Navy Phone Bill: $4 Billion

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And you thought your phone bill was high. The Navy is paying about $4 billion a year for calls, according to Defense News. And not surprisingly, there is a whole lot of padding in that tab.
45-127-k.jpgA check of telephone bills in the Jacksonville, Fla., area found that when we have a digital receipt for a phone bill in the areawe are being overcharged 30 percent, deputy chief of naval operations Vice Adm. Mark Edwards told a group of military-industrial insiders at a recent conference.

Telephone service with no digital receipt showed overcharges of 18 percent, he added.
The Navys top IT official said he wasnt accusing telephone companies, but he just might not let it slide. What Im saying is: Its my money and I want it back. And were going to get it back, he said, to some chuckles.
By recouping 30 percent of the $4 billion tab over the five-year defense plan, we could build another carrier, just on the phone bill, noted Edwards, a former ship and carrier battle group commander. It wont be quite that easy, but were working it.
And it might not end there. Edwards wants the Navy to change course by replacing traditional landlines for VOIP, or voice over IP, communications, he said. It would save us over 24 percent the first year and 24 percent the second year, he estimated.

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