Archive for the ‘Area Codes’ Category

747 Flies Into the Valley

April 25, 2008

What would the guys from “Swingers” do? Back in 1996, the movie’s characters could easily determine what kind of girl they were chatting up by her digits: Either 310, 213 or 818.

Twelve years later, just in the immediate region, we have 310, 213, 818, 323, 626, 562, 424… and soon, 747.

Nearly a decade after the 747 was introduced as a potential new San Fernando Valley area code, state utility officials approved it on Thursday. The good news for businesses: 747 will be an “overlay” code, which means new phone users in the 818 will be assigned it, but old 818 users can keep their number. (818 users will now have to dial the code in all cases, however.)

It might have made sense to separate Burbank and Glendale into 747 and keep the Los Angeles portions of the Valley with 818, but “overlay” area codes are gaining in popularity (such as 424, which now shares West Los Angeles with 310) as a way to placate businesses and consumers.

The 747 area code will be launched in March. If I were doing PR for the California Public Utilities Commission, I’d make sure the very first number went to the Bob Hope Airport in Burbank.

Change My Area Code, Please!

September 7, 2007


(Graphic by L.A. Times.)

Area code changes are generally less popular than root canals, as phone customers — particularly businesses — dread having to inform everyone of the change and spend money on new stationery.

That’s why state regulators ultimately added a 424 area code “overlay” to the 310 region, rather than splitting it in half. Now, the debate is about to begin on what to do with the 818, which is about to run out of numbers: Split in half, or overlay?

In this case, however, the new area code is kinda cool: 747.

Yeah, like a jumbo jet. Given the sometimes negative Valley connotation associated with “818″ (remember “Swingers”?), I’d think there’d be some people who wouldn’t mind getting the cool, sleek “747″ area code.

According to the L.A. Times, should the 818 be split in half, the west half (including Encino and Sherman Oaks) would get the new “747,” so we’d still be stuck with 818 in Glendale. (I’d think it would make more sense to keep Burbank, Glendale and San Fernando in one area code, since they’re not a part of L.A., and then the Los Angeles city portion of the Valley in another code. Makes too much sense, I guess.)

I do find it too bad that distinct area codes are going away, and what was once a geographic identifier is no longer. With so many area codes out there now, it’s impossible to tell where people are calling from.

The paper writes:

With the rise in cellphones, Blackberrys and fax machines, and phone service offered over the Internet, they say the need for new numbers is exploding.

And the 818 — which was formed in 1984 from the 213 — is rapidly running out of numbers. Area codes have 792 prefixes, each with 10,000 phone numbers available. The 818 now has 61 prefixes left.

Officials with the North American Numbering Plan Administration, a contract agency of the Federal Communications Commission that monitors area codes, expect the 818 code to be depleted of numbers by late 2009. Similar problems exist in other Southern California suburbs, and officials are deciding whether to split or overlay the 714 (northern and western Orange County) and 760 (northern San Diego County) area codes.

Before 1984, all of the area was under 213. Actually, it wasn’t even that long ago (ten years) that living in West Hollywood, my area code was 213.

Change My Area Code, Please!

September 7, 2007


(Graphic by L.A. Times.)

Area code changes are generally less popular than root canals, as phone customers — particularly businesses — dread having to inform everyone of the change and spend money on new stationery.

That’s why state regulators ultimately added a 424 area code “overlay” to the 310 region, rather than splitting it in half. Now, the debate is about to begin on what to do with the 818, which is about to run out of numbers: Split in half, or overlay?

In this case, however, the new area code is kinda cool: 747.

Yeah, like a jumbo jet. Given the sometimes negative Valley connotation associated with “818″ (remember “Swingers”?), I’d think there’d be some people who wouldn’t mind getting the cool, sleek “747″ area code.

According to the L.A. Times, should the 818 be split in half, the west half (including Encino and Sherman Oaks) would get the new “747,” so we’d still be stuck with 818 in Glendale. (I’d think it would make more sense to keep Burbank, Glendale and San Fernando in one area code, since they’re not a part of L.A., and then the Los Angeles city portion of the Valley in another code. Makes too much sense, I guess.)

I do find it too bad that distinct area codes are going away, and what was once a geographic identifier is no longer. With so many area codes out there now, it’s impossible to tell where people are calling from.

The paper writes:

With the rise in cellphones, Blackberrys and fax machines, and phone service offered over the Internet, they say the need for new numbers is exploding.

And the 818 — which was formed in 1984 from the 213 — is rapidly running out of numbers. Area codes have 792 prefixes, each with 10,000 phone numbers available. The 818 now has 61 prefixes left.

Officials with the North American Numbering Plan Administration, a contract agency of the Federal Communications Commission that monitors area codes, expect the 818 code to be depleted of numbers by late 2009. Similar problems exist in other Southern California suburbs, and officials are deciding whether to split or overlay the 714 (northern and western Orange County) and 760 (northern San Diego County) area codes.

Before 1984, all of the area was under 213. Actually, it wasn’t even that long ago (ten years) that living in West Hollywood, my area code was 213.


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