Steve Richardson, who goes by the name "Gen. Dogon" on the streets of L.A.'s skid row, is the kind of person federal regulators had in mind when they created the digital-television transition's subsidy.
Richardson's job at a civil rights group leaves him with barely enough money for food. He can't afford a converter box to keep his antenna-equipped TV working on June 12, when stations across the country turn off their analog signals and start broadcasting solely in digital. But when he applied for a $40 converter-box voucher, he was turned down because he lives in the residential Sanborn Hotel.
"I already feel like a caveman in there," he said of his small downtown apartment. "I don't have a working phone in there, and I don't get half the channels. But now TV is being taken away from me, and there's nothing nobody is going to do about it."
A glitch in the Commerce Department program that administers the coupons has left Richardson and many other poor Americans unable to receive them. The problem lies in where they live.
Single-room occupancy hotels such as the Sanborn, which is operated by the Skid Row Housing Trust, are classified by the federal government as business addresses, not residential, and therefore are ineligible.
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