Times Colonist

Beware of extra costs piling up on your new smartphone

- DAVID PADDON

TORONTO — If a new smartphone is on your holiday shopping list, either as a gift or for yourself, there are a lot of possible choices to make, but some decisions about your contract could cost a lot more than you expect.

“The costs can mount up very quickly,” said Howard Maker, a federal ombudsman who heads the Commission for Complaints for Telecomtel­evision Services, also known as the CCTS.

Prices for some types of Canadian wireless service plans have fallen, but overall they remain high compared with other countries, according to a report commission­ed by the federal government and released this week.

The biggest challenge for consumers, experts agree, is predicting data usage and its effect on service cost.

“In terms of estimating personal data usages, it’s very difficult because it’s abstract,” said University of Ottawa assistant law professor Marina Pavlovic.

For example, it’s hard to know how many gigabytes of data will be used to show a single YouTube video — let alone how many videos, photos, text messages, emails and internet searches will accumulate during a billing cycle.

Another difficulty, which may be reduced under recent regulatory changes, has been service contracts that allow data to be shared among several devices with different users, such as parents and their children.

Maker said extra fees on shared plans has been one of the most common complaints to the CCTS, which oversees the wireless industry’s code of conduct on behalf of the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission.

A revision to the wireless code, announced by the CRTC in June, was to address that problem by requiring service providers to notify account holders of surpluses from all devices and authorize only them to consent to extra fees.

But two of Canada’s largest wireless service providers — Rogers and Telus — were unable to comply with that requiremen­t by the Dec. 1 deadline and asked for several additional months to adjust their billing systems.

Pavlovic — one of the lead authors of a research study presented to the CRTC last year, as it was preparing to update the wireless code — believes it still requires consumers to spend too much time and energy to avoid getting a shock with their bills.

She had wanted the CRTC, which sets the regulation­s that the CCTS oversees, to require vendors to provide consumers in advance with a checklist of all the critical informatio­n they’d require to make an informed purchase. “They did not go with our suggestion,” she said. But Pavlovic noted there are several general precaution­s that consumers can take, like watching out for promotiona­l features, such as an extra gigabyte of data, that run out before the contract. Prospectiv­e buyers should also be aware that vendors are required to provide a 15-day money-back guarantee, with certain conditions.

Other tips include checking your device settings right away, and reviewing periodical­ly, to shut off any apps or features that require data. Also monitor usage meticulous­ly, especially when a plan or device is new, and adjust your data plan up or down as needed.

If your first bill arrives and it doesn’t reflect what you expected, Pavlovic said, complain to the service provide and then be ready to go to the CCTS if necessary.

“The CCTS has a lot of power to address individual complaints,” Pavlovic said.

“The process is relatively simple. It’s an online form or people can just call in. It’s free for consumers. And very often, that’s the only leverage you need.”

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