Ready for no more telemarketing calls
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Lolita Harper
The smell of pot roast is wafting through the air and the family has
just sat down for supper. As dad gets ready to pass the potatoes, the
phone rings. It is a nasally sales person with a phenomenal deal on
vacuum cleaner bags.
“No thank you.” Slam.
Even if most people’s evenings are not so Leave it to Beaver-ish
and the pitch on the other end of the phone is likely more credible,
for many people, it still isn’t OK to receive a call from a salesman
at dinnertime.
For them, Wednesday looks to be a phone-call free day.
President Bush signed a bill Monday that removes one of the
hurdles of the federal “do not call” registry, started by the Federal
Trade Commission. An attempt by legislatures to stop the annoying
calls that interrupt their constituents’ dinners, the no-call law
creates a national registry of those whose phone numbers may not be
dialed for telemarketing cold calls.
Telemarketing companies have balked at the new legislation, saying
it would cost them millions of dollars in business and kill thousands
of jobs. Their argument often falls on ears as deaf as those who
answer one of their company’s cold calls.
Costa Mesa resident Jason Drexel, who works at L.A. Boxing in
Costa Mesa, said calls frustrate him most when they come during
business hours.
“It actually [ticks] me off because I think it’s a potential
customer, and then, I end up hearing some bull script being read in
my ear,” Drexel said.
Drexel so far doesn’t worry about getting calls at home because he
does not have a land line -- just a cell phone. Telemarketers haven’t
gotten access to that number just yet, he said.
Despite Bush signing the bill Monday, it is not clear that
telemarketers’ access to other numbers is going to disappear
altogether.
Constitutional challenges remain as a judge has blocked the start
of the rules by arguing they infringed on telemarketers’ freedom of
speech. Though for now, the rules will go into effect Wednesday, that
decision likely will be battled in the courtroom.
The Federal Communication Commission announced Monday that it
would enforce the “do not call list,” keeping the registry, which 50
million people have joined, on track for the Wednesday launch while
adding another twist in the duel between telemarketers and government
regulators over the anti-marketing measure.
Newport Beach resident and businessman Ray Saggar said he likes to
turn the tables on the telemarketers and ask them random questions to
throw them off. Questions like, “What are you wearing?”
“I like to mess with them,” he said. “The funniest thing is when
you can just tell that they are reading and you keep interrupting
them and they keep losing their spot.”
There are dozens of sites on the Internet with tips on how to
avoid telemarketers, what to say, how to embarrass them and even how
to sue if they refuse to delete your number from their cold-calling
list.
Bob and Tammy Green in Iowa wrote on one site that each time a
telemarketer calls, they request to be deleted from the list. They
get the name of the company and a supervisor and write them in a
notebook, along with the time and date. The Greens have successfully
sued two companies. One for $400 and court costs and the other for
$600.
“Most company’s get the ideal real fast and never call you back,”
the couple posted. “If they realize you’re going to get in their
pocketbook, they leave you alone.”
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