Saturday, 30 April 2016


Australians 'Are Fed Up With All The Charges': Consumer Group

HuffPost Australia  |  By Sam McKeith

Posted: 20/04/2016 20:25 AEST Updated: 20/04/2016 20:25 AEST 
s vulnerable Aussies are getting hurt by the move to e-statements. | Don Arnold via Getty Images
 
Some of Australia's most vulnerable groups such as disabled pensioners, Indigenous people and the unemployed are being unfairly hit by companies charging to send paper bills and statements, consumer advocates say.

At federal parliament on Wednesday, consumer advocate group Keep Me Posted launched its campaign calling on big corporates like banks and telcos to stop charging people for receiving paper statements."Consumers are fed up with all the charges -- we pay over half a billion dollars in ATM fees, high surcharge levies on credit cards and now we are being stung simply for having a bill in a format that is easier for us to pay,” the group's executive director Kellie Northwood said.

The campaign is aimed at highlighting that many Aussies do not have internet access, making receiving paper statements and bills a necessity, the group said.

It said Australians who were disabled, on low incomes, or receiving government benefits were much more likely not to have the internet at home than the average household.

Many older people also relied on paper statements and bills, with 46 percent of people over 65 having no access to the internet.

Independent senator Nick Xenophon and Tasmanian MP Andrew Wilkie have backed the campaign, Keep Me Posted said.

The consumer campaign comes after the Commonwealth Bank introduced a fee earlier this year charging customers $2.50 per statement per month to receive hard copies, News Corp Australia has reported.
Origin Energy, Telstra and Optus also reportedly slug consumers on some plans for paper statements.

The local campaign is similar to those run overseas, especially in the UK.

This story has been brought to you by the Emerald Chamber of Commerce Inc.
(Ph: 07 4982 3444)  

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