More Monmouthshire residents give cold callers the cold shoulder
More Monmouthshire residents are fighting
doorstep crime thanks to 'cold calling control zones' set up in the county in
the past two years.
Monmouthshire's tenth cold calling control
zone was established this week (Wednesday 4th November) in Lansdown,
Abergavenny.
This means that around 10% of all households
in Monmouthshire are a part of a cold calling control zone. Of around 37,000
households in the county, the council estimates more than 3000 households are
part of a zone.
The scheme is designed to reduce the risk of
residents being targeted by bogus traders offering property repairs, charity
collections, gardening work etc. Victims of these practices have either lost
money or felt intimidated into having work carried out unnecessarily.
The zones show uninvited callers that they
will not be welcome and zones are easily identified by signs attached to lamp
posts and stickers in people's windows.
Phil Glanville, Head
of Monmouthshire County Council's Trading Standards department said:
"The scheme is really designed to give
consumers the confidence to say 'no' to unwanted callers and to put them on
their guard.
"Figures show that overall crime can drop by
as much as 80%, with an even bigger impact on doorstep crime such as
distraction theft'.
"We have heard from residents that they find
the scheme extremely useful. In St. Arvans when a lamp post bearing our sign
was replaced without a sign the locals rang to complain because they had
started to get more uninvited callers.
"Every one of the people who responded to a
survey in Bulwark carried out four months after the commencement of the scheme
said that the scheme and the information provided made them feel safer in their
home."
Angela Hoyle is the Neighbourhood Watch
Coordinator for Redbrook Road
in Monmouthshire, part of the Wyesham's cold calling control zone. She
said:
"The introduction of the zone is a way
forward in combating unwanted visitors. It's amazing that as the nights
draw in there is an increase in door-to-door visitors using hard-selling
techniques.
"My worst encounter was last year when a man
called but would not accept the fact that I was not interested in what he had
to sell. I eventually asked him to leave. The following week he
returned and found me working in the garden. I am young enough to deal
with such people but elderly people are often unnerved by such encounters and
it's time this practice was stopped."
Councillor Eric Saxon, Monmouthshire County
Council's Cabinet Member for Trading Standards, attended the launch of a
'cold calling control zone' in Wyesham in
October.
He said:
"Both my mother and a resident in my ward
have been targeted by bogus callers and I've seen the terrible effects of being
victimised by these cruel criminals.
"We
can't underestimate how much crime and upset we prevent with these zones and
I'm glad that people have the power to say no to callers."
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