The most frequent complaint from consumers is that they are quoted a
low rate over the phone to unlock a car or a house. When the locksmith
shows up, the fee ends up being doubled or tripled.
The
Southern Nevada Better Business Bureau, which tracks complaints against
businesses and certifies good ones, has logged 23 complaints about
locksmiths in the last three years, including price complaints,
defective products and repair services that caused more damage.
Ten
of those have been resolved, 10 have received no response, and in the
remaining ones the customer did not accept a resolution offer from the
business.
"We don't get a lot," said Rhonda Mettler of the
Southern Nevada Better Business Bureau. "The ones that we do, we really
can't find. Most of them are mobile. When you call a company and say,
'What's your address?', they say, 'Oh, we don't have an address.'"
Of those that do list addresses, many are fake, sometimes ludicrously so.
If
listings in the phone book and online are to be believed, for example,
there are locksmiths located inside or next to the Flamingo, the
Tropicana, Paris Las Vegas, Caesars Palace, Planet Hollywood and The
Mirage.
The back half of the city of Henderson's water treatment
plant houses a locksmith shop, according to directory listings. So does
Las Vegas City Hall.
One company's location, when plotted on Google Maps, showed up on a McCarran International Airport runway.
It's
maddening to local locksmiths who take the time to get licensed in all
Southern Nevada jurisdictions and abide by the rules, which is
expensive, putting them at a competitive disadvantage.
They're also frustrated that the situation hasn't changed, despite pleas to local and state government agencies.
"Here
I am, a law-abiding citizen who takes the time to be licensed in Las
Vegas, and you're not going to police them?" said Debbie Mizrahi, who
has operated Access Lock and Safe with her husband, Josef, since 1995.
"I've been fighting this war for three years, and I'm at the end of my
rope here."
She and two other locksmith operators produced letters
they wrote to the Nevada attorney general's office in 2006. Edie
Cartwright, a spokeswoman for the office, said the only complaint she
could find was one from Carson City, which was referred to the Sheriff's
Department there.
The Nevada Consumer Affairs Division, a state
agency that was assigned to address complaints like these, has been shut
down because of budget cuts. The agency filed complaints by business
name, not business type, a spokeswoman said, and couldn't provide
locksmith statistics.
In
Colorado, the attorney general's office went after a company called
Basad Inc. and its owners, Peleg Forman, Batia Forman and Michael Biton,
after investigating the locksmith company for deceptive trade
practices.
"They were promised cheap locksmiths, $55, and that they'd be there in less than an hour," spokesman Mike Saccone said.
The
customers were hit with additional charges and told the $55 was just a
"service fee," and frequently had to endure lengthy waits, he said.
The
company settled for $100,000, which will be used to reimburse
customers, and must disclose all charges customers will be assessed.
Calls to the company are now recorded to ensure compliance, he said.
"This does send a message to companies that we will not tolerate this, and we will come after them," Saccone said.
In
Illinois, state regulators in 2006 suspended the licenses of two
locksmith companies after finding that they had used unlicensed
personnel, overcharged customers, set up 26 dummy business names and
addresses, and had local phone numbers that forwarded to a call center
in New York, according to court documents.
Meanwhile, other
locksmiths report a drop in business and the headaches of being
associated with a trade they feel is being tarred by shady operators.
"From
last year alone, I'm down over 60 percent," said Gene Altobella, owner
of Gene's Locksmith and head of the Nevada Professional Locksmith
Association. "Some of that's the economy. I'm not disputing that. But
something's not right.