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Now I'm confused. Obummer denied handing out Obamaphones.

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  • Now I'm confused. Obummer denied handing out Obamaphones.



    Lawmaker looks to rein in program after free cell phones sent to dead people
    By Barnini Chakraborty

    Published March 11, 2013



    WASHINGTON – Dead people don’t need cell phones.

    That’s the message Rep. Tim Griffin of Arkansas wants to send Congress, after he says a controversial government-backed program that helps provide phones to low-income Americans ended up sending mobiles to the dead relatives of his constituents. Griffin has introduced a bill that targets the phone hand-out program, which has ballooned into a fiscal headache for the government.

    “This program demands reform,” Griffin told FoxNews.com on Monday. “There is a lot of waste in it and we need to be asking ourselves, ‘Where do we draw the line? Do we give everybody an iPad next? A computer? Is that the role the federal government should be playing?’”

    Griffin said the story of dead relatives receiving cell phones was relayed to him by constituents. He added: “I’ve also gotten calls from people who say their employees were bragging about having 10 phones.”

    The program in question provides limited phone service to people on government assistance. Ideally, Griffin says he would like to get rid of the program created in the mid-80s altogether, but he knows he lacks the support to kill it -- and instead is asking Congress to scale it back. Griffin’s plan would get rid of the cell phones and provide only landline service and phones.

    Started in 1985, the Lifeline program was created to make sure people with low income levels weren’t cut off from emergency services, job searches or communication with family members. The program is funded by charges that appear on the monthly bills of every wireless and landline phone customer in the country. The money goes into a Universal Service Fund that pulls its revenues from fees that show up on most telephone bills as the “federal universal service charge.” The fees range but can go up to $3.22 a month.

    The cost of the program has tripled to $2.2 billion in 2012 from $819 million in 2008. The risk of abuse has also risen.

    “This program is completely ridiculous and it speaks to the point that we are careless with taxpayer dollars,” Griffin said.

    Though the program has spanned multiple administrations, some conservatives have recently nicknamed it the "Obamaphone" after a viral video in 2012 showed an Obama supporter touting the mobiles.

    Some, though, say it isn't feasible to limit the service. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 34 percent of American homes use only wireless telephones. The CDC also reports that nearly one of every six American homes received all or almost all of their calls on a wireless telephone despite also having a landline.

    Under the program, there have been reports of multiple phones going to one person, cell phones being sent to underage residents and perhaps most shocking – phones being sent to the deceased.

    The free phone program is open to those who meet federal poverty guidelines, or are on food stamps, Medicaid or other federal assistance programs. Under the rules, only one Lifeline subscriber is allowed per household. However, a recent audit of the program by the Federal Communications Commission revealed that 41 percent of the nearly 6 million subscribers did not meet the requirements.

    The FCC defended the program to FoxNews.com and says it has helped tens of millions of low-income Americans afford basic phone options. But even they admit the program has holes. Last year the agency tightened the rules for the program and required carriers to verify existing members were eligible. The agency estimated that 15 percent of its users would be weeded out under the new process. The FCC also said its new rules have eliminated more than 1.1 million duplicate subscriptions and saved $214 million in 2012.

    On Feb. 13, the FCC Enforcement Bureau issued citations to 11 people with multiple Lifeline accounts. It was the first time the FCC has taken action against individual subscribers for violating the “one per household” rule.

    And on Feb. 26, the commission announced that two wireless Lifeline providers agreed to payments totaling more than $1 million to end an investigation into whether the companies violated program rules in Oklahoma.

    But for some like Griffin, it doesn’t matter. He sees the program as a handout and one that should not be footed by taxpayers.

    “I understand the FCC is trying to rein the abuse and my first question is, ‘What took you so long?'" he said. “I hear people saying we need this and we need that as a society but is it really fair for the government – i.e. the taxpayers – to provide people with cell phones? I don’t think so.”



    Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2013...#ixzz2NHGSazEc

  • #2
    Good fuck em.
    Whos your Daddy?

    Comment


    • #3
      Thank god somebody in the government finally started bitching about this. It kills me seeing commercials on TV offering this shit. If you can't afford a cell phone, you don't get one. Why is that so hard for this country to do, I'm tired of handouts.

      Comment


      • #4
        Some, though, say it isn't feasible to limit the service. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 34 percent of American homes use only wireless telephones. The CDC also reports that nearly one of every six American homes received all or almost all of their calls on a wireless telephone despite also having a landline.
        So fucking what? We can afford cell service, and dont have to have someone pay for it. You dont have a cell phone, you have a house phone for emergencies.
        "If I asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses." - Henry Ford

        Comment


        • #5
          Maybe if the government would stop coddling low income people they'd be motivated to improve their situation?

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by BP View Post
            Maybe if the government would stop coddling low income people they'd be motivated to improve their situation?
            Stop making sense.

            “I am for doing good to the poor, but...I think the best way of doing good to the poor, is not making them easy in poverty, but leading or driving them out of it. I observed...that the more public provisions were made for the poor, the less they provided for themselves, and of course became poorer. And, on the contrary, the less was done for them, the more they did for themselves, and became richer.”

            ― Benjamin Franklin

            Comment


            • #7
              Shit like this is why people get spun up over budget cuts that - yes they need to happen - but who is fixing all the bullshit stuff? I'd rather see this shit fixed before laying off firemen/police and killing benefits to military personnel...etc..etc...etc.

              I know on this surface this one little program is only "a couple of billion" (gees, that's bad enough), but how many of these are out there? The big shit CAN be cut, but it's this little shit that is also putting nails in our coffin - and a lot more than most would think.
              Originally posted by MR EDD
              U defend him who use's racial slurs like hes drinking water.

              Comment


              • #8
                I believe this is why our phone bills are so high or some of the reason they have went up. IIRC there is a fee for the free fucking phones built into your bill some how.
                Whos your Daddy?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by kingjason View Post
                  I believe this is why our phone bills are so high or some of the reason they have went up. IIRC there is a fee for the free fucking phones built into your bill some how.

                  Started in 1985, the Lifeline program was created to make sure people with low income levels weren’t cut off from emergency services, job searches or communication with family members. The program is funded by charges that appear on the monthly bills of every wireless and landline phone customer in the country. The money goes into a Universal Service Fund that pulls its revenues from fees that show up on most telephone bills as the “federal universal service charge.” The fees range but can go up to $3.22 a month.
                  It has been there since 1985, and a max of $3.22.


                  Stevo
                  Originally posted by SSMAN
                  ...Welcome to the land of "Fuck it". No body cares, and if they do, no body cares.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by kingjason View Post
                    I believe this is why our phone bills are so high or some of the reason they have went up. IIRC there is a fee for the free fucking phones built into your bill some how.
                    It's built into your electric bill too. I used to catch people stealing electricity in Dallas, and the majority of them were low income on the dole, received money to pay their bill, and they still stole it.

                    We've been feeding this beast for far to long, and it will be very difficult to turn off the faucets now.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Baba Ganoush View Post
                      It's built into your electric bill too. I used to catch people stealing electricity in Dallas, and the majority of them were low income on the dole, received money to pay their bill, and they still stole it.

                      We've been feeding this beast for far to long, and it will be very difficult to turn off the faucets now.
                      Yeah I have seen some pretty interesting ways to connect electricity.
                      Whos your Daddy?

                      Comment

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