As part of the program, 13 million low-income subscribers receive an average discount of $9.25 per month on phone service, Tumulty reports. Senior republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee say the program "has nearly tripled in size from $800 million in 2009 to $2.2 billion per year in 2012." The committee is holding a hearing this month to discuss the program, which is funded by the Universal Service Fund, supported by fees on telephone bills. The fund also subsidizes rural phone service.
"When it was expanded to cover cellphone service in 2008, regulators included few safeguards against fraud, Tumulty writes. "As a result, there have been widespread reports that cellular providers, eager to collect a subsidy for each low-income subscriber, signed people up without verifying their eligibility. Some recipients also snapped up multiple phones in violation of a one-per-household rule." (Read more)
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