Montreal Gazette

Bell slashing roaming charges in half

Move comes before CRTC-imposed deadline to submit fee rates

- LUANN LASALLE THE CANADIAN PRESS

Bell Canada says it’s cutting roaming rates in half for cellphone customers travelling in the United States starting Tuesday in response to consumer feedback.

The move comes just weeks before the Sept. 27 deadline set by the CRTC for telecom companies to submit their roaming fee rates and how much they pay other carriers for roaming agreements.

Analyst Eamon Hoey said the Can- adian Radio-television and Telecommun­ications Commission is now much more focused on consumers and Bell’s lower roaming rates are to “blunt” the argument from consumers that rates are too high.

“The value propositio­n being offered to consumers is not commensura­te with what we see internatio­nally,” said Hoey, of Torontobas­ed Hoey Associates Management Consultant­s Inc.

The European Union is proposing that all roaming charges be eliminated across the 28-nation bloc by 2016.

The CRTC’s new wireless code, which will apply to new contracts for cellphones and other mobile devices starting Dec. 2, requires roaming charges be capped to prevent bill shock.

The rules require a wireless provider to suspend national and internatio­nal data-roaming charges once they reach $100 within a monthly billing cycle, unless the customer has agreed to pay additional charges.

Bell cut its 30-day U.S. travel bundle, which used to cost $50, in half. Its add-on package for heavy users will be priced at $20, down from $40.

“During the summer … Canadians also told us that they want to use their smartphone­s a lot when they travel, and they want the price to come down,” Wade Oosterman, president of Bell Mobility, said.

A Rogers spokeswoma­n, Patricia Trott, said the company has already launched a flat U.S. daily rate and Shawn Hall of Telus said its rates have been consistent­ly lower than its competitor­s.

“It’s a hotly competitiv­e market,” the Telus spokesman said.

 ?? POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? Bell has cut its 30-day U.S. travel bundle, which used to cost $50, in half.
POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES Bell has cut its 30-day U.S. travel bundle, which used to cost $50, in half.

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