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Hanging up on the payphone 07.06.11

THE number of public payphones continues to plummet in Inishowen as elsewhere with eircom reporting a record low of just 1,400 still standing nationwide.
At the beginning of 2009, the company announced its intention to start removing some 2,150 of its remaining 4,850 public payphones. The latest figures show that a total of 3,450 payphones have since been discontinued.
The company's latest research, however, shows that people still pop into a kiosk if they're out of credit or if their mobile phone battery is dead.
"Our most recent research into payphone usage shows that the most common reasons for using a public payphone was because the caller had no credit on their mobile phone, their mobile battery was dead or they had forgotten or lost their mobile phone," said an eircom spokesperson.
But half of those surveyed said it was "very unlikely" they would use a payphone in the next 12 months.
The minimum call charge at an eircom payphone is now €1 for a local or national call lasting four minutes.
"eircom continuously monitors payphones for levels of customer usage and in the last number of years there has been a significant decline in call volumes from payphones.
The phone box in Malin - often photographed by tourists.
"The widespread increase in mobile phone usage has undoubtedly had an impact on the payphone market." One of Inishowen's favourite (and working) phone boxes is located in picturesque Malin village and is the subject of countless tourist photos throughout the year.
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