When a
Smart meter is not a Smart meter
“Hello,” said the rather husky voice when I called
my electricity supplier after our smart meter stopped working.
“You would need to contact our Smart team in
regards to the Smart meters. This is their number: xxx-xxxxxx.” So I did.
Remarkably, I got through to another human being
after only pressing a few numbers on my keypad. I explained that my Smart Meter
hadn’t worked for a week.
I was told that the company was updating the
software on all its Smart Meters and that it should have been completed
overnight last week but was taking “longer than expected”. I was advised to try
again in a day or so.
Five days on and tried again – and it’s still not
working. Now I know that all technology has its problems so the fact that
something technical had gone wrong did not worry, or upset me, unduly.
What does make me angry, however, is the way the
company communicates with its customers.
I have received numerous emails from the company
over the years, either confirming matters or advising me my contract is ending
etc. etc.
So why no email to save me turning the wretched
thing on and off for a week, moving it around the house in case it was the strength
of the Wi-Fi signal wasn’t strong enough and then having to ring them?
They know who has Smart Meters fitted so there is
no excuse. And they certainly know my email address. Muppets.
I still can’t believe that my footie team, the
mighty Arsenal, beat Chelsea to win their record-breaking 13th FA Cup.
According to the pundits, Chelsea only had to turn
up to give new manager Antonio Conte the English double in his first season in
charge. Just goes to show what they know.
My family have been diehard Gooners for as long as
I can remember. My uncle has two season tickets for the Emirates and my cousin,
his son, has one.
My uncle very kindly lets me “borrow” his
occasionally for my brother-in-law (another Gooner) and I to enjoy a day out.
Occasionally being the operative word. As we like
to reimburse my uncle for one match (I know – we’re so kind) that works out at
£52.50 a game (adult season tickets cost between £1,000 and £2,000).
Add onto that the cost of fuel from deepest
Suffolk to a mainline station 30 minutes from Tottenham Hale, two return train
tickets from that station to Finsbury Park, a few refreshments before and after
and a programme and suddenly you are, collectively, £200 poorer.
Which makes going to watch a Premier League game
these days a luxury. Not quite the working man’s sport it was, what?
No comments:
Post a Comment