Avista warns of phone scam
Avista urges customers to be alert to anyone pretending to be from Avista. If you receive a call from someone claiming to be an Avista representative demanding immediate payment or asking for your confidential information, immediately end the call.
Red flags for scam activity 
The scammer becomes angry and tells the customer his or her account is past due and service will be disconnected if a large payment isn’t made – usually within an hour. 
The scammer instructs the customer to purchase a pre-paid debit or credit card – widely available at retail stores – then call him or her back to supposedly make a utility payment.
The scammer asks the customer for the prepaid card’s receipt number and PIN, which grants instant access to the card’s funds. 
How to protect yourself 
Avista never asks or requires a customer to purchase a prepaid debit card to avoid disconnection.
Customers with a past due account receive an advance disconnection notification with the regular monthly billing – never a single notification one hour before disconnection.
If you suspect someone is trying to scam you, hang up and call the local police then Avista. Never return a call to the phone number the scammers provide. 
Customers who suspect or experience fraud, or feel threatened during the call should contact local authorities, and then call Avista’s customer service at (800) 227-9187. The number is listed on Avista’s monthly bill.
Some scammers have duplicated Avista’s automated phone greeting, so when customers return a call to the phone number provided by the scammer, it sounds like a legitimate Avista phone number. Some of these criminals also use caller ID spoofing to replicate Avista’s customer service number.
Customers can call Avista at (800) 227-9187 to verify if the phone call was actually from Avista.

Another phone scam to be aware of
Apparently another telephone scam has hit Cottonwood that had been seen only on the East Coast. 
A caller saying they are from Microsoft are telling you that you must pay $100 for your computer service.
It is usually a scam when you get such unsolicited calls. 
Microsoft's best advice to combat such scams? Hang up the phone. Microsoft does not contact people out of the blue to tell them there’s something wrong with their computers. So, unless you’ve initiated contact with Microsoft about a computer problem you’re having, you should dismiss as frauds any phone calls, e-mails, online chat dialogues, and the like from folks who claim they work for Microsoft and have spotted something wrong with your computer.
Never, ever give out credit card or bank account information to an unsolicited caller.

Cottonwood, Idaho 83522
 

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