Teresa Murray
Consumer Watchdog, U.S. PIRG Education Fund
Consumer Watchdog, U.S. PIRG Education Fund
WASHINGTON — A looming deadline should finally force all U.S. phone companies to take stopping robocalls seriously. However, only one-third of the largest mobile and home phone providers nationwide — and a more disappointing percentage of smaller telecommunications companies — have installed caller ID verification aimed at squashing illegal robocalls, even though most of those businesses were required to do so by June. The stakes get higher Sept. 28, when phone providers are required to block calls from companies that haven’t at least reported their status to the FCC.
“How much longer are we going to tolerate people’s lives being destroyed when they fall for an imposter call that looks like it’s coming from their bank or the IRS? This is inexcusable, it has to stop, and phone company compliance will make a big difference,” said Teresa Murray, Consumer Watchdog for PIRG Education Fund, who authored a new report, Make the Ringing Stop: The FCC is Finally Fighting Back Against Robocalls. “Phone companies have known change was coming for years. The FCC told companies to do this three years ago and Congress passed a law mandating it nearly two years ago.”
Overall, among 3,063 telecommunications providers who reported their status to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) as of this month and who the FCC did not exempt from submitting information:
Only 17 percent said they’d completely implemented anti-robocall technology, called STIR/SHAKEN.
27 percent had partially implemented the technology.
56 percent said they were not using the industry standard technology but rather are using their own methods to manage robocalls.
“Here we are with more than 80 percent of phone companies not doing all they can to stop robocalls. These unwanted calls terrorize all of us and victimize many of us,” said Murray. “As if the $10 billion a year in fraud losses from illegal robocalls isn’t bad enough, they cost us Americans another $3 billion a year in wasted time.”
While robocalls have declined slightly this summer, regulators need to move up the deadline for smaller companies, who have until June 2023 to upgrade their technology. The attorneys general in all 50 states are calling for this as well because illegal robocallers are flocking to phone companies with weak robocall detection.
PIRG Education Fund looked closer at 49 of the largest mobile and home phone companies in the United States (those that can serve 1 million or more). Only 16 of them have told the FCC that they have completely implemented anti-robocall technology. An additional 18 have partially implemented the technology. The remaining 15 companies have told the FCC they haven’t adopted the industry standard technology at all and they’re using their own methods to reduce robocalls, or they have not reported their status to the FCC’s database, as required by law.
Check out our new guide: 18 tips to reduce robocalls and protect yourself from scams.