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Customer and Community Liaison

Customer and Community Liaison. Overview. Role of a Liaison Officer Winter Commitments How to pay Debt and payment of debt Help – What can we do !. Role of the Liaison Officer. Key points Vulnerability – Priority Services Register, WHD Customer Issues – Unable to resolve over the phone

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Customer and Community Liaison

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  1. Customer and Community Liaison Looking after our customers

  2. Overview • Role of a Liaison Officer • Winter Commitments • How to pay • Debt and payment of debt • Help – What can we do !

  3. Role of the Liaison Officer Key points • Vulnerability – Priority Services Register, WHD • Customer Issues – Unable to resolve over the phone • Energy Efficiency • Complaints – gather information, help resolve • Metering issues – transposed readings, details not registered • Advice and Guidance

  4. Priority Service Register (PSR) All suppliers are required to have a PSR, which is available to any customer who asks to be placed on it. They provide special services to customers who are vulnerable through age, disability or chronic illness. • Services include • Password scheme • Relocate prepayment meters that are difficult to reach or use • Take more frequent meter readings if no-one in the house is able to read the meter • Send bills to a nominated person • Provide services for clients with hearing or visual impairment • Advance notice of power interruptions • Priority service in an emergency • Annual gas safety checks 4

  5. What we will be doing • Targeted Tariff Check Campaign ScottishPower have wrote to all its customers who pay for their energy on a quarterly basis, with a personalised quote to estimate how much they can save by making changes to their energy account. This builds on the success of our three-month tariff check campaign last winter, which resulted in just under 37,000 ScottishPower customers changing tariff and saving them more than £6.3 million. • No Disconnections ScottishPower will not disconnect any customers for debt between November 2013 and February 2014. Disconnections are very rare, and would only ever follow a lengthy and detailed process. ScottishPower will never knowingly disconnect a vulnerable customer for debt under any circumstances. “ Providing an enhanced customer service experience for Vulnerable customers

  6. Prepayment • Break Winter Commitments ScottishPower has identified a group of its most vulnerable customers who are currently repaying a debt through their prepayment meter. The company will write to these customers and advise them that it will not be collecting any debt repayments for a 3 month period over the winter from December 2013 to February 2014. This should ensure that any payment made by these customers will be purely for energy that is used during the 3 month winter period. • WHD The Warm Home Discount scheme is a programme of support aimed at households who are living in, or are at risk of, fuel poverty. Certain customers will qualify automatically for a rebate and will receive a letter from the Department of Work and Pensions telling them this. Others can apply to ScottishPower for the rebate if they meet certain eligibility criteria. ScottishPower will not place any upper limit on the number of customers who can receive this rebate, should they meet the criteria. All customers who are eligible, and apply within the specified timeframe, will receive the discount. Providing an enhanced customer service experience for Vulnerable customers

  7. Warm Home Discount – 2013/14

  8. WHD Broader GroupScottish Power Customers • Income Support • Income Related Employment and Support Allowance • Income Based Jobseekers allowance • Or, if the following statement applies you may also qualify • Your total gross household income is less than £16,190 • In addition to the above you must meet at least one of the following criteria: • Have a child who was under 5 on the 1st of April 2013 permanently living in the house (born on or after 1st April 2008) • Have a child entitled to free school meals • Receive Child Tax Credit or Working Tax Credit which includes a disability element or severe disability element, disabled child element or severely disabled child element or family element. • Income Related Benefit which includes a disabled child premium, disability premium, severe disability premium or enhanced disability premium • Income Related Benefit which includes a Carers Premium • Employment Support Allowance which includes a Work Related or Activity Component or Support Component • Receive Disability Living Allowance, Incapacity Benefit or Attendance Allowance • Be aged 62 or over • Receives exemption from NHS prescription charges Providing an enhanced customer service experience for Vulnerable customers

  9. Bills, Tariffs and How to Pay • Customers who have remained with their original supplier throughout privatisation may possibly be paying more for their energy • Paying your bill as it is issued is normally the most expensive • Paying via a Pay-Go meter may provide them with more control over energy spend, but will not be the cheapest option • Paying by Direct Debit and Online are normally the cheapest options • Different packages might be available • Fixed price • Unit price remains static for the duration of the contract period • Protected from future price rises • Discounted energy • Prices are normally guaranteed to be cheaper that the suppliers standard monthly Direct Debit price • Prices will stay lower than the standard rate, and may rise or fall Some of these non standard deals might have exit penalties should your client wish to leave before the fixed period ends – please check.

  10. Payment Plans

  11. What An Individual Can Do • Always read the meter to ensure bills are accurate • Monitor their energy usage on a regular basis • Contact their supplier as early as possible if they are struggling to pay • Speak to others who may be able to help • Do not avoid the issue.

  12. Check for actual readings Electricity single rate meter: Records just one rate of electricity, regardless of the time of day. Not recommended for homes with electric heating. Normally used in properties that have heating provided by gas, oil, coal etc. Electricity standard Economy 7 meter: Has two rates, one for normal daytime electricity usage, and one for cheaper rate electricity overnight. Normally used in households that have electric storage heating. Electricity Multi-Rate Meter: Some homes may have electricity meters that record more than two rates. This type of metering is only for all electric homes, and they may have a specialised type of heating system. Gas Meter: Records by volume (not kWh) in either imperial or metric volumes. Always just one rate, regardless of the time of day.

  13. Energy Savings – Quick tips Number of ways to reduce energy wastage and save money • Simple things can be done to reduce costs: • Monitoring of consumption • Switching appliances off when not in use • Keep heating at 21°C – no need for it to be too hot All this adds up to £187 per year!

  14. What a responsible energy supplier should offer • The option of paying for your energy through the Fuel Direct scheme, provided you • receive a qualifying benefit, and are accepted for the scheme by the Department of Work • and Pensions. • • Help to work out an acceptable payment plan by working with other agencies, such as • Citizens Advice Bureau. • • The option to pay in regular cash instalments. • • The use of a prepayment meter, where it is safe and practical to install one. • At all times an individuals ability to pay and their • circumstances should be taken into consideration.

  15. Who Can Assist?

  16. Energy Company Obligation (ECO) • 2.7 million homes might be eligible under the Affordable Warmth element • Householders must be in receipt of qualifying benefits or tax credits and own their own home or live in private rented property • Measures will be free of charge and include: • Cavity wall and loft insulation • Boiler repairs • Boiler replacements • New heating systems – replacing old or inefficient heating systems

  17. ENERGY QUIZ 1.Give 3 steps you can take to start saving energy 2.Name a measure you can take to make your home more energy efficient 3.Which appliances use most electricity ? 4. True or False – Its better to leave the emersion heater on all the time 5.True or false – Less energy is used to turn lights on and off rather than leaving them on all the time. 6.True or false – The biggest source of heat loss in an un-insulated house is through the windows 7.What temperature is recommended for a room thermostat ? 8.What temperature is recommended for a hot water cylinder thermostat ? 9.What is the cheapest method of payment for electricity and gas ? 10. What can we do to reduce energy bills ? Providing an enhanced customer service experience for Vulnerable customers

  18. Final thoughts • Do you have any final questions? • Is there anything that you would like to discuss in more detail? • Is there anything else you think we should cover?

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