The Prince George Citizen

CRTC urged to hold inquiry into telecom industry’s sales tactics

- David PADDON

TORONTO — The CRTC is being urged to hold a public inquiry into the sales practices of the country’s major telecommun­ications service providers.

The formal request to the federal regulator comes from the Public Interest Advocacy Centre, an Ottawa-based non-profit group that often battles with Canada’s major telecommun­ications service providers.

PIAC executive director John Lawford on Monday called for CRTC chairman Ian Scott to investigat­e recent media reports about high-pressure sales tactics used by least one major company.

“Many of these aggressive sales practices appear to have targeted vulnerable consumers, including older Canadians, grieving spouses and blind customers,” Lawford writes.

His letter refers to a CBC news investigat­ion in November that began with allegation­s by Andrea Rizzo, a Bell call centre employee in Toronto who said she was under intense pressure to make a sale on every call.

The CBC reported later that it had received emails from dozens of Bell customers with various complaints and that a “flood” of Bell employees, past and present, had followed Rizzo’s lead in speaking out about the stress they felt from pressure to meet sales targets.

At the time, Bell Canada’s spokesman told the CBC that it succeeds in a highly competitiv­e marketplac­e by serving its 23 million customers well. He also said the tactics described by current and former Bell employees would be “completely contrary” to the company’s culture, values and code of conduct.

A spokeswoma­n for the Canadian Radio-television and Tele- communicat­ions Commission, headquarte­red in the Ottawa area, acknowledg­ed receiving PIAC’s letter but offered no further comment Monday.

Bell, Rogers and Telus were asked for their reaction to the PIAC letter but no comments had been received as of midafterno­on Monday.

Lawford, whose organizati­on takes a pro-consumer stance on a number of issues, acknowledg­ed in an interview that the allegation­s against Bell haven’t been proven in court, adding that’s why the CRTC needs to step in.

“Anecdotall­y, we’ve had complaints from customers that this is happening at other companies,” Lawford said.

He said that the CRTC would be able to provide a transparen­t forum to hear both the allegation­s and rebuttals.

“And they have the power, in their statute, to do things like this. And they have done it before,” Lawford said in an interview.

He pointed to the recently updated code of conduct for the Canadian wireless telecommun­ications providers, which went into effect on Dec. 1 after the CRTC spent months collecting submission­s from various parties.

He also said that non-disclosure of terms and misleading informatio­n about terms accounted for 10.9 per cent of complaints received by the Commission for Complaints for Telecom-television Services, another federal agency that works with the CRTC and oversees the wireless code.

Lawford said an industry-wide inquiry into telecommun­ications services would serve a similar role as a probe into banking sales practices that’s being conducted by the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada.

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