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- Path: sparky!uunet!news.miami.edu!ncar!destroyer!gatech!swrinde!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!decwrl!lll-winken!telecom-request
- From: mgreeny@uxa.ecn.bgu.edu (David S. Greenberg)
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: University Telephone System
- Message-ID: <telecom13.38.3@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Date: 23 Jan 93 07:01:25 GMT
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Organization: Greeny's Bar & Grill
- Lines: 61
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 13, Issue 38, Message 3 of 11
-
- Hi all. At the university I attend/work at, one is able to apply for a
- four digit code which allows one to make long distance calls by
- dialing 1,xxxx,AC + 7D (where xxxx is the code...). This then goes
- out over some outgoing WATs line I suppose, etc. Usually the service
- isn't too bad, and it's not super expensive, but there are two things
- that are irritating:
-
- 1) Each time a bill is sent to someone, they're charged a
- 35 cent billing fee.
-
- 2) If one wants to call 900 numbers with a code, one has
- to ask for the 900 number access to be enabled for the code, and be
- willing to pay a 10% surcharge on top of whatever the regular 900
- number cost is.
-
- My question is thus "Is it legal for the University to do either or
- both of the above?", and/or are such actions covered by some
- tariff(s) somewhere? (or rules, laws, regulations, guidelines,
- etc...).
-
- Also, I've noticed that it's impossible to dial a 900 number with a
- calling card (I wanted to call a mail order computer store one day
- that's what this all stems from). Asking Sprint, MCI, or AT&T
- garnered the response that the 900 calls have the potential to be more
- costly than an overseas call, so they've been blocked, and ONE can not
- equest that access be granted. Doesn't this violate something related
- to equal access?
-
- Finally (yes, this is more than I mentioned), can the University be
- required to allow "dial-1" access from a phone in which the individual
- room resident gets to choose his/her long distance carrier of choice
- rather than being forced to deal with the University run system?
-
- Thanks in advance,
-
-
- Microcomputer Support Specialist, Student Residential Programs
- Western Illinois University, Macomb, IL 61455
- Internet: mgreeny@uxa.ecn.bgu.edu (preferred) GEnie: GREENY (once a month)
- AOL: GREENY1@AOL.COM (really infrequently....use the internet!)
-
-
- [Moderator's Note: The person, organization, company or institution
- ultimatly responsible for the payment of the bills gets a lot of
- leeway in deciding how to run things. There is very little they *have*
- to give you at all. The 35 cent billing fee they charge is about half
- of what some telcos add as a surcharge to calling card calls. Your
- four digit PIN essentially functions like a calling card. Where most
- telcos will not allow 900-number calls on calling cards, your school
- is willing to do it provided you pay a surcharge for the extra
- paperwork involved. It seems to me you have a much better deal than
- some universities give their students.
-
- Read the message from Thomas Brown which follows next in this issue to
- see *why* some places will not allow '900-style' calls to be billed to
- credit cards. While his case deals with the workaround to 900 blocking
- which involves being called back 'collect', the problem remains the
- same. There are too many disputes involved; no one wants to be in the
- middle of it. If your university is willing to do it for a ten percent
- surcharge, then you've got a good deal, I think. PAT]
-