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Article: The Importance of Training. State
Holiday Alerts: State DNC Restrictions for March and April. Upcoming
Conference: ARDA 2009 Convention Exposition from 3/29 - 4/2 Telemarketer
Sued for Cell-phone Calls. Alaska
State Legislature Passes Bill Adding Wireless to State DNC
Rules.

Every year I review many companies' telemarketing compliance programs,
processes and procedures. A common theme has emerged over the years:
companies are really good at developing policies and procedures, but not
so good at training their employees on these processes and procedures.
Another common theme is that employees that are trained well provide
better customer service and their employers experience fewer complaints
from customers and regulators. Employees must be trained because the best
policies and procedures are only as good as the execution by employees;
and this requires training.
Training is also
important because federal and state laws provide safe harbor provisions
for companies that have written compliance policies and procedures, train
their employees on the policies and procedures and a violation of the law
occurs as a result of an error. By way of example, the Telemarketing Sales
Rule (TSR) has a safe harbor. Under the TSR safe harbor, if a telemarketer
can show that, as part of its routine business practice, it meets all the
requirements of the safe harbor, it will not be subject to civil penalties
or sanctions for mistakenly calling a consumer who has asked for no more
calls, or for calling a person on the registry.
To meet the safe
harbor requirements, the seller or telemarketer must demonstrate that:
1. It has written procedures to comply with the do not call
requirements. 2. It trains its personnel
in those procedures. 3. It monitors and
enforces compliance with these procedures. 4.
It maintains a company-specific list of telephone numbers that it
may not call. 5. It accesses the national
registry no more than 31 days before calling any consumer,
and maintains records documenting this
process. 6. Any call made in violation of
the do not call rules was the result of an error.
So what is required to
meet the training component of the safe harbor? At a minimum a company
must:
-
Train all new employees on legal requirements at the time of
hire. - Conduct ongoing training on at least an
annual basis; semiannually would be preferable.
- Train all employees when new applicable laws are
enacted. - Train all employees when new policies
or procedures are enacted by your company. -
Document all trainings sessions and the employees in attendance with sign
in sheets that contain the subject of the
training, the date of training, who conducted the training
and the employee's signature acknowledging that he or
she received the training. - Maintain records of
the training for at least two years.
I recommend that
individual training records be kept in employee personnel files as well as
a master training file. Take an opportunity to review your company's
files. If the FTC initiated an investigation of your company, would you be
able to produce records necessary to meet safe harbor
requirements?

The following holiday
restrictions have been verified for the months of March and
April:
There are no holiday
restrictions for March.
Outbound calling is
prohibited in Louisiana on Friday, April 10, 2009 in
observance of Good Friday.
Outbound calling is
prohibited in Alabama, and Mississippi on Monday, April 27,
2009 in observance of Confederate Memorial Day.

Telemarketer Sued
for Cell-Phone Calls: A telemarketer promoting the upcoming movie,
"The Velveteen Rabbit" has been sued by Verizon Wireless for using an
autodialer to call thousands of Verizon customers. Verizon claims, that in
a 10-day period nearly 500,000 calls were made in early February.
Alaska State Legislature Passes Bill Adding Wireless to State
DNC Rules: House Bill (HB) 93 was unanimously passed by the
Alaska State House legislature. The bill amends the state's definition of
telephone solicitation to include mobile and cellular telephones, and
brings Alaska's statutes more in line with federal
guidelines. |