Local News>No
Telegrams After January
By Andrew
Green, Staff Reporter
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Jamaica's telegraph service will cease operations
as of January 31 next year, says Cable & Wireless Jamaica's director
of corporate communications, Errol Miller.
A telegraphic service was established between Kingston and Havana from
1869, thus linking the island with the USA and Europe even before a domestic
postal service had been established. But the postal service, telephone,
fax machine and e-mail have superseded the telegraph, Mr. Miller said.
"The volume of telegrams has fallen off significantly," he
said. "It is not a viable service in terms of making a profit or
just breaking even."
A telegram is a message sent via telegraph.
"If you tried to price the service to break even you would price
it out of existence," the communications director said.
OVERSEAS TELEGRAMS
A telegram to the United Kingdom or the United States costs customers
$5.60 per word, but Cable & Wireless pays $23 per word to Unitel,
the international service provider about $23. The majority of overseas
telegrams go to the US and UK.
Locally, a telegram costs $40 for the first 20 words and $1 for each
additional word.
"Our company has for many years consistently operated that service
at a loss," he said.
This is a far cry form the era a century ago when the telegraph was the
state-of-the-art in modern technology or even up until World War II when
it was the means through which news of Germany's surrender was communicated
to most of the country.
A former telegraph operator now with the Postal Corporation of Jamaica
told Wednesday Business that Jamaica was once linked by a telegraphic
web stretching from Negril to Morant Point with post offices, postal agencies
and even lighthouses having access to the network.
Telegraphy has since fallen to the point where manufacturers of equipment
used by Cable & Wireless have discontinued production and it is becoming
difficult to find replacement parts.
"Now people are using the service for general communication rather
than the more urgent messages as in the past," he said. The telegraph
is being used to send birthday and Christmas messages.
"One of the biggest users was the Ministry of Labour sending out
notices to farm workers," Mr. Miller said. But today Jamaicans have
about 1.5 million cellular phone accounts and nearly half-a-million telephone
lines, Mr. Miller said. It is quicker, easier and more direct to call
someone than to send a telegram.
The fax message and e-mail also provide more direct communications, he
said.
The telegraph service had been encompassed by the Post and Telegraph
Department until it was shifted to the responsibility of Cable & Wireless
in 1986. "In the context of the new regulatory regime that exists
for communications, all lines of business must cove their cost,"
Mr. Miller said. "We are not supposed to be cross-subsidising services."
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