When D. V. (Austin, Texas)
returned from a stay at Galapago
Inn last fall, he was met with a
$128 phone bill for a brief call he
had made home from the Inn.
Dr. Daniel Spitzer called
home in February from the same
phone booth at Galapago Inn (since renamed SCUBA Club Galapago).
He thought he was using his calling card, but found out later that he was
charged $22 for the first minute and $6.50 per minute thereafter by the
long-distance carrier, Capital Network Mexico S. A. de C. V. International.
To call from Cozumel to Austin using MCI would cost around a dollar
a minute during prime time, only 70 cents per minute on weekends and
after hours. However, privately owned pay phones and hotel phone
networks are in Mexico generally are not connected to U.S. long-distance
providers such as Sprint, AT&T, or MCI.
To avoid outrageous charges (more than 20 times what they should
be), always make sure who the long distance carrier is before making a
call. Contact your long distance carrier before you travel to find out the
local number to dial from your destination, then use its credit card. This
is the easiest and cheapest way and numbers are available in every
country. According to Consumer Action, a group based in San Francisco
and Los Angeles, pay phones in Mexico owned by Ladatel (usually marked
on the phone booth) will accept access codes for the largest U.S. longdistance
carriers.
If you are a victim, contact the carrier billing you for the call. The
name and phone number of the company should appear on your bill. Ask
that the excessive charges be adjusted to reflect what you would have paid
if you had used your preferred carrier. If that doesn't work, call your local
phone company ask it to intervene on your behalf.
J. Q.