reason is that you do not dial straight out when you dial 9 (the dialtone you hear is produced by the IPO)
the system waits until you hit the last digit and checks if you are allowed to do so, then the dial delay counter sets in and adds (usually 4 seconds in case you are not finished dialing) to the wait time then picks up the analog line waiting for a couple of seconds for dialtone from the provider and starts dialing. Analog lines have that delay but you can shorten it by a few seconds if you have the ARS shortcodes with the exact number of digits it has to expect.
take the shortcodes that are with xxxx and xxxN and delete them, then create 2 new ones
xxxxxxxxxx (10 x's for local calls or if you have 7 digit dialing then make it 7, if you have a mix then you are out of luck)
dial
N
line ID
then add
1xxxxxxxxxx
dial
1N
line ID
for Long distance calls
this way the dial delay counter time is taken off because the system knows that you are finished dialing and starts immediately picking up the line and dialing whatever you dialed
Joe W.
FHandw, ACSS (SME), ACIS (SME)
“This is the end of the world, make sure to buy your T-shirt before it is too late"
Original expression of my daughter