Stabroek News

PUC approves monthly charges for GTT call blocking service

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Customers desirous of using GTT’s landline call blocking will have to pay from next February after the Public Utilities Commission (PUC) on Thursday approved the company’s applicatio­n to institute a monthly charge for the service.

GTT, in its applicatio­n to the PUC, had requested the implementa­tion of a rate for the call blocking service to take effect as of October 1st, 2018.

The service, currently being used by 36,368 customers, is used to prevent calls from being made from landlines to other numbers, such as internatio­nal and cellular numbers, with users being prompted for a PIN whenever any call is to be made, except for emergency calls.

While GTT requested approval to implement a charge of $360 per month for the service, the PUC, after careful considerat­ion of the submission­s made by the company and the Guyana Consumers Associatio­n (GCA), ordered that with effect from February 1st, 2019, residentia­l customers will pay a fixed monthly charge of $30, while commercial customers will pay a fixed monthly charge of $70 for the call blocking service.

The PUC’s order (3/2018) also says that the company shall embark on a sensitisat­ion exercise for its consumers regarding the implementa­tion, inclusive of informatio­n regarding its date and the options that are available.

The PUC added that where the Public Switch Telephone Network (PSTN) fails, customers’ accounts are to be credited for the number of days they are unable to access any of the value-added services and features offered by the network.

GTT had submitted that the service that is currently being provided is being facilitate­d through an infrastruc­ture that delivers an array of features that complement its wireline fixed services, which attracts a one-time cost of US$190,000, which does not take into considerat­ion the cost for repairs and the maintenanc­e of the service, said to be incidental to the operations of the infrastruc­ture.

It also noted that the yearly maintenanc­e and repair cost for the infrastruc­ture also attracts a cost of US$250,008. This recurring cost, it said, also facilitate­s a variety of services that are provided to the customers on the PSTN. It also said that the company was considerin­g spending a further US$300,000 to upgrade the system.

However, the GCA, in its opposition to GTT’s applicatio­n, had argued that the operating cost to the company in continuing the call blocking feature was unlikely to increase and, in this circumstan­ce, any tariff approval would represent free cash flow to the company.

The GCA also said that charging for a value-added service that is currently being provided will not increase the maintenanc­e cost for the infrastruc­ture and that the assets acquired in the initial investment to provide the value-added services is now fully depreciate­d.

The GCA also highlighte­d the quality of service and particular­ly its downtime, which it said precludes the customer from enjoying a seamless service. Under those circumstan­ces, it suggested that if any charges are approved by the PUC it should be user-based and not subscriber-based.

The hearings were attended by PUC Chairperso­n Dela Britton, Commission­ers Maurice Solomon and Rajendra Bissessar, PUC Secretary Vidiahar Persaud and PUC financial analyst Moorsalene Sankar.

GTT was represente­d by its Director of Legal and Regulatory Affairs Mark Reynolds and a senior engineer, Floyd Rodney, while the GCA was represente­d by its president, Patrick Dial, and advisor Yog Mahadeo.

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