May 12, 2010 2:10 PM

1 in 4 Homes Have Cell Phone, No Landline

By
CBSNews
(AP)  One in 4 households has a cell phone but no traditional landlines, a trend led by the young and the poor that is showing no sign of abating.

The 25 percent who had only a mobile phone in the last half of 2009 was up 2 percentage points from the first half of the year, according to data reported Wednesday by the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Spotlighting how steadily people's telephone habits are evolving, in the beginning of 2006 just 11 percent of homes had only a cell.

The move away from landlines - just 15 percent of households have a traditional phone and no cell phone, about half the rate of 2006 - is having a widespread effect. It affects everything from how telephone companies stay profitable to how polling firms and government agencies gather data to how 911 service providers locate people in need of help.

Staying steady is the nearly 6 in 10 share of households with both landline and cell service. That figure has essentially remained constant since the beginning of 2007.

Stephen Blumberg, a senior scientist at the CDC and an author of the report, said he believes the tough economic times are having little effect on the switch from landlines to cells. One possible exception - a sharp increase in the number of children from cell-only households, which he said partly reflects a growing number of children living in rented housing as their families' homes were foreclosed.

Of those living below the federal poverty level of about $22,000 a year for a family of four, 36 percent have only cell phones. Twenty-nine percent of the near-poor - between the poverty level and $44,000 annually for a family of four - are cell only, as are 20 percent of those with higher incomes. The percentages in each income group have been growing steadily.

Younger people are leading the way to a cell-only world. More than a third of people under age 35 - including about half of those age 25 to 29 - have only cell phones. The figure drops steadily at age 35 and after, with only about 1 in 20 people age 65 and older relying only on mobile service.

The report also found that:

-63 percent of adults living with an unrelated adult but without children had only cells, nearly four times the rate for related adults without children.

-More than 4 in 10 renters had only cells, about triple the rate for homeowners.

-15 percent of adults in the Northeast had only cell phones, while the figure for those in other parts of the country ranged from 22 to 26 percent.

-30 percent of Hispanics had only mobile phones, compared with 25 percent of non-Hispanic blacks and 21 percent of non-Hispanic whites.

The data was compiled by the National Health Interview Survey, which is conducted by the CDC. The latest survey involved in-person interviews with members of 21,375 households conducted from July through December 2009.

AP
Add a Comment
by djseavy May 21, 2010 3:32 PM EDT
I have MagicJack and a cell phone. Land-line phone companies charge extra for every feature that I get for free on MJ and my cell. And as others have said - I get no telemarketers!
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by ralphing May 13, 2010 1:24 AM EDT
Been cell only for almost 10 years, but had DSL until two years ago. I do miss having a fax machine, which I plugged into the DSL line. The nice thing about cell phones is that I moved across the country two years ago, but kept my old number I've had for 10 years. No need to tell everyone I have a new number since I could keep my old one. You can't do that with a land line.
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by barcar55 May 13, 2010 12:56 AM EDT
My household average income is 100K per year. We all have cell phones which are ready and available at all times. Never any missed calls and all the same or more features than a landline. Why pay two phone bills for the same type service? Doesn't make sense to own both.
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by tmittelstaed May 12, 2010 9:35 PM EDT
"911 calling please state the emergency"

"It's my son, he's choking...aaahhhhhhhhhh! Come quick come quick now now!!!"

"Sir please calm down, your calling from a cell phone so we need you to
tell us the address"

"OK OK the address is 1234 SE.....click"

"sir, sir, sir!!! Damn, he must have forgot to charge his cell battery.."
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by tsigili May 12, 2010 4:06 PM EDT
Have never seen so many phones, enabling so many people, to talk to each other.....about absolutely nothing.
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by USMC-Mom May 12, 2010 3:34 PM EDT
I hate AT&T so heck yes I got away from them as fast as possible. THey are thives.
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by vjhahn May 12, 2010 3:22 PM EDT
We also disconnected our landline - probably about 3 years ago now. We are in our mid 30's, and middle class. It had nothing to do with economics. The landline we had via ATT was cheap at about $13/month. We did not use the landline for making calls, but had kept it for several years because we had DSL. Once cable internet became more affordable and available, we switched and no longer needed the landline at all. I never gave the number out, and I never called out on it so there was truly no reason to keep it.
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