Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Interactive map of the numbering plan areas of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania (blue). This is a list of telephone area codes of Pennsylvania.. In 1947, the American Telephone and Telegraph Company divided Pennsylvania into four numbering plan areas (NPAs) and assigned distinct area codes for each.
Other early allocated 0800 numbers were 10 digit, including the prefix. Childline's number is one of only a handful of 8 digit 0800 UK numbers to ever have been allocated and the only one still in use. Calls to the number do not appear on the phone bill. Childline is also available on the harmonised European number for child helplines, 116111. [19]
The need for new phone numbers in area codes 215/267 was delayed until 2018. Area code 445 was activated as an additional overlay code on February 3, 2018. [ 3 ] This had the effect of assigning 23 million telephone numbers to a service territory of four million people, and 215/267/445 is not projected by the NANP to need a fourth area code ...
Rantzen and the team went to BT to ask for premises for the charity and for a simple freephone number, both of which were provided. [7] The Childwatch programme screened on 30 October 1986 and, based on the results of the survey, launched Childline with a specially written jingle (by B. A. Robertson) which featured the free phone number 0800 ...
The ISPCC provides a wide range of services. Annually, ISPCC Childline has over 100,000 conversations with children, through its phone, online and web chat services. Childline is a free, anonymous and confidential service, that is available to children 24-hours a day by phone, text, and online web chat.
9 0800 1111 was one of the first 0800 numbers to be issued in the United Kingdom.
Pennsylvania (blue) with numbering plan area 724 shown in red. Area code 724 is a telephone area code in the North American Numbering Plan for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in western and southwestern Pennsylvania, including a portion of the suburbs of Pittsburgh.
In 2009, it was projected that 570 would run out of numbers in the third quarter of 2011. The Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission (PUC) considered four options: an overlay plan and three configurations of dividing. Two of the splits would have left Scranton and Wilkes-Barre, the two largest cities in the territory, with the same area code. [1]