Really free?
Or will the phone companies still charge you for sending and receiving text messages?
Barking and Dagenham council has launched a free text message service which allows housing tenants and leaseholders to get information about their council related affairs more easily, without having to use the local authority's contact centre. Residents can send a message to the council and they will receive a reply with their …
Well the simple answer is, quite likely to be charged and probably above the standard rate if the number to text is a short code. Unlikely to be charged to receive the response, but that could change as the worldwide economic disaster siphons more cash out of the councils' budgets.
The problem is that providing a full number to send a text to means many more errors in entering said number, hence the popularity of short codes but they are excluded from bundled allowances on just about all PAYG and contract tariffs.
It may still be cheaper for the council to provide a free text service than to send letters, especially given the cost of posting a letter now. Of course, if too many people make too much use of it then it'll get expensive, but a sensible council would negotiate a good bulk rate in advance.
While you are laughing think of this. Council IT departments are being asked to add the specific skill set of negotiation for SMS packages to their workload. We want them to do more (lazy barstewards) to get value for money. But then we come up with a brilliant wheeze of using technology to solve this.
We want to pay councils less -- after all I don't want to waste my hard-earned cash on profligate councils, I want to waste it on stupid over-priced gadgets such as iPhones. It is my right to waste my own money, not be forced to let someone else to waste it.
I for one, who has worked in IT for over 25 years (in both public and private sectors), would struggle with such requests.
The IT world is stuffed full of those who want to find easy ways to rid people of money. And using legal contracts is oh, so easy.
But if you, Asiren, think it is easy not to get sucked in, prey tell the rest of us how to do it.
Firstly, I'd be surprised if this was a case of using technology to lighten the work load, and not a case of "lets keep the scruffy person as far away from us as possible."
B: The person negotiating the price would most likely not be from the IT department, but from the finance/HR department. The reason why I spit coffee all over my keyboard is that it was claimed that the council will be able "to negotiate a good bulk rate in advance." When it's not your money, negotiations tend not to be as hard as usual. When your pay isn't related to your negotiation performance, the effort is even less.
B.2: Councils negotiating bulk rates are more likely to go for the "10% off and a new iPhone for all the council (to be able to send the texts, natch)" than "20% off first x texts, and 15% off the rest." Not exactly "value for money" for the taxpayer, is it.
Free? In what way exactly? I'd imagine that this service is paid for by local council tax payers, so whilst it's "free" to the chavs who spent all their dole money down the local bookies and wetherspoons, I'd doubt it's free to those who own or rent their own property and pay taxes.
This gives the Council a unique opportunity to correlate real names with otherwise "anonymous" PAYG customers which does raise some serious privacy concerns. Given the economics of social housing, it stands to reason that many of the Council's tennants are likely to have PAYG phones due to credit issues preventing them from obtaining monthly contracts and with the abuse of RIPA in the past by local authorities, I am concerned this data will be used for purposes unrelated to those published by the Council.
& Dagenham must have some very tech savvy OAP tenants. How unusual!
Much interested to find out how the B&D OAP's are so very much more tech savvy than the the rest of the nations OAP's.
Is that the sound of a council jumping on a Band Wagon?
What's next in the exciting world of B&D....refuse pick up via Twitter? Swimming lessons via Carrier pigeon? Some council services just need a 'wetware interface scenario' endof.
>Free? In what way exactly? I'd imagine that this service is paid for by local council tax payers, so >whilst it's "free" to the chavs who spent all their dole money down the local bookies and >wetherspoons, I'd doubt it's free to those who own or rent their own property and pay taxes.
Seems El Reg is slowly going up in the world, now Daily Mail journos are astroturfing here :)
Now then, I have to take issue against a common and understandable bout of misinformation.
Every council house you see returns something like £80 in rent each week whether benefit paid or otherwise.
So a 20,000 council runs housing estate returns about £1.6 million per week in rents. Yep - you got that misinformation on true dude 1.6 million spondooliz per week for modest 20,000 homes at 80 molukaz a week.
That makes for (20,000 x 80 = 200,000 x 8 = 1600,000 no?) 1.6 million times 50 weeks (can't be bothered with the twiddly bits) = 1,600,000 x 50 = 16,000,000 x 5 = 80,000,000 a year no?
Double plus, every council estate you have ever seen is a managed resource with the council (your council?) taking a sizeable management fee. This holds true even if said council estate is being managed into a sink estate.
Truth is the spend on employees from rents received is probably magnitudes better than that spent on said properties.
Why do you think Whitehall wishes to hide social housing account so very, very well and hope it is misrepresented equally so very, very well?