77% of adults in London have never heard of the Priority Registration Service
New research from not-for-profit organisation, the Vulnerability Registration Service (VRS), has revealed that very few people – less than 20% of UK adults – are aware of the Priority Services Register (PSR), despite the ongoing energy crisis.
Offered by each energy provider and devised by Ofgem, the PSR is a vital service that supports and helps protect vulnerable people, including pensioners, households with children under five, people with health conditions or impairments and those dependent on medical equipment.
With many more people falling into fuel poverty and forced prepayment meter practices being exposed, the PSR should be playing a crucial role in protecting vulnerable people from unfair and potentially harmful actions.
According to the Vulnerability Registration Service, which works to help organisations to identify vulnerability and treat their customers fairly, there is still very little awareness of the PSR and the people that desperately need to be protected by the PSR have no idea it even exists.
More specifically, the research highlighted that 63% of vulnerable people have not heard of the PSR. Only 22% of people aged 79-85 and 17% of people aged 67-72 had heard of the PSR, while 42% of households with children under the age of five had heard.
This lack of awareness is not a new issue. Back in 2013, Ofgem found that only 24% of the population knew about the PSR and has called on energy firms to get better at identifying vulnerability and registering customers on the PSR.
Ten years later, and despite further reports from Ofgem criticising energy suppliers for failing their vulnerable customers, the situation has worsened and even fewer households know about the PSR. The issue is made worse by the fact that each energy provider has its own PSR and details are not shared between them. Individuals must register with each provider separately and, if they switch provider, there is no automatic transfer of their details.
Helen Lord, CEO of the Vulnerability Registration Service, said: “Very little is being done by energy firms to raise awareness of the PSR and to better identify their vulnerable customers. If they don’t know who their vulnerable customers are, how can they treat them fairly and meet their legal obligations to protect customers. The forced prepayment scandal is evidence of this.
“Around three million people are registered on the PSR. However, considering there is more than three million elderly people aged over the age of 80 in the UK, and that’s before looking at people with young children or health issues, millions are missing out on the desperately needed protection and support.”
Finding information on the PSR from an energy provider’s website isn’t easy either, nor is it always made easy to register on the PSR. The Vulnerability Registration Service team recently carried out a ‘mystery shopper’ exercise involving the websites of 17 UK energy providers to understand how difficult it was for people to find out about and register on the PSR.*
In the majority of cases, finding information about the PSR was difficult, with links not being immediately obvious. Once found, many only allowed registration online. Only three out of the 17 websites had dedicated phones numbers for vulnerability related queries. The rest subjected vulnerable customers to a call routing system, with no specific reference to the PSR.
Helen Lord concluded: “It’s being made far too difficult for people who are at their most vulnerable and struggling to cope with day-to-day tasks to find and understand what support they are entitled to. Energy firms are not doing enough to identify who their vulnerable customers are and provide them with targeted support. The fact many vulnerable people have never even heard of the Priority Services Register shows there is a long way to go.”
For more information on the Priority Services Register, visit https://www.ofgem.gov.uk/information-consumers/energy-advice-households/getting-extra-help-priority-services-register
Vulnerable people can register for free with the Vulnerable Registration Service https://www.vulnerabilityregistrationservice.co.uk/, a central, independent register of vulnerable people, that helps organisations to identify vulnerability and treat their customers fairly and appropriately.