Free Cell Phone Service for the Poor

By Olga Kharif Olga Kharif – Mon Jan 17, 8:08 am ET

While there's no free lunch, Evan Mensch recently discovered that there are free cell phones. After losing his sales job, the 37-year-old single father of two from Perry, Md., couldn't afford to continue his regular wireless contract. After learning of the federal program that provides wireless service to the oft-unemployed poor, Mensch signed up for a free Kyocera (NYSE:KYO - News) cell phone with 250 free minutes of calling a month through Assurance Wireless, a brand run by Sprint Nextel (NYSE:S - News). "Because of Assurance, I was able to get a call back from an employer," says Mensch, who received a job offer in November after nearly two years without a job.

Sprint Nextel isn't driven by altruism. Serving cash-pinched customers like Mensch can pay off due to federal government subsidies. And finding new customers isn't hard. With unemployment at 9.4 percent and one in six Americans living in poverty, Sprint and rival America Movl's (NYSE:AMX - News) TracFone unit have seen an explosion in sign-ups for the government-subsidized free wireless services they've offered for more than a year. In some financial reporting periods, Assurance accounts for up to 60 percent of new subscribers to Sprint's prepaid cellular plans, which don't require an annual contract, estimates Michael McCormack, an analyst with Nomura Securities International. "There's a growth opportunity here," he says. "There's an untapped market still."

That's rare in the U.S., where more than 80 percent of adults already own a cell phone. American carriers in recent years have aggressively courted less saturated niches like youth, seniors, Spanish speakers, and even sports fans in search of subscriber growth. Now the poor or unemployed form a large pool of would-be customers. Successful applicants have to be eligible for Medicaid or several other low-income assistance programs, have a family income significantly below the local poverty level (poverty guidelines vary by state), or receive food stamps. In October, 43.2 million received such food assistance, up 14.7 percent from a year earlier. Some 30 million households may qualify for the free service in just the 19 states where Assurance operates, says Grace Boehm, Sprint Nextel's director of Assurance Wireless. "As we see growth in the food stamp program, we tend to see an increase in the number of SafeLink subscribers," says Jose Fuentes, director of government relations at TracFone, about its free SafeLink Wireless brand, another big player.

The Universal Service Administrative Co. (USAC) -- which manages a federal fund to which U.S. telecom companies are required to contribute fees -- pays carriers up to $10 per subscriber per month. While that amount may sound meager, it translates into roughly the same per-minute rate spent by the average paying U.S. wireless user. Meanwhile, Sprint's costs of recruiting and keeping these customers are likely lower: Although more than half of regular prepaid wireless subscribers drop their service every year, Assurance users stay put. "We've seen very, very low churn," Boehm says.

Until 2008 the government simply subsidized between $3 and $10 of qualifying low-income consumers' monthly wireless bills as a way to assure their access to basic phone service; customers paid the rest out of pocket. (Uncle Sam offers similar subsidies for landline customers.) But since TracFone started offering totally free service in August 2008, paid directly by the subsidy, demand has soared. USAC's annual disbursements to telcos providing low-income phone service rose 52 percent, to $1.25 billion, between 2008 and 2010. Free wireless is the biggest reason for the increase, with the new market generating hundreds of millions of dollars for service providers.

A staffer at the Federal Communications Commision, which oversees carriers, says the agency may consider tightening oversight and cost management of the fast-growing program. Still, agencies that promote the free phones see growth continuing. "Anytime the boss tells you not to come back to work, the home phone is the first to go," says Sharon Goodson, executive director of North Carolina Community Action Assn., which has helped thousands apply for Assurance phones.

Free cellular plans continue to spread across the map. In January, Sprint began offering Assurance service in five more states, and it hopes eventually to serve the entire country. Rival TracFone now offers its SafeLink Wireless service in 30 states, as well as in Washington and Puerto Rico. It has applied to provide the service in six more states. A dozen other carriers have recently applied for or received governmental approvals to offer free service.

The bottom line: Wireless operators like Sprint Nextel are building a big business providing free cellular service to the poor. Washington picks up the tab.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/bw/20110117/bs_ ... 2019667595