ChatterBank5 mins ago
Is it time to remove the payphones?
13 Answers
There have been calls for the removal of payphones in towns and cities. Apparently payphone use has halved in three years, mainly because of the increasing numbers of mobile phones (70 million in the UK according to Ofcom). What do you think, have payphones had their day? Or are there arguments for keeping them on our streets?
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Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by AB Asks. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Like cazzzz1975 says, sometimes they are necessary. Last week my parents locked their keys and mobiles in the car whilst in town shopping (dozy idiots, I know). Luckily they found a phone box and mum could remember my office number and rang me so I could go and rescue them.
What would have heppened if there were no pay phones? 2 OAPS would have had a long walk to my work place.
What would have heppened if there were no pay phones? 2 OAPS would have had a long walk to my work place.
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If payphones are removed completely, the assumption is being made that everyone will carry a mobile. What about people (like myself) who feel that the technology is untested and do not want to be human guinea pigs in a great experiment? What about people who feel sympathy for those who have huge masts foisted on them and their communities--health risks in the long term not yet known--and therefore do not want to participate in a system that subjects people to these unknown effects? If I was to get a mobile phone, I would be helping to impose these unwanted masts on other people. So let's keep those phone boxes.
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