Times Colonist

Canadian telecom complaints soar

- DAVID PADDON

There has been a dramatic increase in the number of complaints raised against Canada’s telecommun­ications companies, according to an annual tally.

The 14,272 complaints received by Canadian telecom and TV customers over the 2017-18 period was up 57 per cent from the previous year, while the total number of issues they raised rose 67 per cent to 30,734, the Commission for Complaints for Telecom-Television Services said in its report for the 12 months from Aug. 1, 2017, to July 31, 2018.

“With the addition of TV complaints to our mandate in September of 2017, we did anticipate an increase — but not the 57 per cent that we received,” CCTS commission­er Howard Maker said.

But, Maker added, fewer than five per cent of the complaints related to TV alone. “The increase was in the same types of issues that Canadians have complained about historical­ly: sales transactio­ns that go wrong, service that doesn’t work as expected, and billing problems.”

Maker said another reason for the increased number of complaints was public awareness of the CCTS due to notificati­ons by the carriers, media attention to consumer complaints and regulatory proceeding­s such as recent hearings into the sales and marketing practices of Canada’s largest wireless and internet providers.

“I think all of those things contribute to CCTS becoming more widely known,” Maker said.

The decade-old disputeres­olution body was originally responsibl­e for monitoring compliance with Canada’s wireless code, which was updated by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission, effective Dec. 1, 2017.

Wireless services continued to have the biggest number of identified issues by far, with 12,757 in 2017-18, up 49 per cent from last year’s tally.

But issues with internet service rose even more quickly to 8,987, up 56 per cent. Billing and contract disputes continued to be the two biggest issues identified in the CCTS report, regardless of type of service.

For the full 2017-18 reporting year, the biggest category of code breaches out of 111 recorded by the CCTS was about a lack of notificati­on to account holders when one or more device in a shared account hits its monthly data allowance.

Maker said the CCTS had been advocating account-level notificati­ons since 2013, when the original code went into effect, and noted that the CRTC adopted that approach in the revised code.

He said the CRTC has also noticed a trend towards more complaints about internet services and is now studying the possibilit­y of a separate internet code of conduct, in addition to its wireless and TV codes.

But Maker cautioned against just looking at raw numbers in the CCTS annual report.

It’s important to consider how a provider performed compared with the overall industry this year, how has it performed over time and how well has it resolved disputes before they get to the CCTS, he said. “And what’s the size of their customer base? Because if you have 30 per cent of the complaints and you have 50 per cent of the customers, maybe that’s not so bad. But if you have 10 per cent of the customers, then maybe that’s a problem.”

As in recent years, Bell Canada continued to receive the biggest number of complaints, 4,734 or 33.2 per cent of the total — not counting 847 directed at its Virgin Mobile flanker brand or its Bell Aliant (229) and Bell MTS (135) regional affiliates.

Bell noted that it is Canada’s largest communicat­ions provider by far, with more than 22 million customer connection­s, and so it’s not surprising that it received the largest number of complaints (33.2 per cent of total).

“It’s important to note that Bell’s share of the total continued to decline for the third year in a row, and decline more quickly than for our largest competitor­s,” the BCE subsidiary said.

Rogers received the secondlarg­est number of complaints, 1,449 or 10.2 per cent of the total, followed by Telus at No. 3 with 944 or 6.6 per cent of the total, not counting their flanker brands. Rogers said its share of complaints was far less than its market share and the year-over-growth was below the industry average.

“We’re committed to being clear, simple and fair with our customers, and while our complaints are down over 60 per cent over the last five years, one complaint is one too many,” Rogers said.

Telus continued to have the fewest complaints of the three big wireless carriers, even though the number increased 49.6 per cent — faster than at Bell (45.8 per cent) or Rogers (34.4 per cent).

For the first time since it was created, Freedom Mobile — which only has networks in Ontario, Alberta and B.C. — placed fourth in the CCTS annual tally, after the number of complaints rose 185.3 per cent to 850.

 ??  ?? Bell Canada, by far the country's largest telecom company, led the way with 4,734 complaints, followed by Rogers and Telus.
Bell Canada, by far the country's largest telecom company, led the way with 4,734 complaints, followed by Rogers and Telus.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada