By Ken Fisher  | Published: February 17, 2008 - 02:04PM CT                
          
This Presidents' Day, if you're an American, you can thank George W. Bush for at least one thing: on Friday, the President signed into law new legislation which will make the national Do Not Call registry even better. No one likes phone spam, and the DNCR is doing a great job of curtailing it. Yet, the DNCR did have some flaws, and in a rare case of Washington harmony, all parties came together to fix the most pressing problems.

The big kahuna was a ticking clock on original DNCR registrations from users like you and me. When the DNCR was launched in 2003, it was launched with a five-year "reset" policy for any registered number.

This meant that, according to the original rules, had you signed up in 2003, sometime in 2008 you'd be removed from the list whether you liked it or not. You could always sign up again, but it's a hassle that no one (save perhaps telemarketers) thought was fair.

Reacting to consumer and congressional concern that a "reset" was both unnecessary and
unfair to consumers, the FTC already agreed to suspend the removal of any registered users until Congress and the President could consider the matter. It didn't make sense to start resetting user's registry entries if there was a chance the policy would be chucked out the window.