Henro
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2003
- Messages
- 4,982
- Location
- Few miles north of Pgh, PA
- Tractor
- Kubota B2910, BX2200, KX41-2V mini EX
Hi,
Need some help/advice...I hope no one minds me posting this question here... /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
I am trying to help a friend who is new to this county. The only reason I am involved in this is because his native language is not English.
It’s a long story, but I’ll give a brief summary. He signed up with Verizon for phone service last September after arriving in the States. He did not get an international calling plan. Perhaps he did not understand at the time that there were such calling plans.
Anyway, after getting an initial bill or two, and being charged about $3.00 per minute for international calls, he stopped using the phone. He paid those expensive first Verizon bills in full. He called AT&T and switched to their international calling plan.
He received a letter welcoming him as an AT&T customer. He called AT&T and spoke with someone [a customer service person in his native language] and was told that it was OK to call international now, that he was activated on the AT&T international plan. That was in late October. He started using the phone again.
He gets his bill for November and there are $1,366 in international phone charges on it from Verizon! He stops using the phone again after seeing the November bill. And due to the overlap of billing cycles and arrival time of the bill, he also has $721 of international billing charges on his December bill.
Since January 21, I have literally spent about 12 hours on the phone with Verizon/AT&T and/or writing letters on my friend’s behalf. It looks like AT&T either did not actually make the switch happen, or it happened and then a few days later he was cancelled as an AT&T customer.
He would have no motivation to cancel and go back to paying $3 per minute. It would be totally illogical for him to do this. So I believe someone at AT&T messed up, somehow, someway.
Verizon is unwilling to change the charges, or to negotiate them downwards. They do not even have a number for the long distance billing department that a consumer can call. The have no mediator/arbitrator to make a decision. At least that is what they tell me.
AT&T claims they have no responsibility in the matter and that the service was cancelled at his request, which is not the case. But apparently that is what the AT&T computer says. They are unwilling to provide anything in writing to document how this happened.
So my friend is in the position of being a pebble between two large rock mountains.
As a foreigner and not real strong in the English language he is hesitant to do something like go to small claims court, if this would even be possible in this situation. Getting an attorney involved looks like it would quickly eat up the $2,000 in question.
It may be possible to file a complaint with the FCC, but I am not sure if that will help or not.
Ideally, it would be nice if the facts could be put in front of an arbiter/mediator, but I don’t have a clue how this would be done, if it were even possible. Verizon acted like I was nuts for even suggesting that such a thing might make sense. I have not yet called AT&T to ask if they have any kind of arbitration/mediation. I’m sick of being on the phone, got to take a break first.
Verizon says: It’s not our problem if AT&T did not switch you. Pay the $3 per minute. $2,000+ total.
AT&T says: You cancelled your International Calling Plan with us [not true]. It’s not our problem, you were a Verizon customer.
It seems to me that it is most likely that AT&T somehow messed up. It would be nice to put the facts in front of an independent third party and get a decision, and abide by it. I guess that is what the courts are for. But there should be an easier way!
I want to help this guy but I am lost at this point.
Ideas anyone??? Any thoughts will be greatly appreciated!
I want to put a /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif here, but the way I really feel at the moment is /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif /forums/images/graemlins/mad.gif /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif
Need some help/advice...I hope no one minds me posting this question here... /forums/images/graemlins/blush.gif
I am trying to help a friend who is new to this county. The only reason I am involved in this is because his native language is not English.
It’s a long story, but I’ll give a brief summary. He signed up with Verizon for phone service last September after arriving in the States. He did not get an international calling plan. Perhaps he did not understand at the time that there were such calling plans.
Anyway, after getting an initial bill or two, and being charged about $3.00 per minute for international calls, he stopped using the phone. He paid those expensive first Verizon bills in full. He called AT&T and switched to their international calling plan.
He received a letter welcoming him as an AT&T customer. He called AT&T and spoke with someone [a customer service person in his native language] and was told that it was OK to call international now, that he was activated on the AT&T international plan. That was in late October. He started using the phone again.
He gets his bill for November and there are $1,366 in international phone charges on it from Verizon! He stops using the phone again after seeing the November bill. And due to the overlap of billing cycles and arrival time of the bill, he also has $721 of international billing charges on his December bill.
Since January 21, I have literally spent about 12 hours on the phone with Verizon/AT&T and/or writing letters on my friend’s behalf. It looks like AT&T either did not actually make the switch happen, or it happened and then a few days later he was cancelled as an AT&T customer.
He would have no motivation to cancel and go back to paying $3 per minute. It would be totally illogical for him to do this. So I believe someone at AT&T messed up, somehow, someway.
Verizon is unwilling to change the charges, or to negotiate them downwards. They do not even have a number for the long distance billing department that a consumer can call. The have no mediator/arbitrator to make a decision. At least that is what they tell me.
AT&T claims they have no responsibility in the matter and that the service was cancelled at his request, which is not the case. But apparently that is what the AT&T computer says. They are unwilling to provide anything in writing to document how this happened.
So my friend is in the position of being a pebble between two large rock mountains.
As a foreigner and not real strong in the English language he is hesitant to do something like go to small claims court, if this would even be possible in this situation. Getting an attorney involved looks like it would quickly eat up the $2,000 in question.
It may be possible to file a complaint with the FCC, but I am not sure if that will help or not.
Ideally, it would be nice if the facts could be put in front of an arbiter/mediator, but I don’t have a clue how this would be done, if it were even possible. Verizon acted like I was nuts for even suggesting that such a thing might make sense. I have not yet called AT&T to ask if they have any kind of arbitration/mediation. I’m sick of being on the phone, got to take a break first.
Verizon says: It’s not our problem if AT&T did not switch you. Pay the $3 per minute. $2,000+ total.
AT&T says: You cancelled your International Calling Plan with us [not true]. It’s not our problem, you were a Verizon customer.
It seems to me that it is most likely that AT&T somehow messed up. It would be nice to put the facts in front of an independent third party and get a decision, and abide by it. I guess that is what the courts are for. But there should be an easier way!
I want to help this guy but I am lost at this point.
Ideas anyone??? Any thoughts will be greatly appreciated!
I want to put a /forums/images/graemlins/smile.gif here, but the way I really feel at the moment is /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif /forums/images/graemlins/mad.gif /forums/images/graemlins/shocked.gif /forums/images/graemlins/crazy.gif