The Paper Trail

Nebraska Ditches Land Lines

August 29, 2008 RSS Feed Print
  • Comment

The University of Nebraska-Lincoln is phasing out land-line phones, instead using the money it once spent on the seldom-used technology on wireless Internet, the Daily Nebraskan reports. The land lines cost the university up to $700,000 a year. Now, the school plans to only buy a third of its normal service for the 2008 fall semester and, by the start of the 2009 calendar, won't be signing any more phone contracts for housing at all. This also means there will be about 2,500 orphan phones fated for recycling; students who still want a phone can pay $9 a month.

With the money saved from phone lines, the school plans to spend $900,000 on wireless Internet.

Tags:
Wi-Fi,
University of Nebraska,
telephones

Reader Comments

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

The Paper Trail

Nobody knows a college better than its student newspaper. And nobody knows campus newspapers better than this blog. We sift through thousands of student newspaper headlines every day to bring you the latest, most important, or just plain weirdest news from campuses across the country. Heard bigger news or a crazier story? Send tips to papertrail@usnews.com.

advertisement