Two issues for my new friends and neighbors in Canada:


On the costs proposed:     http://www.herald.ns.ca/stories/2001/10/16/f109.raw.html

And an important matter of public safety:



                                       POSTED AT 3:44 PM EDT    Monday,
July 23

                                       N.S. resident fights to keep 911 working


                                       By DARREN YOURK
                                       Globe and Mail Update

-----------------------------------------------------------------

                                       Panic swept over Bob Wulkowicz
                                       when he didn't hear a dial tone.

                                       The Chicago native had just awoken
                                       in the middle of the night with severe
                                       chest pains and struggled to the
                                       phone to call for help. Barely
able to
                                       breathe, he put the receiver to his
                                       ear and heard nothing.

                                       The phone company had mistakenly
                                       disconnected his service.

                                       "I thought I'd had a heart
attack," Mr.
                                       Wulkowicz said. "I was home alone
                                       at the time because my wife was out
                                       of town. I was really upset, and I
                                       ended up out in the middle of the
night in the cold at a pay phone trying to
                                       get the phone company to hook my
phone back up. It was unsettling and
                                       unnerving."

                                       Illinois Bell had mistakenly
credited the credits from all three of Mr.
                                       Wulkowicz's home phone lines to
one phone number instead of alloting them
                                       proportionately. 

                                       "The service department is
instructed not to listen to people who call and
                                       plead," Mr. Wulkowicz said. "They
had shut it off because they thought I was
                                       a deadbeat. It was a data entry
error on their part."

                                       The life-changing event happened
more than a decade ago. Mr. Wulkowicz,
                                       a self-described "recovering
bureaucrat" now living in a remote part of
                                       Guysborough County in
northeastern Nova Scotia, has been on a mission to
                                       ensure that 911 calls can be made
from any phone, connected or
                                       disconnected, ever since. 

                                       "I'm living in a place where
neighbours live far apart," Mr. Wulkowicz said of
                                       his new community. "The volunteer
services take some time to respond, so it
                                       sure seemed to me that it was
ultracritical to be able to call 911. Nobody has
                                       any business disconnecting your
911 access to it because they think they
                                       have some right to do it over a
billing dispute.

                                       "Nobody deserves to die because a
phone company has some policy about
                                       disconnecting your phone."

                                       After his scare in 1988, Mr.
Wulkowicz launched a one-man campaign in
                                       Illinois. He did extensive
research on emergency call cases and found that
                                       as many 30,000 people in Chicago
were without phones at any given time for
                                       various reasons. 

                                       He sued Illinois Bell, asking
that the company be required to always leave
                                       the phone dial tone in place so
emergency calls could be made. Armed with
                                       petitions and the support of
Chicago city council and the state's attorney
                                       general, he ended up in front of
the Illinois Commerce Commission arguing
                                       for his case.

                                       "The phone company was a pretty
powerful lobby so I lost," Mr. Wulkowicz
                                       said. 'As a little guy I didn't
make it, but my son was going to school in
                                       Vermont and decided to do the
same thing there. It exists as law there now.
                                       He got it through. I was tired
and bitter about losing, but his success inspires
                                       me to keep going." 

                                       His batteries recharged, Maritime
Telephone and Telegraph in his new home
                                       province is the next target for
the city boy turned rural crusader.

                                       "Back when I first started this,
I had a number of technical issues to deal
                                       with," he said. "But today in
Nova Scotia they only have digital machines in
                                       their central offices. It
wouldn't cost them anything in the sense that if
                                       someone disconnects or reconnects
your phone they aren't out fooling
                                       around with wires or climbing
ladders. It can all be done in the central office
                                       in the blink of an electronic
eye." 

                                       MTT spokesperson Lynn Coveyduck
said Monday that the company intends
                                       to listen to Mr. Wulkowicz's proposal.

                                       "He's put a a message in with us
and we will follow up with him," Ms.
                                       Coveyduck said. " As a company,
we're always interested in what our
                                       customer's have to say about how
we can improve our service. The
                                       possibility is out there, but we
have to investigate it further." Mr. Wulkowicz
                                       points out that anyone with a
working cell phone can call 911, whether or not
                                       they are connected with a company.

                                       "If your battery works, you can
call for help," Mr. Wulkowicz said. "Yet we
                                       don't give people that in the
supposed safety and security in their own
                                       homes. It is a blind spot, and we
need to change it."

                                       Bell Canada spokesman Andrew Cole
said in Toronto that although he sees
                                       value in the continuous emergency
service, right now if customers don't pay
                                       they aren't keeping a dial tone
on their phones.

                                       "Any time you have a standard
phone service you pay for, part of that cost is
                                       for the 911 service, Mr. Cole
said. "Keep in mind that in terms of telecom
                                       providers around the world,
Canadians pay some of the lowest basic-service
                                       fees anywhere. Part of that
service is one of the most outstanding 911
                                       services around." 

                                       Retired from the Chicago Park
District, Mr. Wulkowicz now spends his time
                                       writing and lecturing about
environmental issues. He hopes he can make a
                                       difference in his adoptive home. 

                                       "I came here to enjoy the
serenity and raw beauty," he said. "I just want to try
                                       to fix some little things for
people who have quiet voices. There's no question
                                       that we can save someone's life.
I've learned my lessons and this time I
                                       intend to get this through."

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