Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

CRTC Won't Force Wireless Telecom Companies To Offer Bills On Paper

Darpan News Desk, 03 Mar, 2020 08:06 PM

    OTTAWA - Canada's telecom regulator won't force mobile service providers to offer customers paper invoices, at least not yet.

     

    But the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission is opening a consultation to learn more about whether there's a "market failure" that demands the government step in.

     

    Two advocacy groups wanted the CRTC to force Telus-owned Koodo Mobile to reverse its move to electronic billing for all but a select few of its customers.

     

    John Lawford with the Public Interest Advocacy Centre, which filed a formal complaint to the CRTC alongside the National Pensioners Federation, said Canadians have a right to receive paper bills— at no cost — under changes to the Telecommunications Act passed in 2014.

     

    Koodo argued that, while the law says telecom companies cannot charge a fee for invoicing, they are not compelled to actually provide paper bills.

     

    Since Koodo began switching to electronic bills in early 2015, most other wireless carriers, including Telus, have followed suit. Rogers is planning to do the same as of March 26.

     

    As long as companies clearly spell out their invoicing policies to new customers, the CRTC ruled Tuesday, "the offering of paper bills may operate as a competitive incentive, and that one communications service provider's refusal to cater to such a demand can be another provider's opportunity to gain a customer."

     

    But, says the ruling, the investigation of this particular complaint was narrow.

     

    "The evidence on the record of this proceeding is insufficient for the commission to conclude that the marketplace has failed to meet an economic or social need regarding the provision of paper bills and that commission intervention is warranted, since the evidence related largely to Koodo," it says.

     

    So the CRTC is seeking more information about other providers' practices, and whether there's a need for regulations, especially to protect people who might have trouble paying bills online. It's seeking input on both telecom and broadcasting services. Providers will have a month to file information on their invoicing practices. Further examination of the issues will take until the end of May.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    In St. John's, N.L., Hopes Rise Of Return To Normalcy In Daily Life — And Death

    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - There's hope in St. John's, N.L., that the daily concerns of life — and death — will slowly begin returning to normal over the weekend.    

    In St. John's, N.L., Hopes Rise Of Return To Normalcy In Daily Life — And Death

    Suspect Allegedly Head-butted And Hit Transit User With Pipe At Vancouver Station, Police Say

    On January 14th, 2020, at approximately 9:00 am, a man got off the SkyTrain at Main Street-Science World Station and walked toward the fare gates.

    Suspect Allegedly Head-butted And Hit Transit User With Pipe At Vancouver Station, Police Say

    Port Hardy Lighthouse Keeper Collects $1M Lottery Prize — After Waiting 2 Months To Get Leave

    A lighthouse keeper who works near Port Hardy says he will soon call it a career after matching all ten numbers in the Lotto 6/49 November 27, 2019 draw to win the $1 million Guaranteed Prize.

    Port Hardy Lighthouse Keeper Collects $1M Lottery Prize — After Waiting 2 Months To Get Leave

    Overnight Closures Of Pattullo Bridge Next Weekend

    The bridge will be temporarily closed during these times for the testing of a recently installed early seismic warning and wind monitoring system.

    Overnight Closures Of Pattullo Bridge Next Weekend

    Youth Sentenced In Drug Overdose Death Of 13-Year-Old Girl In New Westminster

    Youth Sentenced In Drug Overdose Death Of 13-Year-Old Girl In New Westminster
    The youth, who cannot be named because of his age, plead guilty on September 24th 2018 to one count of Trafficking in a Controlled Substance.    

    Youth Sentenced In Drug Overdose Death Of 13-Year-Old Girl In New Westminster

    Victoria Disappointed By High Court Refusal To Hear Plastic Bag Bylaw Appeal

    Victoria Disappointed By High Court Refusal To Hear Plastic Bag Bylaw Appeal
    VICTORIA - The mayor of Victoria says she's disappointed Canada's highest court won't reconsider a lower-court ruling that stopped her city from regulating single-use plastic bags.

    Victoria Disappointed By High Court Refusal To Hear Plastic Bag Bylaw Appeal