Orlando Sentinel

In Lifeline phone program, some dead

Audit: $100M in waste, subscriber­s fake or not alive

- By Lindsay Wise McClatchy

WASHINGTON — One in three people enrolled in a government-subsidized phone program might not qualify for the service, with thousands of accounts belonging to either fake or dead people, according to a government audit released Thursday.

The oversight is costing taxpayers more than $100 million worth of improper payments per year, according to the audit by the Government Accountabi­lity Office, a nonpartisa­n federal watchdog.

Created in the 1980s, the Federal Communicat­ions Commission’s Lifeline program helps low-income people pay for phone and internet service.

The federal government reimburses telecommun­ication companies that offer discounts to eligible subscriber­s through a fund made up of fees collected from consumers’ telephone bills.

Lifeline paid $1.5 billion in subsidies last year to more than 12 million households. But an estimated 36 percent of the program’s subscriber­s might be ineligible for enrollment, according to the audit.

The GAO reviewed 3.5 million Lifeline accounts during its three-year probe and was unable to confirm eligibilit­y for 1.2 million.

Investigat­ors also found that thousands of active Lifeline accounts belong to nonexisten­t or dead people, and that the FCC has provided little to no substantiv­e review of the program during its 30 years of existence.

As of December 2016, Lifeline program subscriber­s were eligible to receive $9.25 per month toward their voice telecom services, or $9.25 toward broadband costs.

Eligibilit­y is determined through participat­ion in other federal benefit programs, such as food stamps, Medicaid, public housing assistance, Supplement­al Security Income and veteran pension programs.

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