ChatterBank3 mins ago
Do the Americans have an equivalent service of the UK’s Telephone Preference System (TPS)?
9 Answers
Don’t know where to post this item, so if you think it needs moving to somewhere else, please do so!
An elderly relative in New York is being pestered by a various debt collection companies who are chasing the previous tenant.
So is there anywhere in the USA she could contact to stop them calling her about 20 times a day? She tells me she's fed up explaining to the debt collection services but is slowly giving up on her answering her phone...and that's the bit that worries me!
Thanks in advance.
An elderly relative in New York is being pestered by a various debt collection companies who are chasing the previous tenant.
So is there anywhere in the USA she could contact to stop them calling her about 20 times a day? She tells me she's fed up explaining to the debt collection services but is slowly giving up on her answering her phone...and that's the bit that worries me!
Thanks in advance.
Answers
Here, in a nutshell, is the relative's problem. Here in the U.S., it's usual to carry your existing phone number with you when you move. However, the collection agency has her residence listed as the last known residence of the people they're actually trying to contact. The number for the residence can be determined through a look-up system. Simple solution...
16:14 Wed 23rd Jun 2010
https://www.donotcall.gov/default.aspx
Also in some states it is a legal requirement for the caller to hang up if you say "no" 3 times, so as soon as you realise it's a cold call just say "no no no" and they have to hang up.
Also in some states it is a legal requirement for the caller to hang up if you say "no" 3 times, so as soon as you realise it's a cold call just say "no no no" and they have to hang up.
https://www.the-dma.org/cgi/offtelephonedave
It may be worth just getting her number changed though. It would seem a lot of the American services charge for this service.
It may be worth just getting her number changed though. It would seem a lot of the American services charge for this service.
Here, in a nutshell, is the relative's problem. Here in the U.S., it's usual to carry your existing phone number with you when you move. However, the collection agency has her residence listed as the last known residence of the people they're actually trying to contact. The number for the residence can be determined through a look-up system. Simple solution and probably cheaper than the land line she now has is to cancel that service and get a cellular phone. Many people, even without her problem, no longer have land lines, only cell phones...
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