WPCNR'S ADAM IN ALBANY. By New York State Assemblyman Adam T. Bradley. July 14, 2003: A few years ago, New York’s state government created a law that helped to protect quiet family dinners and relaxing weekend afternoons. That law set up the state’s Do-Not-Call Registry, a list residents can sign up for to stop receiving calls from persistent and obnoxious telemarketers.
To sign up for the national do-not-call list, visit http://www.donotcall.gov/">www.donotcall.gov or call 1-888-382-1222. People who sign up now should notice a downturn in the number of calls they receive after Oct. 1
A few years ago, New York’s state government created a law that helped to protect quiet family dinners and relaxing weekend afternoons. That law set up the state’s Do-Not-Call Registry, a list residents can sign up for to stop receiving calls from persistent and obnoxious telemarketers.
Since the creation of the state registry in 2001, 2.4 million households across the state signed up, and an estimated half-billion sales calls have been blocked from New York homes. In fact, the registry was so successful that the federal government has taken the cue and set up a national registry. To improve on the protections the Do-Not-Call Registry offers, I sponsored a bill – which the governor signed – merging our list with the national one (A.8986). New York residents already on the state list will automatically be transferred to the national list.
The benefits for New York’s consumers are great. For one thing, since the state will no longer have to handle registration, taxpayers will save over $1 million in operating costs. For another, the federal law creating the registry has more teeth, with fines for violators reaching as much as $11,000 per violation – more than twice the highest state fine.
The Assembly has a strong record of helping citizens deal with telemarketers. In 2000, the Assembly passed the Telemarketing and Consumer Fraud and Abuse Protection Act. That law requires telemarketers to register and bond with the Department of State so fraud victims would have the means to recover their money; prohibits abusive marketers from contacting a person if that person has told them they no longer wish to be contacted; requires telemarketers to disclose the purpose of their call before receiving personal information; and establishes civil penalties for violating the act, and misdemeanor criminal offenses if convicted of engaging in deception (Ch. 546 of 2000).
Having a telephone line should not be an invitation for endless annoying calls from telemarketers. To be sure, many telemarketers are selling honest, valuable services. However many are not, and many citizens do not want to be disrupted by their calls. New York has been a leader in preventing this kind of harassment, and I will fight to make sure we stay that way.