[MissoulaGov] Fwd: Interesting article on who has cell phones
Jamee Greer
greer.jamee at gmail.com
Wed Dec 17 13:07:47 MST 2008
I thought this was worth sharing given recent controversy regarding
how the city survey might be impacted or skewed by residents that only
use cellular phone numbers.
Highlights include:
About one-third of renters and about the same number of people under
age 30 live in homes with only cells. About a quarter of low-income
people also have only wireless phones, nearly double the proportion of
higher-earning people.
Just 9 percent of homeowners are cell-only, compared with 34 percent
of renters.
People with landlines who seldom take calls on them largely have those
phones hooked into computers, or rely so exclusively on their cell
phones that they assume anyone calling the landline is a solicitor and
seldom answer it.
Jamee Greer
406 241 7716
> Subject: Interesting article on who has cell phones
>
> Dec 17, 11:02 AM EST
>
> More than 1/6 of households have only cell phones
>
> Advertisement
>
>
> WASHINGTON (AP) -- The portion of homes with cell phones but no
> landlines has grown to 18 percent, led by adults living with
> unrelated roommates, renters and young people, according to federal
> figures released Wednesday.
>
> An additional 13 percent of households have landlines but get all or
> nearly all calls on their cells, the survey showed. Taken together,
> that means about three in 10 households are essentially reachable
> only on their wireless phones.
>
> The figures, covering the first half of 2008, underscore how
> consumers have been steadily abandoning traditional landline phones
> in favor of cells. The 18 percent in cell-only households compares
> with 16 percent in the second half of 2007, and just 7 percent in
> the first half of 2005.
>
> Leading the way are households comprised of unrelated adults, such
> as roommates or unmarried couples. Sixty-three percent of such
> households only have cell phones.
>
> About one-third of renters and about the same number of people under
> age 30 live in homes with only cells. About a quarter of low-income
> people also have only wireless phones, nearly double the proportion
> of higher-earning people.
>
> Stephen Blumberg, senior scientist at the federal Centers for
> Disease Control and Prevention and an author of the report, said
> there is no evidence the trend is slowing. He said the recession may
> fuel it further, especially as cell phone prices drop and their
> coverage and features improve.
>
> "There's clearly a reason to give up a landline phone if budgets are
> tight," he said in an interview. "Given the current economic
> environment, I'd not be surprised to see more and more people give
> up their landline phones for economic reasons."
>
> The findings have major implications for pollsters. In recent months
> researchers have concluded that people who have only cell phones
> have slightly different political views than those who do not.
>
> Growing numbers of pollsters now include cell-only users in their
> samples, which is more expensive in part due to legal restraints
> against using computers to call them.
>
> The survey also found:
>
> -Just 9 percent of homeowners are cell-only, compared with 34
> percent of renters.
>
> -Older people are less likely to have only cell phones, with just 9
> percent of those 45-64 and 3 percent of those 65 and up living in
> such households.
>
> -By race, 22 percent of Hispanic adults, 19 percent of blacks and 15
> percent of whites live in cell-only homes.
>
> -The South and Midwest have more cell-only households than the
> Northeast or West.
>
> People with landlines who seldom take calls on them largely have
> those phones hooked into computers, or rely so exclusively on their
> cell phones that they assume anyone calling the landline is a
> solicitor and seldom answer it.
>
> The data is compiled by the National Health Interview Survey,
> conducted by the CDC. The latest survey involved in-person
> interviews with members of 16,070 households conducted from last
> January through June.
>
> © 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may
> not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more
> about our Privacy Policy.
>
> Click here for copyright permissions!
> Copyright 2008 Associated Press
>
>
>
>
> LaNette Diaz
> Neighborhood Office
> 435 Ryman
> Missoula, MT 59802
> p) 552-6081
> f) 327-2187
> ldiaz at ci.missoula.mt.us
>
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://www.cmslists.com/pipermail/missoulagov/attachments/20081217/f0e59f34/attachment.htm>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.gif
Type: image/gif
Size: 43 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://www.cmslists.com/pipermail/missoulagov/attachments/20081217/f0e59f34/attachment.gif>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image002.gif
Type: image/gif
Size: 472 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://www.cmslists.com/pipermail/missoulagov/attachments/20081217/f0e59f34/attachment-0001.gif>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image003.png
Type: image/png
Size: 174 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://www.cmslists.com/pipermail/missoulagov/attachments/20081217/f0e59f34/attachment.png>
More information about the MissoulaGov
mailing list