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Cellphone contract crackdown sought by watchdog

Canada's competition watchdog told the broadcast regulator how it would overhaul cellphone contracts, including doing away with hidden fees and misleading claims designed to make it harder to switch carriers and keep prices high.

Misleading ads, switching fees, cancellation charges all singled out in submission to CRTC

Canada's top competition watchdog wants to overhaul the cellphone industry, and crack down on misleading and unfair practices. (Associated Press)

Canada's competition watchdog told the broadcast regulator how it would overhaul cellphone contracts, including doing away with hidden fees and misleading claims designed to make it harder to switch carriers and keep prices high.

In a submission to the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, the Competition Bureau laid out changes it would like implemented inthe telecom industry.

Canadian consumers have long complained about industry practices, including misleading claims and onerous processes that make it harder to get out ofa contract and go elsewhere for cellphone services.

"Discouraging the creation of switching costs that tend to reduce customer mobility, and effectively encouraging the provision of sufficient information to enable informed consumer choice, will allow Canadians to enjoy the beneficial effects of greater competitive forces in wireless markets, including lower prices, higher quality service and greater innovation," the bureau said late Wednesday.

Public consultations planned

Last week,the CRTC issued a draft document that laid out the changes it isthinkingabout making to the wireless industry. That document will be the subject of public hearings next week, and the CRTC had asked for suggestions on it. Wednesday's release by the Competition Bureau is a response to that request.

Among thepractices the Competition Bureau would like to see disappear are long-term service contracts that compel staying in a bad deal. Not worrying about losing a customer keeps prices high and creates barriers to entry by new competitors, who can't provide a real alternative unless enough people are willing to switch.

"If entrants cannot attract customers due to high switching costs, then these entrants may not be able to become effective competitors," the bureau said in its submission, which came following the CRTC's request for input by interested parties.

The bureau says an easy solution to that problem would be to limit how long contracts can go for. Canadian cellphone contracts regularly stretch for three years, but under European law, they can't bemore than two. Most U.S. wireless contracts are also two years, at most, in duration.

The bureau took aim at the process of "locking" cellphones, whereby carriers make devices unable to function on rival networks, further ensuring a customer is less likely to leave.

"The bureau believes that device locking should be prohibited in the marketplace, and that service providers should be required to unlock any previously locked devices free of charge," the submission said.

The bureau's third suggestion to the CRTC is to limit cancellation fees.Under the current system, if a customer switches wireless carriers before their long-term contract expires, the previous carrier often tacks on exorbitant fees. Some entrenched players have been known to charge a $20 fee for every month remaining on the original contract.

'Unlimited' data plans can have limits

On the advertising front, the bureau would like to seea halt to the practice of advertising "unlimited" data plans that in fact have hidden limits. Currently, service providers have the ability to move a customer to a "limited" plan if they exceed certain usage limits.

At the very least, the bureau would like wireless firms tobe clearer with customers about what happens if they go over certain usage levels.

The bureau also recommends that the CRTC review the industry every three years, to keep up with the rapid pace of technological change.

The bureau's recommendations are non-binding, for the moment, and the agency will likely sit on the sidelines until it sees the outcome of whatever changes the CRTC ends up implementing.

But it's the strongest statement the competition watchdog has made yet that it doesn't like what it's seeing in Canada's wireless industry.