“Customers could consider switching service providers,” an ISED Canada representative wrote Thursday, when asked for a response to price increases at Rogers Communications and reported hikes at Bell.
Switch to who? Another fucking country? Bell and Rogers are the only options, they own all the towers, they own all the fiber.
Yup. I really regret letting my EU number go when I moved (back) to Canada. My EU number was about 25 Eur per month (a few years ago) including international roaming calls and data in Canada.
I though naaah, I'll get a local number because it makes sense right? No not really... 98% of the calls I get on my local Canadian number are scam calls (someone threatening me in Chinese with deportation over unpaid taxes etc.) so it's not like I would have been inconveniencing anyone local calling me... most of the remaining 2% call me on WhatsApp or Signal...
That message — from Innovation, Science and Economic Development (ISED) Canada — came just hours after the Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne said Canadians "still pay too much and see too little competition" for cellular services.
"Customers could consider switching service providers," an ISED Canada representative wrote Thursday, when asked for a response to price increases at Rogers Communications and reported hikes at Bell.
"That should not be the consumer's responsibility," said Keldon Bester, executive director of the research and advocacy group Canadian Anti-Monopoly Project, who spoke out against Rogers's recent merger with Shaw Communications.
Statistics Canada reported on that same trend late last year, but noted that a bigger "data allowance" can actually make cellular prices appear to be falling due to how they are calculated as part of the inflation rate — even if the total dollar amount consumers pay hasn't gone down
The sector "has been investing billions each year in expanding and enhancing its networks so that subscribers enjoy faster speeds, wider coverage, and larger data allotments," wrote Eric Smith, the group's senior vice president.
One such report, produced last February by Wall Communications for ISED Canada, found the country still had among the highest prices anywhere for cellphone and broadband service in 2022.
The original article contains 643 words, the summary contains 196 words. Saved 70%. I'm a bot and I'm open source!
They use Videotrons network. You're covered well in the Ottawa area. Elsewhere in Canada you roam on the other carriers, but you're able to use your plan as you always would. You only get charged more if you roam more than you're at home for 3 months in a row.
Overall I'm very happy with the service. Data rollover is such an amazing thing.
Rural coverage can be spotty, when I was with Telus connection was always great. However Fizz is worth that single minor inconvenience for the massive savings in price. My bill is a third of what my Telus bill was after 15ish years of 'loyalty' AND I went from some email data to all day video data. With Telus they would increase my bill for 'competitive' reasons every two years. Fizz emailed me to let me know my plan was a buck cheaper, a little goes a long way. +1 for Fizz if you have the opportunity.
I don't understand at all what value add the flag ship brands have. Telus, Rogers, and Bell all seem to just be the same offer that is more expensive than their "discount" brands.
Years ago, the federal government had a cell phone contract that provided unlimited voice, text, Canada wide LD and 1Gb of data for ~$25/month with no extra fees (no startup, SIM, e911 etc) and with a monthly threshold when using more data which raised the rate JUST for that month in $5 increments capped at $50/month for unlimited data. I would guess their current plan is better