UTAC Board helps spread the word of
Lifeline Program for telephone access
Telephones may be available for those who
cannot afford them
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[September 14, 2017]
September
11-17, 2017, is Lifeline Awareness Week and the UTAC board, which
administers the program in Illinois, wants Illinois residents to
know they do not need to go without a phone due to cost.
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The Lifeline program is a federally-funded program
that subsidizes the cost of one telephone per household, either a
cell phone or a landline phone. Internet service as part of the cost
of the phone is also being phased in and may be available.
Participants in Medicaid, SNAP, SSI, Federal Public Housing
Assistance, or Veterans Pension and Survivors Benefits programs or
someone making 135% or less of federal poverty guideline are
eligible. If you believe you may be eligible, contact your phone
company.
In Illinois, a program funded entirely through voluntary donations
also subsidizes the cost of landline phone installation for Lifeline
participants. Donations can be made at
www.linkupillinois.org
or by contacting your landline phone provider.
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“Telephones are truly a lifeline,” said UTAC Board
Chairman Allen Cherry. “With affordable access to this basic
service, our friends, family members, and neighbors are only a call
away from help in an emergency.”
Eligible families can enroll by calling their local telephone
service provider or a participating cell phone provider and asking to be
enrolled in Lifeline. The contact information for the two largest providers in
Illinois is AT&T: 1-888-256-5378 Frontier Communications: 1-800-921-8101
More information about the programs is available at www.linkupillinois.org.
[Allen Cherry, President
Universal Telephone Assistance Corp.] |