Toll-free Goes Green

Going Green? Then join millions of toll free phone service subscribers in the latest trend and save paper by getting fax messages sent to e-mail. You’ll save money and the planet all at the same time.

Read more here.

800 Shortage Could Bring About Embargo

More than two-thirds of the available supply of 800, 888, 877, and 866 numbers are taken and millions of new subscribers are registering every year. Business owners who wait much longer to obtain a number might find themselves out of luck. In a competitive market, a toll free number is a valuable commodity for every business.

Read more here.

What is Happening to All The 1(800) Numbers?

Insiders are calling it the perfect storm. Toll free phone service has hit all all-time high in popularity. The 800 numbers are so successful that once obtained, they are rarely retired. And the federal government has not released reserved numbers intended to alleviate the shortage. Supplies will soon run out.

Read more here.

Why Is It So Difficult To Get An 800 Phone Number?

Toll free service has a long history. 800 numbers were introduced in 1967. By the 1980s, nearly half of all long distance calls would be toll free. Today, 98 percent of adults say they regularly use toll free numbers. Meanwhile, the supply of 800 numbers are at an all-time low. More than two-thirds of the available numbers are taken and there are no immediate plans by the FCC to introduce a new pre-fix.

Read more here.

eBay Seller Busted For Trying To Auction Toll Free Number

The attempts to profit from the illegal sale of 800, 888, 877 and 866 numbers are in response to rapidly dwindling supplies. Available toll free numbers are at an all-time low and experts advise anyone interested in obtaining an 800 number should act now. Thousands of toll free numbers are registered each day. With a limited number of possibilities, the finite supply is nearly expended. Toll free numbers are assigned by entities called Responsible Organizations, toll free service providers who have access to the SMS/800 database of available numbers.

Read more here.

Man Caught And Fined For Trying To Sell 800 Number

By law, phone numbers cannot be sold or brokered. In 1997, the FCC made the sale of 800 numbers illegal. Because of the short supply of available numbers, complaints were pouring in at that time that price gouging for the popular numbers was becoming a common practice. The FCC acted quickly, prohibiting sales.

Read more here.

Supplies Still Dwindling Despite Mass De-Activations of 800 Numbers

A recent plea for the deactivation of unused 800 numbers resulted in a surge of numbers returned to the main database. But despite these mass replacements, the supply of available toll free numbers continues to dwindle as thousands of subscribers register for a 1- 800 number each day.

Read more here.

Now Is The Time To Invest In An 800 Number

More than two-thirds of the available supply of 800, 888, 877, and 866 numbers are taken and millions of new subscribers are registering every year. Business owners who wait much longer to obtain a number might find themselves out of luck. In a competitive market, a toll free number is a valuable commodity for every business.

Read more here.

U.S. Pool of 1-800 Numbers Growing Thin

Industry insiders are recommending that anyone wishing to obtain a toll free number secure one immediately. There are an average of 8,000 new toll free numbers registered each day. With a limited number of numerical possibilities, the finite supply is nearly expended.

Read more here.

1800MATTRESS.com Founder Found Dead

BY CARL MACGOWAN | carl.macgowan@newsday.com
10:43 PM EDT, May 13, 2009

Kay Barrigan was found dead at her Searingtown home, police said. (Handout)

Kay Barragan was a stylish woman who liked pretty clothes and perfume, said her daughter, Kay Otilia Massell, of Santa Rosa, Calif.

But beneath the fashionable exterior was a woman of strong faith who raised a disabled daughter and helped her husband start a multimillion-dollar bedding company, Massell said.

And in recent years, she cared for a son afflicted with schizophrenia – the same son accused Wednesday of killing Barragan in their Searingtown home. “I feel very sad,” Massell, 42, said Wednesday.

“My mother loved her children very much, and she sacrificed for us and she loved her grandchildren. She had 12 grandchildren, and she was a doting grandmother who never missed a birthday or an Easter or a Christmas, and called every day to make sure that everyone had eaten and they were doing well in school.”

Barragan loaned her husband Napoleon $2,000 to start Dial-A-Mattress in 1976. Joe Vicens, the company’s chief operating officer of national sales, called Barragan “a dedicated and committed member of our founding team.”

Kay Barragan’s death and her son’s arrest is the latest family tragedy. Massell’s sister, Beatrice, known as Bibi, had a heart problem since birth and died in 2003 at 27. Their brother, Luis, 34, died in 2006 in a swimming accident.

Massell said her faith carried her through the family’s tragedies.

Eduardo Barragan, 38, who was charged in the death of his mother, is godfather to two of Massell’s children. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia 19 years ago, Massell said.

“Eddie is a wonderful brother,” she said.