The Keep Me Posted campaign (KMP) lobbies banks, financial services companies, public utilities and others to make it easy and inexpensive - ideally free - for people to carry on receiving paper statements about their accounts.
Here is what I thought about the campaign, until recently: It only really matters to older people who are unable or unwilling to embrace online technology. As digital natives grow up, this group of refuseniks will become smaller and eventually just disappear.
KMP were worthy luddites - attempting to hold back inevitable progress.
What persuaded me I might be completely wrong about this was meeting Judith Donovan, dynamic chair of the KMP campaign. "People think 'old people die'. We've just got to wait for this group to push off the planet," she says, making me feel guilty for thinking along similar lines. "But we are not anti-digital, and it isn't luddite to talk about vulnerable people who can't use the internet."
Anyway, these groups are the tip of the iceberg, Donovan explains. The Government concedes 5-7% of the population will still not have broadband by the time its broadband strategy comes to an end in 2017.
Meanwhile, she points out, the lack of physical printed bank statements, and proof of address or identity is a problem which affects all ages. Young people who use online banking services often do so solely via tablets or phones, neither of which generally have printers attached, and debt agencies are increasingly concerned they fail to manage their affairs well.
There are nearly a million people living in care in the UK, and the lack of paper based records is increasingly causing problems for them, the campaign argues. Lawyers and accountants find it difficult to wrap up estates, with gaining the required records a tortuous process.
This is the reason why organisations such as Solicitors for the Elderly are among more than 70 organisations supporting the campaign, including debt advice charities, the national consumer federation, Dyslexia Scotland and Capability Scotland.
Those who need documents often find that their own print-offs are not acceptable, Donovon adds. Requesting official duplicates can incur large charges. "They tell you that you are saving them money, then charge you for our own information," she says.
Six European countries have passed legislation protecting consumer rights to paper bills. But in the UK, only three water companies and one building society have signed a pledge to offer customers a simple choice. Not a single one is in Scotland.
This may be an uphill struggle. But I'm more persuaded than I was that it is one worth backing.
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