Free Cell Phone Service for Nearly 450,000 of Philadelphia Area's Poorest Residents Blocked by Handful of City and County Offici
29 Enero 2009 - 9:00AM
PR Newswire (US)
Red Tape, Foot-dragging Stops Benefits of Federal Program for
Universal Telecommunications Access From Reaching Those Needing It
Most in Philly Area; Only Chester and Montgomery Counties Are On
Board So Far. PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 29 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Even
as low-income residents of such major metropolitan areas as Boston,
Atlanta, and Miami are enjoying the benefits of a federal program
designed to ensure that telephone service is available and
affordable for eligible low income households, half a dozen city
and county bureaucrats are blocking the distribution of free cell
phones and related minutes to an estimated 443,569 of the poorest
residents of the greater Philadelphia area, including 221,870 in
the city of Philadelphia itself. Miami-based TracFone Wireless,
Inc., America's leading prepaid cell phone provider, went public
today with its concerns about the months of unreasonable and
unjustified legal and procedural roadblocks that have been erected
in response to the launch of SafeLink Wireless(R) in Philadelphia.
SafeLink Wireless is the TracFone service delivered under the
federal Lifeline program designed to ensure universal access to
telecommunications services for qualifying low-income consumers.
Hundreds of thousands of consumers in other states have already
benefited from SafeLink since its inception in the fall of 2008.
City and county officials in Philadelphia, Berks County, Bucks
County, Lehigh County, and North Hampton County have so far refused
to certify the TracFone Wireless program. To date, Chester County
and Montgomery County are alone in certifying the program in the
greater Philadelphia area. Delaware County is currently in the
process of testing phones for certification purposes. TracFone's
SafeLink Wireless already is certified and in place in Florida,
Tennessee, Virginia, Massachusetts and the greater Atlanta area.
Statewide, TracFone's SafeLink would benefit a million or more
low-income residents. Jose Fuentes, director of government
relations, TracFone Wireless said: "This is an unfortunate
situation where those who need our program the most in the greater
Philadelphia area are losing out for no good reason. The notion
that that there are special E911 technical issues or legal
liabilities in the Philadelphia area is, quite simply,
preposterous. Other states, cities and counties across the U.S.
have weighed these same issues and proceeded to certify our program
in order to connect their poorest citizens to the
telecommunications system. The only thing that local officials have
to certify is that our cell phones have the ability to dial and
connect to 911 call centers regardless of activation status or
prepaid minutes. That can be tested and proven in a matter of
minutes." TracFone officials point out they already have thousands
of Philadelphia area customers who have had no problem whatsoever
accessing E911 services. Fuentes said that the following officials
in the greater Philadelphia region should be contacted to determine
why they are blocking cell phone access for nearly 450,000
low-income area residents: Fuentes said that the following
officials in the greater Philadelphia region should be contacted to
determine why they are blocking cell phone access for nearly
450,000 low-income area residents: Philadelphia - Frank Punzo, and
215-686-4500; Berks County - Daphne Miller, and 610-655-4901; Bucks
County - Peter Ference, and 1-888-245-7210; Lehigh County, Laurie
Bailey - and 610-782-3087; and North Hampton County, Richard
Teasdale - and 610-746-3194. TracFone's SafeLink Wireless service
provides eligible low-income households a free cell phone, mobile
access to emergency services and free 42 minutes of air time,
monthly, for one year. The cell phone offers such features as
voicemail, text, call waiting, international calling to over 60
destinations and caller ID. "We are offering the Philadelphia
area's low-income residents the opportunity to have the same access
and privileges many individuals take for granted when it comes to
using cell phones," Fuentes said. "The SafeLink Wireless service is
truly unique because we are providing a service that no other
company has made available before -- a free cell phone and free
monthly minutes to qualifying low income families. SafeLink
Wireless offers low income families accessibility, freedom and the
security in knowing that should an emergency occur -- wherever they
are, they will stay safe and stay connected." The SafeLink cell
phones would mean more economic opportunity and enhanced public
safety for Philadelphia area low-income families. A recent study
("Cell Phones Provide Significant Economic Gains for Low-Income
American Households," April 2008) analyzed the impact of mobile
phones on low-income households. "In this day and age, the cell
phone should be deemed an imperative necessity for the millions of
low-income families who are far less likely to own them," said
Nicholas P. Sullivan, the study's author and a former visiting
scholar at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "Our study showed
cell phones can significantly boost the earning potential of these
communities, and this connectivity vastly encourages their
opportunities and remains central to their everyday survival,"
Sullivan stressed. The same study also revealed the cell phone is a
critical component for personal safety and access to emergency
services. Typically, families living below the poverty line
struggle to pay their monthly bills, experience credit issues, and
cannot afford traditional home phone and wireless services. Using
public pay phones regularly poses problems and cell phone contracts
often are difficult to maintain due to costly usage charges over
long-term agreements. As a result, regular communication is a major
dilemma for these families. Federal Lifeline program eligibility
varies by state but generally families may qualify for SafeLink
Wireless service if their household income is not above 135 percent
of the federal poverty income guidelines, or if they receive any of
the following government assistance programs: Medicaid; Supplement
Security Income (SSI); Low-Income Home Energy Assistance Program
(LIHEAP); National School Lunch Program; Federal Public Housing
Assistance (Section 8); Food Stamps; and Temporary Assistance to
Needy Families (TANF). To learn more about the TracFone SafeLink
Wireless service, including eligibility requirements, please call
1-800-977-3768, or visit http://www.safelinkwireless.com/. ABOUT
TRACFONE WIRELESS, INC. TracFone Wireless, Inc. is America's number
one prepaid wireless service in the U.S. with more than 10 million
cell phone subscribers. TracFone is a subsidiary of America Movil,
S.A.B. de C.V. ("AMX") (BMV: AMX; NYSE: AMX; Nasdaq: AMOV; LATIBEX:
XAMXL), the leading provider of wireless services in Latin America
with more than 153 million cell phone subscribers. For more
information, please visit: http://www.tracfone.com/. DATASOURCE:
TracFone Wireless, Miami CONTACT: Ailis Aaron Wolf for TracFone
Wireless, Miami, +1-703-276-3265, Web Site:
http://www.safelinkwireless.com/ http://www.tracfone.com/
Copyright