No LNP in Canada equals no competition

I'm going to pull together two of Mark Evans' recent posts to complain about how bad the cellular market is in Canada.

Mark points to Tyler Hamilton's discussion on how the lack of LNP is harming competition:

The CRTC has said it will look at the issue this year, but more immediate action is needed. Canadian rates are much higher and plans offer fewer features than what U.S. carriers offer, and in many respects it has become more affordable for a Canadian to sign up with a U.S. carrier's North America plan than to get an equivalent package in Canada.
Tyler Hamilton: Pressure builds for wireless number portability

I'm pretty close to signing up for a US plan, especially when I make a lot of calls to the US, and as noted, can get a "North America" plan. But there's that damn LNP issue! What can I do with my current number? Nothing.

The "new" CityFido plan is terrible (30¢/minute outside the "local" area, *plus* long distance -- previous price was 10¢/minute) now that Rogers bought Microcell.

More on the no-LNP causing monopoly, plus the cellphone device choice monopoly:

Consumers are also plagued by the lack of local number portabilty, which dampens competition because it's not easy to switch to rival carrier. I'm not sure why the CRTC is so reluctant to push LNP into the market given it has a mandate to encourage competition.
Another puzzling issue is how consumers get to choose wireless devices. The way it works now, the carriers offer you several models, and you pick the one that meets your needs and budget. There is no way, however, to bring your own device to the table.
Mark Evans: Canada's Wireless Monopoly

Hmmm. I wonder if I can argue that my cell number is my home number, and so LNP should apply? Actually, I wonder about people that switched their home phones to CityFido. Wouldn't LNP still apply?

I'm willing to fight this one. Because, basically, the phone company has my number hostage. If I want to keep my number, which is on my business cards, my email, everywhere -- I have to stay with the same cell provider.

And choice of phones. The only place in Vancouver that I've found that has good phones is Cell Baby on Robson at Bute. The phones are expensive, but you can even get a fancy Sony Ericsson K700i.

Actually, I had an interesting business idea that involved only switching your number once: provide an unlimited forwarding service. There are VoIP providers that could do this easily. So, unlimited forwarding for $5/month, including a web portal to easily change forwarding options. Add in voicemail + voicemail by email for an extra $2.50/month. Basically, $7.50/month for a super-charged virtual phone number.

Comments

Canadians get ripped off on Mobile Phone services BIG time

I can't believe that north america would have the worst market of cell/mobile phones wichever you prefer to call them. I lived in eastern europe and middle east, and i was getting and moving with my mobile devices back and force, and never had such an issue like i have to unlock my phone, all or most of the world dosent have that, you can buy phone anywhere you wish and connect it to provider wichever you prefer, but not in canada, and im pretty sure in US is same story. To unlock the phone or should i say lock it in order to use it for exmpl with Rogers you have to pay them 250$ lol WTF? In Ukraine for example to unlock phone costs 5$, yes 5 freaking bucks, thats it. Ooh and services, i dont know what to call them, rates just ridiculosly high. I think that north americans before they go fighting terrorism in foreign countries should concider fighting a few of their own.

Actually...

Despite what the story says, the promise is to have a "plan" by September. It took years for carriers in the US to implement this after there was a plan in place...

Hmm... CRTC - competition. Ye

Hmm... CRTC - competition. Yeah... I know they have a mandate to encourage it but someone ought to remind them of that. Mobile services are stagnating in Canada and the three stooges (Bell, Rogers/Fido and Telus) show no sign of hope.

Thanks for the T-Mobile info however. Next time I'm south of the border I may consider that. They have a pretty wicked unlimited mobile data plan:

http://www.t-mobile.com/tmobile_internet/rates.asp

cellular NORTH AMERICAN plans.

i work in the industry and yes ALL the Canadian providers plans suck. and YES absolutley we need LNP .however we all know its not going to happen ...

on the subject of the American carriers N/A plan .if you read the little little print ,you will find the info on the carrier cancelling your service with a termination fee of anywhere between $150.00 and $200.00 if more than %50 of your usage is not within their network over a 90 day period.. 

William, you need to be more

William, you need to be more specific.. I've spoken to Verizon wirless here in Plattburgh, Ny for use in Montreal, Qc and there's no such clause about using anything in their network for at least 50%.. which carrier are you talking about??? North Korea Mobile?  lol... anyways, the cancellation fee ofcourse is everywhere...