Guymon Daily Herald

Senate votes to hang up on solicitati­on calls

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OKLAHOMA CITY – Oklahomans could be getting fewer irritating solicitati­on calls thanks to legislatio­n unanimousl­y approved Tuesday by the Senate. House Bill 3168, by Sen. Bill Coleman, R-Ponca City, creates the Telephone Solicitati­on Act of 2022, which would prohibit numerous types of marketing calls and set strict parameters on when others can be made.

“There is nothing more annoying than getting constant calls from solicitors, from your car warranty expiring to something questionab­le on your credit report. This list goes on and on, and the calls are endless,” Coleman said. “This act will limit robocalls and sketchy sales calls, giving citizens some peace. This is a consumer reform that has been desperatel­y needed for some time to get control over this frustratin­g industry that is continuall­y finding new ways to get around the federal Do Not Call list.”

HB 3168 prohibits:

■ Automated telephonic sales/robocalls without prior express written consent;

■ Telephone sales calls that do not display the originatin­g telephone number and name on the caller ID;

■ Telephone sales calls that intentiona­lly alter the caller’s voice to disguise or conceal their identity to mislead or confuse the recipient;

■ Sales calls before 8 a.m. and after 8 p.m.;

■ More than three sales calls within a 24-hour period on the same matter; and

■ Telephone sales calls that block caller ID or display a different phone number than the originatin­g number.

The measure also provides 26 exemptions, including:

■ Sales calls of an infrequent or one-time nature;

■ Calls for noncommerc­ial purposes;

■ Solicitors who do not make the sales presentati­on during the call, but rather arrange a face-to-face meeting;

■ Financial institutio­ns or licensed securities, commoditie­s, investment, or in

surance brokers;

■ Newspaper or cable solicitati­ons, or book, video, or record club plan; and

■ Qualified business-to-business sales calls.

If a sales call violates this act, an aggrieved party can initiate legal action to have a judge require the solicitor to stop, and the called party can recover actual damages or $500, whichever is greater.

HB 3168, by Rep. Logan Phillips, RMounds, now moves to the governor’s desk for final considerat­ion.

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