged codes within existing area codes. It
- will increase the supply of available phone numbers nationwide from 1
- billion to 6.3 billion.
-
- End of article.
-
- One problem with this change is that callers won't automatically know
- that a call is a toll call at the time that they place it. For
- example, any non-local call which I dial within area code 508 yields a
- recording which states:
-
- "Sorry we cannot complete your call as dialed.
- To call beyond the local area you must dial 1 first.
- Do not dial 1 when dialing a local call.
- This is a recording."
-
- I always know that I will incur toll charges when dialing an inital 1
- for calls within my area code.
-
- Unfortunately, I can't easily distinguish between calls dialed to area
- code 617 which are included in my calling plan at no additional charge
- and those that incur toll charges since I always have to dial 1 617 to
- reach them.
-
- Cellular One/Boston doesn't require the dialing of an inital "1" for
- calls within the same area code. They route the call to their closest
- point of interconnect and it ends up usually being a local call.
- Often it is cheaper for me to use my cellular phone than to use my
- land line.
-
-
- Monty Solomon / PO Box 2486 / Framingham, MA 01701-0405
- monty%roscom@think.com
-
-