Friday, December 26, 2025
ADVT 
National

Complaints For Wireless Down For First Time While Internet Issues Rise: Watchdog

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Dec, 2015 11:45 AM
    TORONTO — Canadians had fewer official complaints about their wireless communication services but more concerns about their Internet plans, according to the latest report from the telecom industry's consumer watchdog.
     
    The Commissioner for Complaints for Telecommunications Services says that the number of complaints it accepted about telecom services fell to 9,988 in the year ending July 31, from 11,340 in the previous year.
     
    Internet complaints now account for 26.1 per cent of all telecom complaints, up by more than half since last year. Wireless complaints have dropped from more than 60 per cent of the total to 52.9 per cent.
     
    This year marks the first time since the industry-funded consumer agency began collecting records in July 2007 that the proportion of complaints about wireless services has fallen.
     
    In 2013, the CRTC implemented a new wireless code of conduct for telecom providers. The CCTS said in this latest report that it found 582 violations of the code, up from 30 the year before.
     
    One company, Wind Mobile, accounted for 422 of those breaches, most of which were releated to its unlimited roaming plan between Canada and the United States.
     
    BCE was again the biggest target, accounting for 36 per cent of the overall complaints. Rogers Communications Inc. came in second at 18.2 per cent of complaints, followed by Wind Mobile, at 7 per cent, and BCE-owned Virgin Mobile at 6.1 per cent.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ottawa Appoints Trio Of Scientists To Study Montreal Sewage Dump Plan

    Environment Canada says the city did not provide enough data to conclude whether or not the untreated wastewater would be "acutely toxic."

    Ottawa Appoints Trio Of Scientists To Study Montreal Sewage Dump Plan

    Pierre Trudeau Makes World News On His Birthday: A Foreign Look At The Election

    The late Pierre Elliott Trudeau was making international news on what would have been his birthday on Sunday as foreign media focused on the possibility his son might follow in his footsteps to become Canada's next prime minister.

    Pierre Trudeau Makes World News On His Birthday: A Foreign Look At The Election

    Former Conservative MP Dona Cadman Backs Surrey Liberal Randeeep Singh Sarai

    Former Conservative MP Dona Cadman Backs Surrey Liberal Randeeep Singh Sarai
    “He’s got vision,” she said. “For Surrey Centre, he is the best candidate.”

    Former Conservative MP Dona Cadman Backs Surrey Liberal Randeeep Singh Sarai

    Police Officer And Civilian Shot In Brampton, Ont., 3 Arrested, 1 Man At Large

    Police Officer And Civilian Shot In Brampton, Ont., 3 Arrested, 1 Man At Large
     Police say three people are in custody after a police officer was shot Friday night in Brampton, Ont.

    Police Officer And Civilian Shot In Brampton, Ont., 3 Arrested, 1 Man At Large

    Two Dead In Northeastern B.C. Plane Crash: Transportation Safety Board

    Two Dead In Northeastern B.C. Plane Crash: Transportation Safety Board
    Spokesman Chris Krepski says the crash happened late Friday afternoon while a privately owned Cessna was taking off from a grass runway near the community of Taylor, just south of Fort St. John.

    Two Dead In Northeastern B.C. Plane Crash: Transportation Safety Board

    Incidents Against Muslim Women Prompt Ottawa Police To Urge Women To Report Any Abuse

    A series of incidents against Muslim women in Ottawa has prompted the city's police to issue an appeal to others who may have been victimized to come forward.

    Incidents Against Muslim Women Prompt Ottawa Police To Urge Women To Report Any Abuse