Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!mailrus!accuvax.nwu.edu!nucsrl!telecom-request From: wts@winken.att.com (W T Sykes) Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom Subject: Long-distance Calls to Take More Dialing in NC Message-ID: <4619@accuvax.nwu.edu> Date: 1 Mar 90 15:02:32 GMT Sender: news@accuvax.nwu.edu Organization: AT&T Federal Systems Research and Development - Burlington, NC Lines: 60 Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 10, Issue 137, Message 5 of 11 Reprinted from the Greensboro (NC) News & Record, March 1, 1990: "LONG-DISTANCE CALLS TO TAKE MORE DIALING" by Paul Nowell, The Associated Press "CHARLOTTE (NC) - The thousands of new telephone numbers being absorbed by such laborsaving devices as facsimile machines, pagers and cellular phones are partly to blame making all North Carolinians work a little bit harder when dialing. Starting Friday, people who dial long distance within their own area codes will have to include the three-digit code. The change will make it possible to use 1.5 million new telephone numbers in both the 704 and 919 calling areas. "This small change in our dialing habits is a response to the tremendous growth that North Carolina has experienced in the last several years," said Joseph P. Lacher, Southern Bell vice president. "We are simply running out of numbers." The new system will give the state a previously untapped supply of "prefix codes" - the first three digits of a local phone number. The new prefix codes will be combinations that had previously been reserved for area codes. For example, a 213 prefix - which is the area code for part of Los Angeles - will now be available for use in both North Carolina area codes. "But it also means we must use the 10-digit-dialing for all long-distance calls," Lacher said. "If we did not require the use of area codes on all long-distance calls, the (computer) switch would be unable to process the call." The alternative to 10-digit-dialing is a new area code for the state. But Southern Bell officials say of the original 152 area codes, only eight remain available. Bellcore - the research and engineering arm of the Bell operating companies that allocates area codes - is stingy with the remaining supply until their is no other solution. Other solutions are not always possible. Los Angeles will get its third area code in 1992, less than 10 years after getting its second. This past fall, Chicago got a second area code. In January, New Jersey's 201 area code was split. Those areas first went to 10-digit-dialing to handle growth before getting a new area code, said Southern Bell spokesman Clifton Metcalf. By the mid-1990's, Bellcore is expected to start a new system that will expand the number of area codes from 152 to 792, he said." -- 30 -- William T. Sykes AT&T Federal Systems Research and Development Burlington, NC UUCP:att!winken!wts