UNITED STATES
                       SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
                             WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549

                                  SCHEDULE 14A

           PROXY STATEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION 14(A) OF THE SECURITIES
                     EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 (AMENDMENT NO.  )

Filed  by  the  Registrant  [X]
Filed  by  a  Party  other  than  the  Registrant  [   ]

Check  the  appropriate  box:
[   ]  Preliminary  Proxy  Statement
[   ]  Confidential,  for  Use  of the  Commission  Only  (as permitted by Rule
       14a-6(e)(2))
[ X ]  Definitive  Proxy  Statement
[   ]  Definitive  Additional  Materials
[   ]  Soliciting  Material  Pursuant  to Sec. 240.14a-12


                           TALK AMERICA HOLDINGS, INC.
                           ---------------------------
                (Name of Registrant as Specified In Its Charter)

                           ---------------------------
      (Name of Person(s) Filing Proxy Statement, if other than the Registrant)

Payment  of  Filing  Fee  (Check  the  appropriate  box):
[X]  No  fee  required.
[ ]  Fee  computed on table below per Exchange Act Rules 14a-6(i)(1) and 0-11.
     1) Title of each class of securities to which transaction applies:
     2)  Aggregate  number  of securities to which transaction applies:
     3)  Per  unit  price  or  other  underlying  value  of transaction computed
     pursuant  to  Exchange  Act  Rule  0-11  (Set forth the amount on which the
     filing  fee  is  calculated  and  state  how  it  was  determined):
     4)  Proposed  maximum  aggregate  value  of  transaction:
     5)  Total  fee  paid:
[ ]  Fee  paid  previously  with  preliminary  materials.
[ ]  Check  box  if  any part of the fee is offset as provided by Exchange Act
Rule  0-11(a)(2)  and  identify the filing for which the offsetting fee was paid
previously.  Identify  the  previous filing by registration statement number, or
the  Form  or  Schedule  and  the  date  of  its  filing.
     1)  Amount  Previously  Paid:
     2)  Form,  Schedule  or  Registration  Statement  No.:
     3)  Filing  Party:
     4)  Date  Filed:



                           TALK AMERICA HOLDINGS, INC.
                           12020 Sunrise Valley Drive
                             Reston, Virginia 20190
                                 (703) 391-7500

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

                                   May 6, 2003

To  the  Stockholders  of
Talk  America  Holdings,  Inc.:

     NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the Annual Meeting of Stockholders (the "Annual
Meeting")  of  Talk  America  Holdings,  Inc.,  a  Delaware  corporation  (the
"Company"),  will  be held on June 18, 2003, at 10:00 a.m., Eastern time, at The
Sheraton  Reston  Hotel,  11810 Sunrise Valley Drive, Reston, Virginia 20191 for
the  following  purposes:

     (1) To consider and vote upon a proposal to elect two directors, each for a
     term of three years and until his successor has been elected and qualified;

     (2)  To  consider  and  vote  upon  a  proposal  to  ratify and approve the
     appointment  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  as  the independent certified
     public  accountants  for  the  Company  for  2003;

     (3)  To  consider  and  vote upon a proposal to ratify and approve the 2003
     Long  Term  Incentive  Plan;  and

     (4)  To transact such other business as may properly come before the Annual
     Meeting  or  any  adjournment  or  adjournments  thereof.

     Only  stockholders of record at the close of business on April 21, 2003 are
entitled  to  notice  of  and  to  vote  at  the  meeting  or any adjournment or
adjournments  thereof.

     The  Board  of  Directors  hopes that you will be able to attend the Annual
Meeting.  Whether  or  not  you  are  able to be present in person at the Annual
Meeting,  we  urge you to sign and date the enclosed proxy and return it at your
earliest convenience in the enclosed envelope. If you attend the Annual Meeting,
you  may  revoke  the  proxy  and  vote in person if you desire. Please read the
enclosed  proxy statement, which contains information relevant to the actions to
be  taken  at  the  Annual  Meeting.

                                   By  Order  of  the  Board  of  Directors,

                                      /s/ Aloysius  T.  Lawn,  IV
                                   Aloysius  T.  Lawn,  IV,  Secretary
Reston,  Virginia
May  6,  2003



                           TALK AMERICA HOLDINGS, INC.
                           12020 Sunrise Valley Drive
                             Reston, Virginia 20190
                                 (703) 391-7500

                                 PROXY STATEMENT
                       FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

     The  Board  of  Directors  (the  "Board") of Talk America Holdings, Inc., a
Delaware  corporation  (the "Company"), the principal executive offices of which
are  located  at  12020  Sunrise  Valley  Drive,  Reston, Virginia 20190, hereby
solicits  your  proxy  in  the  form  enclosed  for use at the Annual Meeting of
Stockholders  to  be  held  on  June  18, 2003 (the "Annual Meeting"), or at any
adjournment  or  adjournments  thereof.  The  Annual Meeting will be held at The
Sheraton  Reston  Hotel,  11810  Sunrise Valley Drive, Reston, Virginia 20191 at
10:00 a.m., Eastern time.  The Company will bear the expenses of soliciting your
proxy.  This  proxy statement and the accompanying form of proxy are first being
released  for  mailing  to  stockholders  on  or  about  May  6,  2003.

     We urge you to date, sign and mail your proxy promptly to make certain that
your  shares  will be voted at the Annual Meeting.  Proxies in the enclosed form
that  are  received  in  time for the Annual Meeting will be voted at the Annual
Meeting  in  accordance  with  the  instructions, if any, indicated on the proxy
card.  If  no  instruction  is  given,  the  proxy will be voted in favor of the
nominees  for  election  as  directors  specified under "PROPOSAL 1: ELECTION OF
DIRECTORS";  in  favor  of  the  ratification  and  approval of the selection of
auditors  as  described  in  "PROPOSAL  2: RATIFICATION OF INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED
PUBLIC  ACCOUNTANTS";  and  in  favor  of  the  ratification and approval of the
adoption  of  the  2003  Long  Term  Incentive Plan as described in "PROPOSAL 3:
APPROVAL OF THE 2003 LONG TERM INCENTIVE PLAN."  Any proxy may be revoked at any
time  before  it  is  exercised  by  giving written notice of such revocation or
delivering  a  later dated proxy to the Corporate Secretary of the Company prior
to  the  Annual  Meeting,  or  by  voting  in  person  at  the  Annual  Meeting.

                                VOTING SECURITIES

     Only  stockholders of record at the close of business on April 21, 2003 are
entitled  to  vote  at  the  Annual  Meeting.  On  April  21,  2003,  there were
26,175,205 shares of Company common stock, par value $.01 per share, outstanding
and  entitled  to  vote  (excluding  1,315,789  shares  of  common stock held in
treasury).  Each share of common stock is entitled to one vote.  The presence in
person  or  by  proxy  at the Annual Meeting of the holders of a majority of the
shares of common stock will constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.

     With  respect  to  Proposal  1,  the  nominees  in Class II for election as
directors  who  receive the greatest number of votes cast at the Annual Meeting,
assuming  that  a  quorum  is present, shall be elected as directors. A withheld
vote  on  any  nominee  will  not  affect  the  voting  results.

     With respect to Proposal 2, approval will require the affirmative vote of a
majority  of  the shares present in person or represented by proxy at the Annual
Meeting  and  entitled  to  vote.



     With  respect  to Proposal 3, approval will require the affirmative vote of
the  holders  of  a  majority  of  the total votes cast at the Annual Meeting in
respect  of  the  proposal.

     Brokers who hold shares in street name do not have the authority to vote on
certain  matters  for  which they have not received instructions from beneficial
owners.  Such  broker  non-votes  (arising  from  the  lack of instructions from
beneficial  owners)  will  not  affect  the  outcome  of the vote on Proposal 1,
Proposal  2  or  Proposal  3.

     It  is anticipated that sufficient stockholders will attend the meeting, in
person  or  by  proxy,  to  constitute a quorum for the transaction of business.

                                        2


                          SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN
                        BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

     The  following  table  sets  forth certain information known to the Company
with respect to beneficial ownership of the Company common stock as of March 31,
2003  (except  as  otherwise  noted) by (i) each stockholder who is known by the
Company  to  own  beneficially  more than five percent of the outstanding common
stock,  (ii)  each  of  the Company's directors and nominees for director, (iii)
each  of  the  executive officers named below and (iv) all current directors and
executive  officers  of  the  Company  as a group. Except as otherwise indicated
below,  the  Company  believes  that  the  beneficial owners of the common stock
listed  below have sole investment and voting power with respect to such shares.




NAME OF BENEFICIAL OWNER OR IDENTITY OF GROUP          NUMBER OF SHARES          PERCENT OF SHARES
                                                     BENEFICIALLY OWNED (1)     BENEFICIALLY OWNED
                                                                                  
Paul Rosenberg
650 N. E. 5th Avenue
Boca Raton, Fl 33432
                                                         1,919,995 (2)                 7.3%

Gabriel Battista                                           655,555 (3)                 2.4%

Mark S. Fowler                                             108,674 (3)                   *

Arthur J. Marks                                             61,666 (3)                   *

Edward B. Meyercord, III                                   244,820 (3)                   *

Ronald R. Thoma                                              39311 (3)                   *

Jeffrey Earhart                                             81,434 (3)                   *

Aloysius T. Lawn, IV                                       145,660 (3)                   *

Warren A. Brasselle                                         89,278 (3)                   *

David G. Zahka                                              40,000 (3)                   *

All directors and executive officers as a group
(12 persons)                                             2,186,005 (3)                 7.8%



*     Less  than  1%

(1)     The  securities  "beneficially  owned"  by  a  person  are determined in
accordance  with  the  definition  of  "beneficial  ownership"  set forth in the
regulations  of  the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  (the  "SEC")  and,
accordingly,  may  include securities owned by or for, among others, the spouse,
children  or  certain  other  relatives  of such person.  The same shares may be
beneficially  owned  by  more  than  one  person.  Beneficial  ownership  may be
disclaimed  as  to  certain  of  the  securities.

                                        3


(2)     The  foregoing  information  is derived from the Schedule 13D/A filed by
Paul  Rosenberg, the Rosenberg Family Limited Partnership, PBR, Inc. and the New
Millennium  Charitable  Foundation  on  February  12,  1999.

(3)     Includes  shares  of  Company  common  stock that could be acquired upon
exercise  of  options exercisable within sixty (60) days after March 31, 2003 as
follows:  Gabriel  Battista-605,555;  Edward B. Meyercord, III-194,444; Aloysius
T.  Lawn,  IV-114,444;  Jeffrey  Earhart-76,666; Warren A. Brasselle-79,445; and
David  G.  Zahka-33,334.

COMPLIANCE  WITH  SECTION  16(A)  OF  THE  EXCHANGE  ACT

     Under Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, the
Company's  directors  and  certain  officers  and persons who are the beneficial
owners  of  more than 10 percent of the common stock of the Company are required
to  report  their  ownership  of  the  common stock, options and certain related
securities  and any changes in that ownership to the SEC. Specific due dates for
these  reports  have been established, and the Company is required to report any
failure  to  file  by  such  dates in 2002. The Company believes that all of the
required  filings  have  been made in a timely manner, except that the executive
officers  of  the  Company  who  participated  in  the Company's Employee Option
Exchange  (described  under "EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION - Stock Options" below) that
was  completed  in  April  2002,  including  Messrs.  Battista, Meyercord, Lawn,
Earhart,  Brasselle,  Griffo,  and  Vinall,  reported  the cancellation of their
options that were exchanged in their timely filed Form 4 reports of the issuance
of  the new options delivered in the exchange, rather than in the earlier Form 5
report.  In  making  this  statement,  the  Company  has relied on copies of the
reporting  forms  received  by  it.


                        PROPOSAL 1: ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     The  Company's  Amended  and Restated Certificate of Incorporation provides
that  the Board shall consist of not less than one nor more than 15 persons, the
exact  number  to be fixed and determined from time to time by resolution of the
Board.  The Board has acted to fix the number of directors at five.  Pursuant to
the  terms  of  the Company's Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation,
the Board is divided into three classes, as nearly equal in number as reasonably
possible, with terms currently expiring at the annual meeting of stockholders in
2003  ("Class  II"), the annual meeting of stockholders in 2004 ("Class I"), and
the  annual  meeting  of  stockholders  in  2005  ("Class  III"),  respectively.

     At  the Annual Meeting, Arthur Marks and Edward B. Meyercord, III are to be
elected  as  Class  II  directors,  for terms to expire at the annual meeting of
stockholders  in  2006.  Messrs.  Marks  and Meyercord will each serve until his
successor  has  been  elected  and  qualified.  Mr.  Marks currently serves as a
director  of the Company.  Mr. Meyercord currently serves as the President and a
director  of  the Company.  The proxies solicited hereby, unless directed to the
contrary  therein,  will be voted for the nominees.  The nominees have consented
to  being  named in this proxy statement and to serve if elected.  The Board has
no  reason  to  believe  that  the nominees for election as director will not be
candidates  or will be unable to serve, but if either occurs it is intended that
the  shares represented by proxies will be voted for such substituted nominee or
nominees  as  the  Board,  in  its  discretion,  may  designate.

                                        4


     The  following  sets  forth  certain  biographical  information,  present
occupation  and business experience for the past five years for the nominees for
election  as  directors  and  the  continuing  Class  I and Class III directors.

The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR the Class II nominees listed below.

CLASS  II:  NOMINEES  WHOSE  TERMS  WILL  EXPIRE  IN  2003

ARTHUR MARKS, AGE 58.  Mr. Marks has been a director of the Company since August
1999.  He  is currently a general partner of Valhalla Partners, a private equity
fund.  From 1984 through 2001, Mr. Marks was a General Partner of New Enterprise
Associates,  a  private  equity  fund  that  invests in early stage companies in
information  technology  and  medical  and  life sciences. Mr. Marks serves as a
director  of  two  publicly traded software companies, Mobius Management Systems
and  Progress  Software  Corp.,  as  well  as one publicly traded communications
equipment company, Advanced Switching Communications. He is also a director of a
number  of  privately  held  companies.

EDWARD  B.  MEYERCORD,  III,  AGE  37.  Mr.  Meyercord  currently  serves as the
President  and a director of the Company. Mr. Meyercord was elected to the Board
and  President  of the Company in May 2001. He served as Chief Financial Officer
of the Company between August 1999 and December 2001 and Chief Operating Officer
of  the  Company  between  January  2000  and May 2001. He joined the Company in
September  of  1996  as  the  Executive  Vice President, Marketing and Corporate
Development.  Prior  to  joining  the  Company,  Mr.  Meyercord  served  as Vice
President  in  the  Global Telecommunications Corporate Finance Group at Salomon
Brothers,  Inc., based in New York.  Prior to Salomon Brothers, he worked in the
corporate  finance  department  at  PaineWebber  Incorporated.

CLASS  I:  INCUMBENTS  WHOSE  TERMS  WILL  EXPIRE  IN  2004

GABRIEL  BATTISTA,  AGE  58.  Mr.  Battista  currently serves as Chairman of the
Board  and Chief Executive Officer of the Company.  Prior to joining the Company
in  January  of  1999  as  a  director and Chief Executive Officer, Mr. Battista
served  as Chief Executive Officer of Network Solutions Inc., an Internet domain
name  registration  company.  Prior  to  joining Network Solutions, Mr. Battista
served  both  as  CEO  and  as  President and Chief Operating Officer of Cable &
Wireless,  Inc.,  a  telecommunication  provider.  His  career has also included
management positions at US Sprint, GTE Telenet and The General Electric Company.
Mr.  Battista  serves  as  a  director of Capitol College and Systems & Computer
Technology  Corporation  (SCTC).

RONALD  R.  THOMA, AGE 68.  Mr. Thoma is currently a business consultant, having
retired  in  early  2000  as  an Executive Vice President of Crown Cork and Seal
Company,  Inc., a manufacturer of packaging products, where he had been employed
since  1955.  Mr.  Thoma  has  served  as  a director of the Company since 1995.

                                        5


CLASS  III:  INCUMBENT  WHOSE  TERM  WILL  EXPIRE  IN  2005

MARK  S.  FOWLER,  AGE  61.  Mr. Fowler has been a director of the Company since
September  1999.  From  1981 to 1987, he was the Chairman of the FCC.  From 1987
to 1994, Mr. Fowler was Senior Communications Counsel at Latham & Watkins, a law
firm,  and of counsel from 1994 to 2000.  From 1991 to 1994, he was the founder,
Chairman  and  Chief  Executive  Officer  of  PowerFone  Holdings  Inc.,  a
telecommunications  company.  From 1994 to 2000 he was a founder and chairman of
UniSite,  Inc.,  a  developer  of  antenna  sites  for  use by multiple wireless
operators.  From  1999  to  December  2002,  Mr.  Fowler served as a director of
Pac-West  Telecomm,  Inc.,  a  competitive local exchange carrier.  From 1999 to
date,  Mr.  Fowler  has served as a director of Beasley Broadcast Group, a radio
broadcasting  company.  Mr.  Fowler  is also a founder and serves as Chairman of
the  Board  of  Directors  of  AssureSat, Inc., a provider of telecommunications
satellite  backup  services.

                             THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS

     The  Board  met or acted by written consent in lieu of a meeting 8 times in
2002.  During  the  fiscal  year  ended  December  31, 2002, each then-incumbent
director  attended at least 75% of the aggregate number of meetings of the Board
and  meetings  of  the  committees  of  the  Board  on  which  he  served.

BOARD  COMMITTEES

     The  Board  has  established the following two committees, the function and
current  members  of  which  are  noted  below.

Audit  Committee.  In  2002,  the  Audit Committee consisted of Arthur J. Marks,
Mark  S.  Fowler  and  Ronald  R. Thoma.  The members of the Audit Committee are
independent,  as  that term is defined in the National Association of Securities
Dealers  listing standards.  The Audit Committee's primary purpose is to oversee
the Company's accounting and financial reporting processes and the audits of the
Company's  financial  statements.  Without  limitation  of the generality of the
foregoing, the Audit Committee's primary functions are to oversee: the integrity
of  the  Company's  financial  statements and financial reporting structure; the
Company's  compliance  with  related  legal  and  regulatory  requirements;  the
independent  auditor's  qualifications  and independence; and the performance of
the  Company's  independent  auditors.  In  addition,  the  Audit  Committee  is
directly  and  solely responsible for the appointment, replacement, compensation
and  oversight of the work of the independent auditors.  The Audit Committee met
5  times  in  2002.

                                        6


AUDIT  COMMITTEE  REPORT

     The  following report of the Audit Committee does not constitute soliciting
material  and  should  not be deemed filed or incorporated by reference into any
other Company filing under the Securities Act of 1933 or the Securities Exchange
Act  of  1934,  except  to the extent the Company specifically incorporates this
report  by  reference  therein.

     During  2000, the Audit Committee of the Board developed an updated charter
for  the  Committee,  which  was  approved  by the full Board on March 20, 2000.
Management  and the Audit Committee, with assistance of legal counsel, have been
reviewing  the  various  proposals  and  recently  adopted rules with respect to
accounting  and  other  matters.  An updated charter for the Audit Committee was
approved  by the full Board on April 29, 2003.  A copy of the updated charter is
attached  hereto as Exhibit A.  The updated charter revises the prior charter by
providing  that the Audit Committee: engages and hires the Company's independent
auditors, approves related party transactions and establishes procedures for the
receipt,  retention and treatment of complaints regarding Company accounting and
auditing  matters.  The  Audit  Committee reviews and reassesses this charter at
least  annually.

     While  management  is  responsible for the preparation and integrity of the
Company's  financial  statements,  accounting and financial reporting principles
and  internal  controls  and  procedures  designed  to  assure  compliance  with
accounting  standards and applicable laws and regulations, the Audit Committee's
primary  purpose  is to oversee the Company's accounting and financial reporting
processes  and  the audits of the Company's financial statements.  The Company's
independent auditors, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, are responsible for performing
an  independent audit of the consolidated financial statements and expressing an
opinion  on the conformity of those financial statements with generally accepted
accounting  principles.

     In  fulfilling  its  oversight  responsibilities,  the  Audit Committee has
reviewed and discussed the audited financial statements for fiscal 2002 with the
Company's  management  and  has  discussed  with  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP the
matters that are required to be discussed by Statement on Auditing Standards No.
61, Communication with Audit Committees. In addition, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
has  provided  the  Audit  Committee with the written disclosures and the letter
required  by  the  Independence  Standards  Board  Standard  No.1,  Independence
Discussions  with  Audit  Committees, and the Audit Committee has discussed with
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  their  independence.

     Based  on these reviews and discussions, the Audit Committee recommended to
the  Board of Directors that the audited financial statements be included in the
Company's  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31,
2002,  for  filing  with  the  SEC.

                                   THE  AUDIT  COMMITTEE

                                   Arthur  J.  Marks,  Chairman
                                   Mark  S.  Fowler
                                   Ronald  R.  Thoma

                                        7


Compensation Committee.    In 2002, the Compensation Committee consisted of Mark
S.  Fowler  and  Ronald R. Thoma.  The Compensation Committee is responsible for
determining  compensation  for  the  Company's  executive officers and currently
administers the 1998 Long Term Incentive Plan, the 2000 Long Term Incentive Plan
and  the  2001 Non-Officer Long Term Incentive Plan and reviews and approves the
grant of options to employees of the Company.  The Compensation Committee met or
took  action  by  written  consent  in  lieu  of a meeting 20 times during 2002.

     Although  the  Board has not established a nominating or similar committee,
the  Board  will  consider  stockholder  nominations  for directors submitted in
accordance  with the procedure set forth in Section 402 of the Company's Bylaws.
The  procedure  provides  that  a notice relating to the nomination of directors
must  be  timely  given  in  writing to the Chairman of the Board of the Company
prior  to  the  meeting.  To  be  timely,  notice  relating to the nomination of
directors must be delivered not less than 14 days nor more than 50 days prior to
any  such  meeting of stockholders called for the election of directors.  Notice
to the Company from a stockholder who proposes to nominate a person at a meeting
for  election  as  a  director  must  be  accompanied by each proposed nominee's
written  consent  and contain, to the extent known to the notifying stockholder,
the  name,  address and principal occupation of each proposed nominee, the total
number  of shares of capital stock of the Company that will be voted for each of
the  proposed  nominees,  the name and address of the notifying stockholder, the
number  of  shares  of  capital  stock  of  the  Company owned by each notifying
stockholder  and  the  information  regarding the proposed nominee that would be
required  to  be  disclosed  in  a  proxy  statement  filed under the Securities
Exchange  Act of 1934.  Stockholder nominations not made in accordance with this
procedure  may  be  disregarded by the Chairman, who may instruct that all votes
cast  for  each  such  nominee  be  disregarded.

COMPENSATION  OF  DIRECTORS

     The  Company  currently  pays  non-employee directors an annual retainer of
$10,000.  Directors  are eligible to receive, and have been granted in the past,
options  to  purchase  shares  of  common stock of the Company.  No options were
granted  in  2002.  Non-employee  directors  are  also reimbursed for reasonable
expenses incurred in connection with attendance at Board meetings or meetings of
committees  thereof.

                                        8


                               EXECUTIVE OFFICERS

As  of  March  31,  2003:

            NAME           AGE                  POSITION
------------------------   ---   -----------------------------------------------
Gabriel  Battista           58   Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive
                                 Officer  of the  Company  and  a Director
Edward B. Meyercord, III    37   President  of the Company and a Director
Warren A. Brasselle         45   Senior  Vice  President  - Operations
Jeffrey Earhart             41   Senior Vice President - Customer Operations
Kevin  D.  Griffo           42   Executive Vice President - Sales and Marketing
Aloysius  T.  Lawn,  IV     44   Executive Vice President - General Counsel and
                                 Secretary
George  Vinall              47   Executive Vice President - Business Development
Thomas  M.  Walsh           43   Senior Vice President - Finance and Treasurer
David  G.  Zahka            43   Chief  Financial  Officer

All  officers  are  elected  annually  by  the Board and hold office until their
successors  are  elected  and  qualified.

The  backgrounds  of  Messrs.  Battista  and Meyercord are set forth above under
"PROPOSAL  1:  ELECTION  OF  DIRECTORS."

WARREN  A. BRASSELLE.  Since April 2000, Mr. Brasselle has served as Senior Vice
President  -  Operations  for  the  Company.  Prior  to joining the Company, Mr.
Brasselle  was Vice President of Operations for Cable and Wireless North America
since  1996,  where he was broadly responsible for the design, provisioning, and
maintenance of Cable & Wireless' voice, data, and IP network. Mr. Brasselle also
held  a  variety  of  operational  positions  at  MCI, now MCI WorldCom Inc. and
Williams  Telecommunications.

JEFFREY  EARHART.  Mr.  Earhart  currently  serves  as  Senior  Vice President -
Customer  Operations  of  the  Company.  Between  1997  and  2000, he served the
Company as Vice President, Operations. Mr. Earhart originally joined the Company
as  its  Director  of  Retail Sales and Provisioning in 1990, a position he held
until  1992.  Prior  to  rejoining  the  Company  in 1997, Mr. Earhart served as
President  of  Collective  Communications Services, an independent long distance
reseller  of  long  distance  services  of  the  Company.

KEVIN  D.  GRIFFO.  Mr.  Griffo  has  served  as  the  Company's  Executive Vice
President  - Sales and Marketing since March 2000. Prior to joining the Company,
Mr.  Griffo  was  the  President and Chief Operating Officer of Access One.  Mr.
Griffo  was  also  employed by AMNEX from January 1995 to December 1997, holding
various  positions,  including  Chief Operating Officer and President of AMNEX's
Telecommunications  Division.

                                        9


ALOYSIUS T. LAWN, IV.  Mr. Lawn joined the Company in January 1996 and currently
serves  as  Executive  Vice  President - General Counsel and Secretary. Prior to
joining the Company, from 1985 through 1995, Mr. Lawn was an attorney in private
practice.  Mr. Lawn is a director of Stonepath Group, Inc., a global, integrated
logistics  services  organization.

GEORGE  VINALL.  Mr.  Vinall  joined the Company in January of 1999 as Executive
Vice  President - Business Development.  Prior to joining the Company, he served
as  President  of  International  Protocol  LLC,  a telecommunication consulting
business,  as  General  Manager  of  Cable  &  Wireless  Internet  Exchange,  an
international  Internet  service  provider,  and as Vice President, Regulatory &
Government  Affairs  of  Cable  and  Wireless North America, a telecommunication
provider.

THOMAS  M.  WALSH.  Mr.  Walsh  joined  the  Company  in  September  of 2000 and
currently  serves  as  Senior  Vice  President  - Finance and Treasurer.  Before
joining the Company, he served as a director at Comcast Cellular Communications,
a  telecommunications  company,  from  1996  to 1999, and Regional Controller of
Southwestern  Mobil  Systems, a successor corporation, from 1999 to 2000.  Prior
to Comcast Cellular Communications, he worked for Call Technology Corporation, a
telecommunications  company,  where  he  was  responsible  for  all  finance and
accounting  functions as Chief Financial Officer.  Prior to his tenure with Call
Technology  Corporation,  Mr.  Walsh  served as Audit Manager for Ernst & Young.
Mr.  Walsh  is  a  Certified  Public  Accountant.

DAVID  G.  ZAHKA.  Mr.  Zahka  joined  the  Company in December of 2001 as Chief
Financial Officer.  Before joining the Company, he spent more than 15 years with
PaineWebber  Incorporated,  and  its successor UBS Warburg, where he served most
recently as Executive Director of the Financial Sponsors Group.  At PaineWebber,
Mr. Zahka also served as Senior Vice President of Debt Capital Markets and First
Vice  President  of  the  Utility  Finance  Group.

CERTAIN  RELATIONSHIPS  AND  RELATED  PARTY  TRANSACTIONS

     In  1999,  the  principal  operating subsidiary of the Company requested an
employee,  Jeffrey Earhart, to relocate from Pennsylvania to Florida in order to
take  over  the  management  of  its  customer  service  centers in Florida.  In
connection with the relocation, the Company agreed to make advances or a loan to
Mr.  Earhart  for  the  relocation  and  the  construction of a new residence in
Florida.  In  2000,  the  Company  and  Mr.  Earhart memorialized this agreement
regarding  relocation with a loan that was secured by the new residence and bore
interest at the rate of 8.25 percent per annum.  The loan was refinanced in July
2002  and bore interest at the rate of 6.25 percent per annum to reflect current
market  rates.  As  of  March  27,  2003,  Mr.  Earhart  retired the loan in its
entirety.  The  largest aggregate amount of the loan outstanding during 2002 was
$1.04  million,  and, as of March 31, 2003, no money was outstanding on the loan
and  advances.  In May 2001, Mr. Earhart was elected an executive officer of the
Company.

                                       10


                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

SUMMARY  OF  CASH  AND  CERTAIN  OTHER  COMPENSATION

     The  following  table  sets  forth  information  for the fiscal years ended
December  31,  2002,  2001 and 2000 as to the compensation for services rendered
paid  by  the  Company to the Chief Executive Officer and to the five other most
highly  compensated  executive  officers  of the Company whose annual salary and
bonus  exceeded  $100,000.




                                  SUMMARY  COMPENSATION  TABLE

                                                                                            LONG TERM
                                                          ANNUAL COMPENSATION             COMPENSATION
                                            -----------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                            SECURITIES
                                                                                            UNDERLYING
                                                                                           OPTIONS/SARS
NAME AND PRINCIPAL POSITION                   YEAR      SALARY (1)      BONUS (1)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                 

Gabriel Battista, Chairman of the Board       2002      $ 500,000       $ 535,000            440,488(4)
of Directors,  Chief Executive Officer        2001             --(2)           --                 --
and Director                                  2000             --(2)    $  50,000            166,666(3)

Edward B. Meyercord, III, President           2002      $ 350,000       $ 381,500            150,000(4)
And Director                                  2001      $ 300,000              --                 --
                                              2000      $ 298,000       $  30,000            116,666(3)

Aloysius T. Lawn, IV, Executive Vice          2002      $ 275,000       $ 245,400             70,000(4)
President - General Counsel and               2001      $ 275,000              --                 --
Secretary                                     2000      $ 260,500       $  27,500            104,166(3)

Warren A. Brasselle, Senior Vice              2002      $ 250,000       $ 233,500             68,333(4)(5)
President - Operations                        2001      $ 250,000              --                 --
                                              2000      $ 186,539(7)    $ 188,000             85,000(6)

David G. Zahka, Chief Financial Officer       2002      $ 250,000       $ 233,500                 --
                                              2001      $  13,462(7)           --            100,000(6)
                                              2000             --              --                 --

Jeffrey Earhart, Senior Vice President -      2002      $ 230,000       $ 333,000             63,889(4)
Customer Operations                           2001      $ 230,000              --                 --
                                              2000      $ 216,615       $ 140,000            106,000(3)(5)(6)



(1)     The  costs  of  certain  benefits  not properly categorized as salary or
benefits  are  not  included  because  they  did  not exceed, in the case of any
executive  officer named in the table, the lesser of $50,000 or 10% of the total
annual  salary  and  bonus  reported  in  the  above  table.

(2)     Under  his  employment  agreement  with  the  Company,  Mr.  Battista is
entitled to a minimum annual salary of $500,000.  Mr. Battista's salary for 1999
included,  in  addition  to the $500,000 annual base salary for 1999, $1,000,000
representing  a  prepayment of $500,000 in salary for each of the years 2000 and
2001  as  provided  in  Mr.  Battista's  employment  agreement with the Company.

                                       11


(3)     Options  to  purchase the Company's common stock. The options granted to
Messrs.  Battista,  Meyercord, Lawn and Earhart were granted under the Company's
2000  Long Term Incentive Plan. In 2000, Mr. Battista was granted (i) options to
purchase  83,333  shares  of  the Company's common stock at an exercise price of
$6.00  per  share  that  vest  in five years and (ii) options to purchase 83,333
shares  of  the  Company's common stock at an exercise price of $14.25 per share
that  vest  over  three years. In 2000, Mr. Meyercord was granted (i) options to
purchase  50,000  shares  of  the Company's common stock at an exercise price of
$6.00  per  share  that  vest  in five years and (ii) options to purchase 66,666
shares  of  the  Company's common stock at an exercise price of $14.25 per share
that  vest  over  three  years.  In  2000,  Mr.  Lawn was granted (i) options to
purchase  45,833  shares  of  the Company's common stock at an exercise price of
$6.00  per share that vest in five years, (ii) options to purchase 16,666 shares
of  the  Company's  common  stock  at  an exercise price of $6.93, half of which
vested  upon  grant and the remainder of which vested six months thereafter, and
(iii)  options  to  purchase  41,666  shares of the Company's common stock at an
exercise  price  of  $14.25  per share that vest over three years.  In 2000, Mr.
Earhart  was  granted  options to purchase 31,000 shares of the Company's common
stock at an exercise price of  $6.00 per share that vest in five years.  Each of
the  employment  agreements  for  Messrs.  Battista,  Meyercord,  Lawn, Earhart,
Brasselle  and  Zahka  provide  for  immediate  vesting of options in event of a
"change  of  control"  (as  defined  in  such  agreements).

(4)     Messrs.  Meyercord,  Lawn,  Earhart  and Brasselle were reissued options
under  the  1998 Long Term Incentive Plan to purchase the Company's common stock
on April 5, 2002, in exchange for options to purchase the Company's common stock
exchanged  and  cancelled  pursuant  to  the  Company's Employee Option Exchange
(described  under  "EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION  -  Stock  Options" below): 150,000,
70,000,  63,889,  and  60,000,  respectively, at an exercise price of $1.53.  On
April  5,  2002,  Mr.  Battista  was  reissued  options under the 1998 Long Term
Incentive  Plan  to  purchase  107,155  shares of the Company's common stock and
under  the  2000  Long  Term  Incentive  Plan  to purchase 333,333 shares of the
Company's common stock, in exchange for options to purchase the Company's common
stock exchanged and cancelled pursuant to the Company's Employee Option Exchange
(described  under  "EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION  -  Stock  Options"  below).

(5)     Options  to  purchase the Company's common stock. The options granted to
Messrs.  Earhart  and  Brasselle were granted under the Company's 1998 Long Term
Incentive  Plan.  In  2000,  Mr.  Earhart was granted options to purchase 50,000
shares  of  the  Company's common stock at an exercise price of $15.88 per share
that  vest  over  three  years.  In 2002, Mr. Brasselle was granted options that
vest  over three years to purchase 8,333 shares of the Company's common stock at
an  exercise  price  of  $1.53  per  share.

(6)     Options  to purchase the Company's common stock.  The options granted to
Messrs. Earhart, Brasselle and Zahka were not granted under a stock option plan.
In  2000,  prior to Mr. Earhart becoming an executive officer of the Company, he
was  granted  options to purchase 25,000 shares of the Company's common stock at
an  exercise  price of $14.25 per share that vest over three years.  In 2000 and
prior  to  Mr.  Brasselle  becoming  an executive officer of the Company, he was
granted  (i)  options to purchase 60,000 shares of the Company's common stock at
an  exercise  price  of  $43.14  per  share,  10,000  vested immediately and the
remainder  vest  over  three  years  (these  options  were subsequently reissued

                                       12


pursuant  to  the  Company's Employee Option Exchange as described in footnote 4
above), and (ii) options to purchase 25,000 shares of the Company's common stock
at  an  exercise price of $14.25 per share that vest over three years.  In 2001,
in  connection  with his hiring by the Company, Mr. Zahka was granted options to
purchase  100,000  shares  of the Company's common stock at an exercise price of
$1.20  per  share  that  vest  over  three  years.

(7)     Messrs.  Brasselle  and  Zahka  commenced employment with the Company on
April  3,  2000  and  December  7,  2001,  respectively.


STOCK  OPTIONS

     The  following  table  sets  forth  further information regarding grants of
options  to  purchase  the  Company  common stock made by the Company during the
fiscal  year  ended  December  31,  2002  to the executive officers named in the
Summary  Compensation  Table,  above.




                         OPTION/SAR  GRANTS  IN  LAST  FISCAL  YEAR

                    NUMBER OF       PERCENT OF TOTAL
                    SECURITIES       OPTIONS/SARS
                    UNDERLYING        GRANTED TO      EXERCISE                      POTENTIAL REALIZABLE VALUE
                   OPTIONS/SARS      EMPLOYEES IN     PRICE PER    EXPIRATION         AT ASSUMED ANNUAL RATES
NAME                 GRANTED            2002          SHARE (1)       DATE            OF STOCK OPTION TERM (5)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                       5%($)           10%($)
                                                                                    ---------------------------
                                                                                      
Gabriel Battista   107,155(2)            4.8%          $ 1.53       11/12/08         $  62,431      $ 144,184
                   333,333(3)           14.8%          $ 1.53       11/12/08         $ 194,209      $ 448,520

Edward B.          150,000(2)            6.7%          $ 1.53        11/1/09         $ 102,752      $ 243,636
Meyercord, III

Aloysius T.         70,000(2)            3.1%          $ 1.53         4/1/09         $  43,588      $ 101,750
Lawn, IV

Jeffrey Earhart      3,889(2)            0.2%          $ 1.53       12/17/02         $     220      $     440
                    10,000(2)            0.4%          $ 1.53        10/5/09         $   6,801      $  16,109
                    50,000(2)            2.2%          $ 1.53        1/28/10         $  35,553      $  84,833

Warren A.           60,000(2)            2.7%          $ 1.53         3/8/10         $  43,379      $ 103,852
Brasselle            8,333(4)            0.4%          $ 1.53         4/5/12         $   8,030      $  20,384

David G. Zahk            0                --               --             --                --             --

---------------------

(1)     All  options  have  been  granted  at market price on the date of issue.

(2)     The  options  granted  to Messrs. Battista, Meyercord, Lawn, Earhart and
Brasselle  were  granted under the Company's 1998 Long Term Incentive Plan.  The
optionholders were reissued these options to purchase the Company's common stock

                                       13


on April 5, 2002, in exchange for options to purchase the Company's common stock
exchanged  and  cancelled  pursuant  to  the  Company's Employee Option Exchange
(described  below).

(3)     The  options  granted  to  Mr. Battista were granted under the Company's
2000 Long Term Incentive Plan.    The optionholder was reissued these options to
purchase the Company's common stock on April 5, 2002, in exchange for options to
purchase  the  Company's  common  stock  exchanged and cancelled pursuant to the
Company's  Employee  Option  Exchange  (described  below).

(4)     The  options  granted  to Mr. Brasselle were granted under the Company's
1998  Long  Term  Incentive  Plan.

(5)     Disclosure  of  the  5%  and  10% assumed annual compound rates of stock
appreciation  based  on exercise prices are mandated by the rules of the SEC and
do  not  represent  the  Company's estimate or projection of future common stock
prices.  The  actual  value  realized  may be greater or less than the potential
realizable  value  set  forth  in  the  table.

     The  following  table  sets  forth  certain  information  as  to aggregated
option/SAR  exercises  in  the Company's fiscal year ended December 31, 2002 and
option/SAR  values  as  of  December 31, 2002 for each of the executive officers
named  in  the  Summary  Compensation  Table,  above.




               AGGREGATE OPTION/SAR EXERCISES IN LAST FISCAL YEAR
                      AND FISCAL YEAR-END OPTION/SAR VALUES

                                                                    NUMBER OF SECURITIES             VALUE OF UNEXERCISED IN-
                             SHARES                                UNDERLYING UNEXERCISED                    THE-MONEY
                            ACQUIRED                                     OPTIONS/SARS                     OPTIONS/SARS (1)
      NAME                     ON               VALUE             -------------------------         -------------------------
                            EXERCISE           REALIZED           EXERCISABLE/UNEXERCISABLE         EXERCISABLE/UNEXERCISABLE
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                                                               

Gabriel Battista                0                  0                  605,555/111,110                $     1,792,786.16/$0.00

Edward B.
Meyercord, III                  0                  0                   194,444/72,222                $       610,500.00/$0.00

Aloysius T. Lawn, IV            0                  0                   114,444/59,721                $       284,900.00/$0.00

Jeffrey Earhart             3,889        $ 20,883.93                    60,001/55,999                $  176,369.38/$67,830.62

Warrren A. Brasselle            0                  0                    60,001/33,332                $ 176,369.38/$101,745.93

David G. Zahka                  0                  0                    33,334/66,666                $ 146,669.60/$293,330.40



(1)     Calculated  as  the  difference  between  the exercise/base-price of the
options/SARs and a year-end fair market value of the underlying securities equal
to  $5.60.

     On  August  29,  2001,  the  Company  initiated  an  offer  to exchange all
outstanding stock options previously issued by the Company to employees that had
an exercise price of $16.50 or more and did not expire before April 5, 2002, for
new  options to be granted under one of the Company's various stock option plans
(the  "Employee Option Exchange").  On October 4, 2001, the Company accepted for
cancellation  options  to purchase a total of 1,938,211 shares of Company common
stock.  On  April  5,  2002,  the  Company  granted  new options pursuant to the
Employee  Option  Exchange  in exchange for the exchanged and cancelled options.

                                       14


                          TEN-YEAR OPTION/SAR REPRICINGS

     The  following  table  sets  forth  certain  information  with  respect  to
adjustments  and  amendments  of the exercise prices of Company stock options or
SARs previously awarded to executive officers of the Company, including pursuant
to  the  Employee  Option  Exchange,  in the ten fiscal years ended December 31,
2002.



                                                                                                       Length of
                                                                                                        Original
                                            Number of                                                 Option Term
                                           Securities      Market Price     Exercise                  Remaining at
                                            Underlying      of Stock        Price at                    Date of
                                           Options/SARs     at Time of       Time of          New     Repricing or
Name and Position of           Date of     Repriced or     Repricing or   Repricing or      Exercise   Amendment
Executive Officer             Repricing      Amended         Amendment      Amendment        Price      (Months)
                                                                                         
Gabriel Battista,
Chairman and Chief
Executive Officer           April 5, 2002     333,333         $ 1.53         $ 31.32         $ 1.53        70
                            April 5, 2002     107,155         $ 1.53         $ 21.00         $ 1.53        70

Edward B. Meyercord, III,
President, Director and
Treasurer                   April 5, 2002     150,000         $ 1.53         $ 47.82         $ 1.53        91

Aloysius T. Lawn, IV,
Executive Vice President -
General Counsel and
Secretary                   April 5, 2002      70,000         $ 1.53         $ 29.64         $ 1.53        84
                            October 13, 1998   20,000         $17.25         $ 34.89         $17.25         3
                            October 13, 1998   30,000         $17.25         $ 31.68         $17.25         3


Kevin Griffo, Executive
Vice President - Sales
And Marketing               April 5, 2002     433,333         $ 1.53         $ 41.07         $ 1.53        96

George Vinall, Executive
Vice President - Business
Development                 April 5, 2002      80,000         $ 1.53         $ 25.68         $ 1.53        71

Warren Brasselle, Senior
Vice President-Operations   April 5, 2002      60,000         $ 1.53         $ 43.14         $ 1.53        96

Jeffrey Earhart, Senior
Vice  President-Customer
Operations                  April 5, 2002       3,889         $ 1.53         $ 17.25         $ 1.53         9
                            April 5, 2002      10,000         $ 1.53         $ 35.64         $ 1.53        92
                            April 5, 2002      50,000         $ 1.53         $ 47.64         $ 1.53        97
                            October 13, 1998    3,888         $17.25         $ 57.39         $17.25        26
                            October 13, 1998    3,889         $17.25         $ 57.39         $17.25        38
                            October 13, 1998    3,889         $17.25         $ 57.39         $17.25        50



                                       15


                        COMPENSATION PLANS AND SECURITIES

      The following table sets forth certain information as of December 31, 2002
with  respect to compensation plans under which equity securities of the Company
are  authorized  for  issuance:




                                                                            NUMBER OF SECURITIES
                            NUMBER OF SECURITIES TO    WEIGHTED-AVERAGE      REMAINING AVAILABLE
                            BE ISSUED UPON EXERCISE    EXERCISE PRICE OF     FOR FUTURE ISSUANCE
                            OF OUTSTANDING OPTIONS,   OUTSTANDING OPTIONS,      UNDER EQUITY
    PLAN CATEGORY             WARRANTS AND RIGHTS     WARRANTS AND RIGHTS   COMPENSATION PLANS(1)
--------------------------  -----------------------  ---------------------  ---------------------
                                                                   
Equity compensation
   plans approved by
   security holders                2,141,758               $ 5.50                126,097
Equity compensation
   plans not approved
   by security holders (2)         2,037,609               $ 8.25                774,188
                            -----------------------  ---------------------  ---------------------
Total                              4,179,367               $ 6.84                900,285


(1)     Under  all  plans,  if  any  shares  subject  to  a  previous  award are
forfeited, or if any award is terminated without issuance of shares or satisfied
with  other  consideration,  the  shares  subject  to  such award shall again be
available  for  future  grants.

(2)     The  shares are primarily under the Company's 2001 Non-Officer Long Term
Incentive  Plan pursuant to which up to 1,666,666 shares of the Company's common
stock  may be issued to employees of the Company in the form of options, rights,
restricted  stock and incentive shares.  The shares also include shares issuable
on exercise of certain options granted in connection with the initial employment
of executive officers and without shareholder approval as permitted by the rules
of Nasdaq.  To the extent permitted by the rules of Nasdaq, there may be further
grants  of  securities by option or otherwise without shareholder approval, both
to  non-executive  employees  and  in  connection with the initial employment of
executive  officers.

EMPLOYMENT  CONTRACTS

     Gabriel  Battista  is  party  to  an employment agreement with the Company,
dated  as  of  November  13, 1998, that was amended as of March 28, 2001 and now
expires  on December 31, 2004. Under the terms of the agreement, as amended, Mr.
Battista  received  a  signing  bonus  of $3,000,000 at the time of the original
agreement  and  is  entitled to a minimum annual base salary of $500,000, plus a
discretionary  bonus.  The  initial  three  years  of  salary under the original
agreement  were paid in advance. Mr. Battista is also entitled to other benefits
and  perquisites. In addition, upon execution of the original agreement in 1998,
Mr.  Battista  was  granted  options  that  vested  over three years to purchase
333,333  shares  of  the Company common stock at an exercise price of $31.32 per
share,  and  options  that vested immediately upon execution of the agreement to
purchase  an additional 216,666 shares at an exercise price of $21.00 per share.
A  portion  of  these  options  were  exchanged  and  cancelled  pursuant to the
Company's  Employee  Option  Exchange (described under "EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION -
Stock  Options").

     In  the  event  of  certain  transactions  (including an acquisition of the
Company's  assets, a merger into another entity or a transaction that results in

                                       16


the  Company  common  stock  no longer being required to be registered under the
Securities  Exchange Act of 1934), Mr. Battista will receive an additional bonus
of  $1,000,000  if  the  price  per  share  for the Company common stock in such
transaction  is  less  than  or  equal to $60.00 per share, or $3,000,000 if the
consideration  is  greater  than  $60.00  per  share.

     Edward  B.  Meyercord,  III  entered into a three-year employment agreement
with  the  Company effective as of March 26, 2001. Commencing in 2002, under the
contract,  Mr. Meyercord is entitled to a minimum annual base salary of $350,000
and  certain  other  perquisites  made generally available by the Company to its
senior  executive  officers.

     Aloysius  T.  Lawn,  IV entered into a three-year employment agreement with
the  Company  effective  as  of  March 26, 2001. Under the contract, Mr. Lawn is
entitled  to  a  minimum  annual  base  salary  of  $275,000  and  certain other
perquisites  made  generally  available  by  the Company to its senior executive
officers.

     Jeffrey  Earhart  entered  into  a three-year employment agreement with the
Company  effective  as  of  October  2, 2001. Under the contract, Mr. Earhart is
entitled  to  a  minimum  annual  base  salary  of  $230,000  and  certain other
perquisites  made  generally  available  by  the Company to its senior executive
officers.

     Warren A. Brasselle entered into a three-year employment agreement with the
Company  effective  as  of  April  3,  2000.  Under  the contract, Mr. Brasselle
received  a signing bonus of $100,000, payable in two equal installments on June
31, 2000 and September 30, 2000, and is entitled to a minimum annual base salary
of  $250,000  and  certain  other  perquisites  made  generally available by the
Company  to  its  senior executive officers.  In addition, upon execution of the
agreement,  Mr.  Brasselle  was granted options to purchase 60,000 shares of the
Company's  common  stock at an exercise price of $43.14 per share, 10,000 vested
immediately  and  the  remainder  vest  over  three  years  (these  options were
subsequently  reissued  pursuant  to  the  Company's Employee Option Exchange as
described  under  "EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION  -  Stock  Options").

     David  G.  Zahka  entered  into  a three-year employment agreement with the
Company  effective  as  of  December  7, 2001.  Under the contract, Mr. Zahka is
entitled  to  a  minimum  annual  base  salary  of  $250,000  and  certain other
perquisites  made  generally  available  by  the Company to its senior executive
officers.  In  addition,  upon execution of the agreement, Mr. Zahka was granted
options  to purchase 100,000 shares of the Company's common stock at an exercise
price  of  $1.20  per  share  that  vest  over  three  years.

     Each  of  the  employment agreements for Messrs. Battista, Meyercord, Lawn,
Earhart,  Brasselle  and Zahka provide for immediate vesting of options in event
of  a  "change  of  control"  (as  defined in the agreements) of the Company and
provide  for  severance  benefits  in  the event employment is terminated by the
Company  without  cause  prior  to  the end of the term and for a certain period
beyond the end of the term in the event of a "change of control."  The severance
benefits  are generally the payment of an amount equal to two years' base salary
plus the average annual incentive bonus earned by the executive in the preceding
four  years,  as  well  as the continuation of various employee benefits for two
years.

                                       17


     Each  of  the above-described agreements requires the executive to maintain
the  confidentiality  of  Company  information  and assign any inventions to the
Company. In addition, each of the executive officers has agreed that he will not
compete  with  the  Company  by engaging in any capacity in any business that is
competitive  with  the business of the Company during the term of his respective
agreement  and  thereafter  for  specified  periods.

COMPENSATION  COMMITTEE

COMPENSATION  COMMITTEE  INTERLOCKS  AND  INSIDER  PARTICIPATION

     None.

COMPENSATION  COMMITTEE  REPORT  ON  EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION

     The  Compensation  Committee  approves  salaries  and  certain  incentive
compensation  arrangements  for  management  and  key  employees of the Company.

     The  principal  elements  of  the  Company's  compensation  structure  are
described  below:

     Annual  Salary.  Minimum annual base salaries for executive officers of the
Company  have  been established pursuant to employment contracts negotiated with
each of the executive officers of the Company. Increases above such minimum base
salaries may be granted in the discretion of the Compensation Committee based on
its  subjective assessment of individual performance.  The Company believes that
such  employment contracts help to attract and retain qualified individuals.  In
addition,  the  employment  agreements  include  confidentiality and non-compete
agreements  by  the  officers.  See  "EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION  -  Employment
Contracts."

     Annual  Bonuses.  For  2002, the Board approved an annual bonus program for
the  executive  officers  and  certain other employees of the Company to provide
further  incentive  to  achieve  the  Company's  2002  performance goals.  Bonus
targets  for  the  program were 50% of base salary for the CEO and President and
40% of base salary for the balance of the executive officers.  Awards under this
program  were  based  upon  achieving  the  Company's  operating  plan, with the
opportunity  for  leverage of the bonus targets based upon surpassing such plan.
The  Compensation  Committee  of the Board reviewed the Company's performance in
2002  against  the  criteria that had been established under the program and, at
the  Compensation  Committee's  recommendation,  the Board subsequently approved
bonuses  for  the  Company's executive officers as set forth in the annual bonus
program,  which  awards  to the persons named in the Summary Compensation Table,
above,  are  reflected  therein  under  the  "Bonus"  column.

     In addition, the Board adopted an incentive compensation plan for a limited
number  of employees, including executive officers of the Company other than the
CEO.  Under this plan, the participating employees were organized in groups on a
cross-functional  basis  and  charged  with the responsibility for improving and
monitoring  the  following operational areas: customer satisfaction, general and
administrative  expenses/capital  budget,  sales  and marketing, credit quality,

                                       18


gross  margin,  and facilities-based provisioning.  Incentive compensation under
this plan was based upon the Company's achieving certain operational performance
measures  established  by  the  Board  when  it  adopted  the  plan.  Maximum
compensation  per  employee for each cross-function team was $2,000 per quarter,
with  an  aggregate  quarterly cap of $4,000.  The incentive compensation awards
under  this  plan to the persons named in the Summary Compensation Table, above,
are  reflected  therein  under  the  "Bonus"  column.

     Long  Term  Incentive  Compensation.  In  general,  the Company has granted
stock  options  to  key executives as an inducement to such executives' entering
into  employment  contracts  with  the  Company.

     The  Company believes that stock options are an effective tool for directly
linking  the  financial  interests  of executive officers and key employees with
those  of  the  Company's  stockholders  and  for  recruiting and retaining high
quality  management  personnel.  Stock options are intended to focus the efforts
of  executive  officers  and key employees on performance that will increase the
value of the Company for all of its stockholders.  In keeping with this purpose,
the  Company  initiated  the  Employee  Option  Exchange  on August 29, 2001, as
described  under  "EXECUTIVE  COMPENSATION  -  Stock  Options,"  above, to allow
eligible  employees  to  exchange  outstanding  options that had exercise prices
significantly  higher than the then-current market price of the Company's common
stock for options with an exercise price equal to the market value of the shares
on  the  date  of grant.  The Employee Option Exchange was completed on April 5,
2002.  The  Company  believed  that  options  with  an  exercise price closer to
current  market  value  would  provide  a  better  performance incentive for the
holders.

     Future option grants or other stock or incentive awards under the 1998 Long
Term  Incentive  Plan,  the  2000 Long Term Incentive Plan, the 2001 Non-Officer
Long  Term  Incentive  Plan and, if approved, the 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan,
will  be  made  in  the  discretion  of the Compensation Committee, including in
connection  with  the  negotiation  of  individual  employment  arrangements.

     Chief  Executive  Officer's 2002 Compensation.  As set forth in the Summary
Compensation  Table,  Mr.  Battista's  base  salary  of  $500,000  in  2002  was
established  pursuant  to  the terms of the employment agreement he entered into
when  he  joined  the  Company.  The  Compensation Committee determined that the
Company's  performance  satisfied the criteria it had established under the 2002
annual  bonus  program described above and qualified Mr. Battista for a bonus of
$535,000  for  2002.  In  extending Mr. Battista's employment agreement in March
2001  to  December 31, 2004, the Compensation Committee had determined to retain
the  same  compensation  terms,  including  the  amount  of  the  base  salary.

                                   THE  COMPENSATION  COMMITTEE

                                   Ronald  R.  Thoma
                                   Mark  S.  Fowler

                                       19


                                PERFORMANCE GRAPH

     The following graph sets forth a comparison of the percentage change in the
cumulative  total  stockholder  return on the Company's common stock compared to
the  cumulative  total  return  of  the  S&P  MidCap  400  Index and the S&P 500
Integrated  Telecommunications  Services  Index for the period from December 31,
1997,  through December 31, 2002.  The comparison assumes that $100 was invested
on  December  31, 1997 in the Company's common stock and each of the indices and
assumes  reinvestment  of  dividends.  The  stock price performance shown on the
graph  below  is  not  necessarily  indicative  of  future  performance.

                               [GRAPH OMITTED]




                   DEC. 31,   DEC. 31,   DEC. 31,   DEC. 29,   DEC. 31,   DEC. 31,
                    1997       1998        1999       2000       2001       2002
                   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------   --------
                                                           
Talk America
Holdings, Inc. .    $ 100      $  84      $  89      $   7      $   2      $    9
                    -----      -----      -----      -----      -----       -----
S&P MidCap 400
Index. . . . . .    $ 100      $ 118      $ 133      $ 155      $ 152      $  129
                    -----      -----      -----      -----      -----       -----
S&P 500 Integrated
Telecommunications
Service Index. .    $ 100      $ 149      $ 175      $ 106      $  91      $   59
                    -----      -----      -----      -----      -----       -----


                                       20


PROPOSAL  2:  RATIFICATION  OF  INDEPENDENT  CERTIFIED  PUBLIC  ACCOUNTANTS

     The  Audit  Committee  of  the  Board  has  appointed  the  firm  of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  as  independent  auditors  of  the  Company for the
current fiscal year.  This firm has served as the Company's independent auditors
since  2000  and  has  no  direct or indirect financial interest in the Company.

     Although  not  legally required to do so, the Audit Committee and the Board
are  submitting  the  selection  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as the Company's
independent auditors for ratification by the stockholders at the Annual Meeting.
If  a  majority  of  the shares present in person or represented by proxy at the
meeting  and  entitled  to vote is not voted for such ratification (which is not
expected),  the  Audit  Committee  will  reconsider  its  appointment  of
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  as  independent  auditors  of  the  Company.

     A  representative  of  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  will  be present at the
Annual  Meeting  and will have the opportunity to make a statement if he desires
to  do  so.  It  is  anticipated  that  such representative will be available to
respond  to  appropriate  questions  from  stockholders.


     The  Board  of  Directors  recommends a vote FOR the proposal to ratify the
selection  of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP as independent auditors of the Company.


     During  the  Company's  fiscal  years  ended  December  31,  2002 and 2001,
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP  provided  services  to the Company in the following
categories  and  amounts:

     DESCRIPTION                                 2002             2001
     -----------                                 ----             ----

     Audit  Fees                               $203,000        $172,619 (1)
     Audit-Related  Fees                       $ 54,140        $ 50,401
     Tax  Fees                                 $      0        $      0
     All  Other  Fees                          $ 31,400        $108,619

(1)     In  addition, the Company paid BDO Seidman, its former auditors, $11,940
in fiscal 2001 for BDO Seidman's services in connection with reissuance of their
report  on  the  Company's  financial statements for the year ended December 31,
1999.

                                       21


     In the above table, in accordance with new SEC definitions and rules, which
the  Company  elected to adopt for this year's proxy statement, "audit fees" are
fees  the  Company  paid to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP for professional services
for  the  audit  of  the Company's consolidated financial statements included in
Form  10-K  and  review  of  financial statements included in Form 10-Qs, or for
services  that  are  normally  provided  by  the  accountant  in connection with
statutory  and  regulatory filings or engagements; "audit related fees" are fees
billed by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP for assurance and related services that are
reasonably  related  to  the performance of the audit or review of the Company's
financial  statements;  "tax  fees" are fees for tax compliance, tax advice, and
tax planning; and "all other fees" are fees billed by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
to  the  Company  for  any  services not included in the first three categories.

     The  Audit  Committee  has  determined  that  the  services  provided  by
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP to the Company that were not related to its audit of
the  Company's  financial  statements were at all relevant times compatible with
that  firm's  independence  and  approved  all  such  services.

PROPOSAL  3:  APPROVAL  OF  THE  2003  LONG  TERM  INCENTIVE  PLAN

     The  Company's  Board  has  approved the Company's 2003 Long Term Incentive
Plan,  subject  to  the  approval  of  the Company's stockholders. Approximately
65,500  shares  of  the Company's common stock under the existing 1998 Long Term
Incentive  Plan  and  60,500  shares  of  the  Company's  common stock under the
existing  2000  Long Term Incentive Plan remain currently available for award to
executive  officers  and  other employees of the Company.  Approximately 774,188
shares  of  the  Company's common stock under the existing 2001 Non-Officer Long
Term  Incentive  Plan  remain currently available for award to Company employees
who  are not executive officers.  The new 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan provides
for  the  issuance of up to 1,250,000 shares of the Company's common stock.  The
Company's  Board  believes  that  the availability of share awards under the new
2003  Long  Term  Incentive  Plan  will give the Company the needed compensation
flexibility  to continue to attract and retain key employees. The 2003 Long Term
Incentive  Plan will increase the ability of the Board of Directors to adapt the
compensation  of  such employees to the changing needs of the Company's business
and  to  competitive  trends in executive compensation practices. The Board also
believes  that  in  order  to more closely align the interests of such employees
with  the  interests  of the stockholders of the Company, increased ownership of
the  Company's  stock  by  these  individuals  is  desirable.

     The  following is a summary description of the new 2003 Long Term Incentive
Plan,  which  description  is qualified in its entirety by reference to the 2003
Long  Term  Incentive  Plan,  a  copy  of which is attached hereto as Exhibit B.

ELIGIBILITY  AND  TYPES  OF  AWARDS

     All  employees  of  the  Company  and its subsidiaries and all non-employee
directors  of  the Company are eligible to participate in the new 2003 Long Term

                                       22


Incentive Plan. Eligible employees to whom awards will be granted under the 2003
Long  Term  Incentive  Plan  will  be selected by the committee of the Company's
Board  of  Directors  that  administers  the  2003  Long Term Incentive Plan, as
discussed  below.  The 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan permits the granting of the
following  types  of  awards: (1) stock options, including options designated as
incentive  stock options under Section 422 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986,
as  amended  (the  "Code"),  or  ISOs,  and options not so designated, (2) stock
appreciation  rights  or  SARs,  (3) restricted stock, and (4) incentive shares.
Dividends  or  interest  or  their  equivalent  may  also be paid or credited in
connection  with  any award.  Since the number and identity of employees to whom
awards  may  be granted under the new 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan and the form
of  such  awards  are  at the discretion of the committee administering the 2003
Long  Term  Incentive Plan, it is not possible at this time to predict precisely
the  number  or identity of the individuals to whom awards may be granted in the
future  or  the  type or size of such awards.  It is expected, however, that the
individuals  receiving  awards  will  include  officers  named  in  the  Summary
Compensation  table  above  under  the  heading  "EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION," other
executive  officers  of  the  Company and directors of the Company.  The maximum
number  of  shares  of  Company common stock that may be awarded to any employee
under  the  2003  Long  Term Incentive Plan during any calendar year is 250,000,
subject  to  adjustment  as  described  below.  Unless earlier terminated by the
Board,  the  2003  Long  Term  Incentive  Plan will terminate on April 29, 2013;
termination  of  the 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan will not, however, affect the
validity  of  any  then  outstanding  award.

ADMINISTRATION  OF  2003  LONG  TERM  INCENTIVE  PLAN

     The  2003  Long  Term Incentive Plan will be administered by a committee of
the  Board,  which  initially will be the Compensation Committee. This committee
has  the  authority  (i) to select employees to whom awards are granted, (ii) to
determine the size and types of awards granted, (iii) to determine the terms and
conditions  of  such  awards  in  a  manner  consistent  with the 2003 Long Term
Incentive Plan (discussed below), (iv) to interpret the 2003 Long Term Incentive
Plan  and  any  instrument  or  agreement  entered into under the 2003 Long Term
Incentive  Plan,  (v)  to  establish  such rules and regulations relating to the
administration  of the 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan as it deems appropriate and
(vi) to make all other determinations that may be necessary or advisable for the
administration of the 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan. The committee may amend the
terms  of  any  award,  or  substitute new awards for previously granted awards,
provided  that  such  amendment or substitution may not impair the rights of any
participant  with  respect  to  any  outstanding  award  without  his  consent.

     The  Board  of  Directors  may amend, alter or terminate the 2003 Long Term
Incentive  Plan  at any time, provided that no such action may impair the rights
of a participant with respect to any outstanding award without the participant's
consent  and provided that no amendment may be made without stockholder approval
if  such  approval  is required to comply with applicable law or requirements of
any interdealer quotation system or stock exchange on which the Company's common
stock  is  listed  or  quoted.

                                       23


SHARES  SUBJECT  TO  2003  LONG  TERM  INCENTIVE  PLAN

     Subject to adjustment as described below, 1,250,000 shares of the Company's
common  stock  shall  be  available for grant under the 2003 Long Term Incentive
Plan.  If  any  shares  subject  to  any award are forfeited, or if any award is
terminated  without issuance of shares or is satisfied with other consideration,
the  shares  subject  to  such award shall again be available for future grants.
Further,  awards substituted for previous awards in accordance with the terms of
the  2003  Long  Term  Incentive Plan will not be counted toward the share limit
unless  otherwise  provided  by  the  administering committee.  The closing sale
price  of  the Company's common stock on the NASDAQ National Market on April 15,
2003  was  $8.58.

STOCK  OPTIONS

     The  purchase  price  per  share under any option will be determined by the
administering committee, provided that it shall not be less than 25% of the fair
market  value  of  a share on the date of grant of the option, nor less than the
par  value of a share.  The term of each option shall be fixed by the committee,
provided that no option shall have a term extending beyond ten years (five years
in  the  case  of  ISOs  granted  to ten-percent stockholders) from the date the
option is granted.  Options are exercisable during their term as provided by the
committee.  Options  shall be exercised by payment of the purchase price, either
in  cash,  in  shares  valued at the fair market value on the date the option is
exercised,  in any combination thereof or in such other form of consideration as
the  committee shall determine, provided, that, if the committee so provides, an
option  may  be  exercised  by  delivery  of a properly executed exercise notice
together  with  irrevocable  instructions to a broker to deliver promptly to the
Company  the amount of sale or loan proceeds necessary to pay the purchase price
and  applicable  withholding  taxes  in  full  and  such  other documents as the
committee shall determine.  The ability to deliver shares in lieu of cash on the
exercise  of  options could permit the successive, immediate exercise of options
with  shares  received  upon  earlier  or  substantially simultaneous exercises.
Whether  an  option  holder uses shares to exercise an entire option in a single
exercise  or  through  successive  exercises, the net increase in shares held by
such  person  will be identical.  The committee may accept as partial payment on
the exercise of options a promissory note, which may be secured by the shares to
be  received  upon  such exercise.  The maximum number of shares with respect to
which  options may be granted to any employee under the 2003 Long Term Incentive
Plan  in  any  calendar  year  is  250,000  shares.

STOCK  APPRECIATION  RIGHTS

     An  SAR  may be granted either alone or in conjunction with any other award
under  the 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan. SARs related to any option (i) must be
granted  at  the  time such option is granted, and (ii) if such option is an ISO
may be exercisable only upon exercise of the related option. Upon exercise of an
SAR,  the  holder  thereof  is entitled to receive the excess of the fair market
value  of  the  shares  for  which  the right is exercised (calculated as of the
exercise  date)  over  either the exercise price per share of the related option
or, if none, over the fair market value of such number of shares on the date the
SAR  was granted (hereinafter, the "exercise price") or such amount in excess of
such  fair  market  value  as  may  be specified by the administering committee.

                                       24


Payment by the Company upon exercise of an SAR may be made in cash or shares, or
any  combination  thereof,  as  the  administering  committee  shall  determine.

RESTRICTED  STOCK

     The  administering  committee  shall  determine  the  terms and conditions,
including  acceleration  and  forfeiture  provisions  and  other  provision  and
restrictions  (which  may  include restrictions on the right to vote such shares
and  the  right  to  receive  any  dividends with respect thereto) that shall be
placed on restricted stock awarded under the 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan. This
restricted  stock  may  not  be  disposed  of  by  the  recipient until any such
restrictions  lapse. Restricted stock may be issued for no cash consideration or
for  such  minimum  consideration  as  may  be  required by applicable law. Upon
termination  of  employment  during  the restricted period, all restricted stock
shall be forfeited, subject to such exceptions, if any, as are authorized by the
committee relating to termination of employment on retirement, disability, death
or  other  special  circumstances.

INCENTIVE  SHARE  AWARDS

     The  administering  committee may grant incentive share awards, which shall
provide  for  the issuance of shares at such times and subject to such terms and
conditions as the committee shall deem appropriate, including without limitation
terms  that  condition  the  issuance  of  such  shares  upon the achievement of
performance  goals.

ASSIGNABILITY  OF  AWARDS

     An  award  and  the  shares  subject  to  an  award  may  not  be assigned,
transferred,  pledged  or otherwise encumbered by a participant except as may be
approved  by  the  administering  committee  in  the  award  or  subsequently.

ADJUSTMENTS

     In  the event of any change in corporate structure of the Company affecting
the  shares  (e.g., merger, consolidation, recapitalization, reclassification or
stock dividend), the committee may make such adjustments as it deems appropriate
to  the  number, class and option price of shares subject to outstanding options
granted  under the 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan, and in the value of, or number
or  class  of shares subject to, other awards granted or available to be granted
under  the  2003  Long  Term  Incentive  Plan  and  to  individual  employees.

FEDERAL  INCOME  TAX  CONSEQUENCES

     The  following  discussion  briefly  summarizes  certain federal income tax
aspects  of  stock  options,  stock  appreciation  rights,  and restricted stock
granted  under  the  2003  Long  Term  Incentive  Plan.  State  and  local  tax
consequences  may  differ.

     Incentive  Stock  Options.  In  general,  an  optionee  is  not required to
recognize  income  at the time of the grant or exercise of an ISO.  However, the

                                       25


difference  between the exercise price and the fair market value of the stock on
the  exercise date is an adjustment item for purposes of the alternative minimum
tax.  If  an  optionee does not exercise an ISO within certain specified periods
of  time  after termination of employment, the ISO is treated for federal income
tax  purposes  in  the  same manner as a nonqualified stock option, as described
below.

     Nonqualified  Stock  Options.  An  optionee  generally  is  not required to
recognize  income at the time of grant of a nonqualified stock option.  However,
an  optionee  generally is required to recognize ordinary income on the date the
nonqualified  stock  option is exercised in an amount equal to the excess of the
fair  market  value  of the shares on the exercise date over the exercise price.

     Stock  Appreciation  Rights.  A  grantee  generally  is  not  required  to
recognize  income  at the time of grant of an SAR.  However, a grantee generally
is  required to recognize ordinary income on the date the SAR is exercised in an
amount  equal  to  the  amount  of  cash and the fair market value of any shares
received  on  exercise.

     Restricted  Stock.  Shares  of restricted stock awarded under the 2003 Long
Term  Incentive Plan will be subject to a substantial risk of forfeiture (i.e. a
vesting  requirement)  for  the period of time specified in the award.  Unless a
grantee  of  shares of restricted stock makes an election under Section 83(b) of
the  Code  as described below, the grantee is not required to recognize ordinary
income  at  the  time  of  grant  of restricted stock.  However, on the date the
substantial risk of forfeiture lapses, the grantee recognizes ordinary income in
an  amount  equal  to  the  fair  market value of the shares on such date.  If a
grantee  makes a Section 83(b) election to recognize ordinary income on the date
the  shares  of  restricted  stock  are granted, the grantee recognizes ordinary
income at such time in an amount equal to the fair market value of the shares on
the  date  of  award.  In such case, the grantee is not be required to recognize
additional  ordinary  income  when  the  substantial  risk of forfeiture lapses.

     Gain  or Loss on Sale or Exchange of Shares.  In general, gain or loss from
the  sale  or exchange of shares acquired pursuant to awards under the 2003 Long
Term  Incentive  Plan will be treated as capital gain or loss, provided that the
shares are held as capital assets at the time of the sale or exchange.  However,
in  the  case  of  shares  acquired pursuant to the exercise of ISOs, if certain
holding  period requirements are not satisfied at the time of a sale or exchange
(a  "disqualifying  disposition"),  an  optionee  may  be  required to recognize
ordinary  income  upon  such  disposition.

     Deductibility by Company.  The Company generally is not allowed a deduction
in  connection with the grant or exercise of an ISO.  However, if an optionee is
required  to  recognize  income  as a result of a disqualifying disposition, the
Company  will  be entitled to a deduction equal to the amount of ordinary income
so recognized.  In the case of nonqualified stock options (including an ISO that
is  treated  as  a  nonqualified  stock  option,  as  described above), SARs and
restricted  stock, the Company generally will be allowed a deduction at the same
time  and  in  the  same  amount  as the optionee or grantee recognizes ordinary
income.

     Section  162(m).  Subject to certain exceptions, Section 162(m) of the Code
disallows federal income tax deductions for compensation paid by a publicly-held

                                       26


corporation  to  certain  executives to the extent it exceeds $1 million for the
taxable  year.  The 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan has been designed to allow the
administering  committee  to  make  awards  under  the plan that qualify under a
"performance-based  compensation"  exception  to the $1 million deduction limit.

VOTE  REQUIRED  FOR  APPROVAL  OF ADOPTION OF THE 2003 LONG TERM INCENTIVE PLAN

     The  Company  is  submitting  the  new 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan to its
stockholders  for  approval  as  required  by NASD rules governing Nasdaq-traded
issuers. Under these rules, the affirmative vote of the holders of a majority of
the  total  votes  cast  at  the  Annual  Meeting  in respect of the proposal is
required  to  ratify  the  adoption  of  the  2003  Long  Term  Incentive  Plan.


                                 OTHER BUSINESS

     The  Company  does not presently know of any matters that will be presented
for  action  at  the  Annual Meeting other than those set forth herein. If other
matters properly come before the meeting, proxies submitted on the enclosed form
will  be  voted by the persons named in the enclosed form of proxy in accordance
with  their  best  judgment.

                                 ANNUAL REPORTS

     THE COMPANY'S ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K FOR THE FISCAL YEAR ENDED DECEMBER
31,  2002,  IS  ENCLOSED  WITH THIS PROXY STATEMENT.  THE COMPANY ALSO HAS FILED
THIS  REPORT WITH THE SEC, AND COPIES OF OUR ANNUAL REPORT ON FORM 10-K, AS WELL
AS  QUARTERLY  REPORTS ON FORM 10-Q, CURRENT REPORTS ON FORM 8-K, AND AMENDMENTS
TO THOSE REPORTS ARE AVAILABLE, WITHOUT CHARGE, ON OUR WEBSITE, WWW.TALK.COM, AS
SOON  AS  REASONABLY  PRACTICABLE AFTER THEY ARE FILED WITH THE SEC.  COPIES ARE
ALSO AVAILABLE, WITHOUT CHARGE, FROM THE COMPANY.  REQUESTS FOR COPIES SHOULD BE
ADDRESSED  TO  INVESTOR  RELATIONS, TALK AMERICA HOLDINGS, INC., 6805 ROUTE 202,
NEW  HOPE,  PENNSYLVANIA  18938.


                       2004 ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS

     In accordance with rules promulgated by the SEC, any stockholder who wishes
to  submit  a proposal for inclusion in the proxy materials to be distributed by
the  Company  in connection with the annual meeting of stockholders in 2004 must
submit  it  so it will be received by the Company by January 7, 2004, unless the
Company changes the date of next year's annual meeting by more than 30 days from
this  year's,  in which case the proposal must be submitted at a reasonable time
before  the  Company  begins  to  print  and  mail  its  proxy  materials.  Any
stockholder  proposals  for  the  2004  annual  meeting of stockholders that are
submitted  outside  the processes of Rule 14a-8 under the Securities Act of 1934
will  be  considered untimely if not received by the Company within a reasonable
time  prior  to  its  printing  its  proxy  materials in 2004.  In addition, any

                                       27


stockholder  proposal  for  next year's annual meeting submitted after March 22,
2004,  or,  if  the  Company changes the date of the 2004 annual meeting by more
than  30 days from this year's, after a reasonable time before the Company mails
its proxy materials for next year's annual meeting, will not be considered filed
on  a  timely  basis with the Company under SEC Rule 14a-4(c)(1).  For proposals
that  are  not  filed  on such a timely basis, the Company retains discretion to
vote  proxies it receives.  For proposals that are filed on such a timely basis,
the  Company  retains  discretion  to  vote  proxies it receives provided 1) the
Company includes in its proxy statement advice on the nature of the proposal and
how  it  intends to exercise its voting discretion and 2) the proponent does not
issue  a  proxy  statement.

                                   By  Order  of  the  Board  of  Directors

                                   /s/  Aloysius  T.  Lawn,  IV
                                   Aloysius  T.  Lawn,  IV,  Secretary

Reston,  Virginia
May  6,  2003

                                       28

                                    EXHIBIT A

                           TALK AMERICA HOLDINGS, INC.
                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

(As  amended  and  approved by the Audit Committee and the Board of Directors on
April  29,  2003)

THE  AUDIT  COMMITTEE

The  Company  shall  have  an  audit  committee  of  its Board of Directors, the
structure,  composition  and  responsibilities of which shall be as set forth in
this charter.  The audit committee shall be elected or appointed annually by the
Board  of  Directors.  The  audit  committee  shall  consist  of  at least three
directors  and  all  members  of  the  audit committee shall be "independent" of
management  and  the  Company  as and to the extent provided in the rules of the
NASD governing issuers whose shares are quoted on NASDAQ (as currently in effect
and  as  they  may be amended, the "NASD Rules").  In addition, no member of the
audit  committee:

     -    may accept any consulting, advisory or other compensatory fee from the
          Company,  other  than  for  service  on  the Board of Directors or any
          committee  thereof;
     -    may  own,  directly  or  indirectly,  20%  or  more  (or  such  lower
          measurement  as may be established in rules and regulations adopted by
          the  Securities and Exchange Commission (as currently in effect and as
          they  may be amended, the "SEC Rules")) of the Company's voting stock;
          or
     -    otherwise  be  an  affiliate  of  the Company other than in his or her
          capacity  as  a  director  or  member of any committee of the Board of
          Directors,

nor shall any member otherwise have any relationship that, in the opinion of the
Board of Directors, would interfere with the exercise of his or her independence
from  management  of  the Company.  Each audit committee member shall be able to
read  and  understand  fundamental financial statements, including the Company's
balance sheet, income statement and cash flow statement, and at least one member
shall have been determined by the Board of Directors to be a "financial expert,"
in  all  cases as and to the extent required and provided in the applicable NASD
Rules.



PURPOSE

The audit committee's primary purpose is to oversee the Company's accounting and
financial  reporting  processes  and  the  audits  of  the  Company's  financial
statements.  Without  limitation  of  the generality of the foregoing, the audit
committee's  primary  functions  are  to  oversee:

     -    the  integrity  of  the  Company's  financial statements and financial
          reporting  structure;
     -    the  Company's  compliance  with  related  legal  and  regulatory
          requirements;
     -    the  independent  auditor's  qualifications  and  independence;
     -    the  performance  of  the  Company's  independent  auditors;
     -    the  receipt,  retention  and  treatment  of  complaints regarding the
          Company's  accounting,  auditing  matters  or  internal  accounting,
          financial  or  disclosure  controls;
     -    the  confidential,  anonymous  submission  of  complaints  regarding
          questionable  accounting  or  auditing  matters;  and
     -    related-party  transactions

The  audit  committee  also  monitors  and reviews compliance with the Company's
legal  compliance  and  ethics  policies  and  programs.

AUTHORITY  AND  RESPONSIBILITY

The  audit committee shall have the authority and the responsibility, for and on
behalf  of  the  Company's  Board  of  Directors, to (a) oversee and monitor all
aspects  of  the  Company's  accounting  and  financial  reporting  processes,
including, without limitation, the oversight and monitoring of the participation
of  the Company's management and its independent auditors in such processes, the
Company's  financial  statements and financial reporting process, the systems of
internal  accounting  and  financial  controls, any internal audit function, the
annual  independent  audit  of the Company's financial statements, and the legal
compliance  and  ethics  programs  as established by management and the Board of
Directors,  (b)  provide  over  the  names  of  the  audit committee members the
required  Audit  Committee Report for the Company's Proxy Statement required for
the  Company's Annual Meeting of Shareholders and (c) take any actions as it may
deem  desirable or appropriate to provide for the reliability and credibility of
the  Company's financial statements and the integrity of the Company's financial
reporting  process.

Subject  to  the  applicable  provisions  of  the Delaware corporate law and the
Company's Amended and Restated Certificate of Incorporation and its By-laws, the
audit  committee  may  adopt such operating rules as it may deem appropriate for
the  exercise  of  its authority and the discharge of its responsibility and for
the  conduct  of  its  activities as a committee, including, without limitation,
establishing  the  times  and  places  of  its  meetings  and  providing for the
delegation  of  the  responsibility  for  the conduct of certain of its specific
activities  to  one  or  more  of its members, who will report back to the audit
committee  as  a  whole.

In discharging its responsibilities, the audit committee shall have the power to
investigate  any  matter brought to its attention, shall have full access to all
books, records, facilities and personnel of the Company and shall have the power
and  authority  to  engage  and  determine  funding,  by  the  Company, for such
independent  counsel and other advisors as it may determine are necessary for it
to  carry  out  its  duties  and  responsibilities.

In  performing  their  duties  and  responsibilities,  each  member of the audit
committee  is entitled to rely in good faith upon the records of the Company and
upon  information,  opinions,  reports  or  statements  presented  by any of the
Company's  officers or employees, or other committees of the Board of Directors,
or  by  any other person as to matters the member reasonably believes are within
such  other person's professional or expert competence and who has been selected
with  reasonable  care  by  or  on  behalf  of  the  Company.

                                        ii


PRINCIPAL  PROCESSES

Without  in  any  respect limiting the authority and responsibility of the audit
committee,  it  being  understood  that  the  audit  committee  will  maintain
flexibility  in  its  oversight  and  monitoring of the Company's accounting and
financial  reporting  processes,  the  following  shall  be  the  principal
responsibilities  and recurring processes of the audit committee in carrying out
its  responsibilities:

-    The  audit  committee  shall  have a clear understanding with the Company's
     management  and  its independent auditors that the independent auditors are
     ultimately  accountable  to  the Company's Board of Directors and the audit
     committee,  as  representatives  of  the  Company's  stockholders.

-    The  audit  committee  will  meet  at  least  four  times  a  year.

-    The  audit  committee  shall  pre-approve  all audit and non-audit services
     provided  by  the  Company's  independent  auditors.  Notwithstanding  the
     foregoing,  the  audit committee shall not have the authority to engage the
     Company's  independent auditors for any of the following non-audit services
     (the  "non-allowed  services"):

     --   Bookkeeping  or  other  services  related  to the Company's accounting
          records  or  financial  statements
     --   Financial  information  systems  design  and  implementation
     --   Appraisal  or  valuation  services,  fairness  opinions  or
          contribution-in-kind  reports
     --   Actuarial  services
     --   Internal  audit  outsourcing  services
     --   Management  functions  or  human  resources  work
     --   Broker-dealer,  investment  adviser  or  investment  banking  services
     --   Legal  services and expert services unrelated to the audit (other than
          tax  services)
     --   Any  other  service  that  is,  by law, rule or regulation (including,
          without  limitation,  SEC  Rules  and NASD Rules), not permitted to be
          provided  to  a  public  company  by  its  independent  auditors.

     The  audit  committee  may  delegate  pre-approval  of  audit and non-audit
     services  to  a  subcommittee  of  the  audit  committee, provided that any
     decisions  made  by  such subcommittee shall be presented to the full audit
     committee  at  its  next  scheduled  meeting.

-    The  audit  committee  shall  be  directly  and  solely responsible for the
     appointment,  replacement,  compensation  (funding  by  the  Company)  and
     oversight  of the work of the independent auditors (including resolution of
     any  issues  arising  between  management  and  the  independent  auditors
     regarding  financial  reporting) for the purpose of preparing or issuing an
     audit  report  or  related  work, and the independent auditors shall report
     directly  to  the  audit  committee.

                                        iii


-    The  audit  committee  shall  discuss  with  the independent auditors their
     independence  from management and the Company and obtain from, and actively
     discuss  with, the independent auditors the written disclosures required by
     the Independence Standards Board, particularly Independence Standards Board
     Standard  No.  1,  as  well  as  express  confirmation from the independent
     auditors  that  they have not been engaged by the Company to perform any of
     the non-allowed services listed above, and shall consider the compatibility
     of  any  nonaudit  services  with  the  auditors'  independence.  Without
     limitation  of  the  foregoing,  the audit committee shall address with the
     independent auditors in connection with any audit performed by them (i) the
     Company's  critical  accounting  policies  and  practices, (ii) alternative
     treatments  of  financial  information  within  GAAP  that  the independent
     auditors  have  discussed with Company management, the ramifications of the
     use  of  such  alternative  disclosures  and treatments and the alternative
     preferred  by  the  independent  auditors  and  (iii)  any material written
     communications  between  the  independent  auditors and Company management,
     such  as  any management letter and any schedule of unadjusted differences.

-    Annually,  the  audit  committee shall review and recommend to the Board of
     Directors  as  a whole the selection of the Company's independent auditors.

-    The  audit  committee periodically will meet separately with management and
     separately  with  the  Company's  independent auditors. The audit committee
     shall discuss with the Company's independent auditors the overall scope and
     plans  for  their  respective audits including the adequacy of staffing and
     compensation.  Also,  the  audit committee shall discuss with the Company's
     management  and  its independent auditors the adequacy and effectiveness of
     the  accounting  and  financial  controls  and  procedures,  including  the
     Company's  system  to  identify,  monitor and manage business risk, and the
     Company's  legal  and  ethical  compliance  programs.  Further,  the  audit
     committee  shall  meet  separately  with the independent auditors, with and
     without  management  present, to discuss the results of their examinations,
     including,  without limitation, all of the matters required to be discussed
     with  the  independent auditors under Statement on Accounting Standards No.
     61.

-    Based  on  the  review and discussions described below, the audit committee
     shall  recommend to the Board of Directors whether the annual and quarterly
     financial  statements  of  the  Company  and  related  disclosure should be
     included  in the Company's Annual Report on Form 10-K and Quarterly Reports
     on  Form  10-Q,  respectively:

     -    Prior to the filing of each of the Company's Quarterly Reports on Form
          10-Q,  the  audit  committee  shall  review  with  management  and the
          independent  auditors  the  interim  financial  statements  and  other
          information  to  be included in the Form 10-Q, including the Company's
          disclosure  under  "Management's  Discussion and Analysis of Financial
          Condition  and  Results  of  Operations" ("MD&A"). The audit committee
          also  shall  discuss the results of the quarterly review and any other
          matters  required  to  be  communicated  to the audit committee by the
          independent  auditors under generally accepted auditing standards. Any
          member of the audit committee may represent the entire audit committee
          for  the  purposes of the review described in this paragraph, in which
          event  such  member will make a presentation to the audit committee at
          its  next  regularly  scheduled  meeting.

                                        iv


     -    The  audit  committee shall review with management and the independent
          auditors  the  financial  statements  and other financial information,
          including  the Company's disclosures under MD&A, to be included in the
          Company's  Annual  Report  on  Form  10-K  (or  the  annual  report to
          stockholders  if  distributed  prior  to  the  filing  of  Form 10-K),
          including their judgment about the quality, not just acceptability, of
          accounting principles, the reasonableness of significant judgments and
          the  clarity of the disclosures in the financial statements. Also, the
          audit  committee shall discuss the results of the annual audit and any
          other  matters  required  to be communicated to the audit committee by
          the  independent auditors under generally accepted auditing standards,
          including,  without  limitation,  all  of  the  matters required to be
          discussed  with the independent auditors under Statement on Accounting
          Standards  No.  61.

-    The  audit committee shall review and approve hiring policies for employees
     or  former  employees  of  any  of  the  Company's  independent  auditors.

-    The  audit  committee shall establish procedures for the receipt, retention
     and treatment of complaints received by the Company regarding the Company's
     accounting,  auditing  matters  or  internal  accounting,  financial  or
     disclosure  controls.

-    The  audit  committee  shall  establish  procedures  for  the confidential,
     anonymous  submission  of  complaints  or  concerns  regarding questionable
     accounting  or  auditing  matters.

-    The  audit  committee  shall  review  and  approve  all  related-party
     transactions.


ANNUAL  REVIEW

The  audit  committee  shall review and reassess the adequacy of this charter at
least  annually  and  recommend  any proposed changes to the Board of Directors.

                                        v


                                    EXHIBIT B

            TALK AMERICA HOLDINGS, INC. 2003 LONG TERM INCENTIVE PLAN


     1.     Definitions.  In  this  Plan,  except  where  the  context otherwise
indicates,  the  following  definitions  shall  apply:

          1.1.     "Agreement"  means  a  written  agreement  or  other document
evidencing  an  Award  that  shall  be  in  such form as may be specified by the
Committee  and that may, but need not be, signed by a Participant, as determined
by  the  Committee  in  its  discretion.

          1.2.     "Award"  means  a grant of an Option, Right, Restricted Stock
or  Incentive  Share.

          1.3.     "Board"  means  the  Board  of  Directors  of  the  Company.

          1.4.     "Code"  means  the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.

          1.5.     "Committee"  means  a committee of the Board appointed by the
Board  to  administer  this  Plan  and  to  make  and administer specific Awards
hereunder.  The  Committee  may,  in  its  discretion, appoint a subcommittee to
administer  the  Plan  with  respect  to  specific  Awards  hereunder.

          1.6.     "Common  Stock"  means  the  common stock, par value $.01 per
share,  of  the  Company.

          1.7.     "Company" means Talk America Holdings, Inc. and any successor
thereto

          1.8.     "Date  of  Exercise"  means  the  date  on  which the Company
receives  notice  of  the  exercise of an Option or Right in accordance with the
terms  of  Section  8.1.

          1.9.     "Date  of  Grant" means the date on which an Award is granted
under  this  Plan.

          1.10.     "Director"  means  a member of the Board of Directors of the
Company.

          1.11.     "Employee"  means  any person determined by the Committee to
be  an  employee of the Company or a Subsidiary, including an Employee Director,
consultant  or any person who has been hired to be an employee of the Company or
a  Subsidiary.

          1.12.     "Employee  Director"  means  a  Director  who  is  also  an
Employee.

          1.13.     "Fair  Market Value" as of any date means an amount equal to
the  last  sale  price  for  a  Share  on  the  Nasdaq  National Market, or such
securities  exchange  or  other  automated  dealer  quotation system that is the
principal  market for the Common Stock, as reported for such date by such source
as  the  Committee  may select, or, if such price quotations of the Common Stock
are  not  then  reported, then the fair market value of a Share as determined by
the  Committee  pursuant  to  a reasonable method adopted in good faith for such
purpose.



          1.14.     "Grantee"  means  an Employee or Director to whom Restricted
Stock  has  been  awarded  pursuant  to  Section 9 or Incentive Shares have been
awarded  pursuant  to  Section  10.

          1.15.     "Incentive  Shares"  means  an  award  providing  for  the
contingent  grant  of  Shares  pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  Section  10.

          1.16.     "Incentive  Stock Option" means an Option granted under this
Plan  that the Company designates as an incentive stock option under Section 422
of  the  Code.

          1.17.     "Nonstatutory  Stock  Option"  means an Option granted under
this  Plan  that  is  not  an  Incentive  Stock  Option.

          1.18.     "Option"  means  an  option to purchase Shares granted under
this  Plan  in  accordance  with  the  terms  of  Section  6.

          1.19.     "Option  Period" means the period during which an Option may
be  exercised.

          1.20.     "Option  Price" means the price per Share at which an Option
may  be  exercised.  Subject to the terms of the Plan, the Option Price shall be
determined  by  the  Committee;  provided,  however,  that in no event shall the
Option  Price be less than the greater of 25% of the Fair Market Value as of the
Date  of  Grant and the par value of the Common Stock, and provided further that
the  Option Price of an Incentive Stock Option granted under this Plan shall not
be  less than one hundred percent (100%) of the Fair Market Value on the Date of
Grant  and, in the case of an Incentive Stock Option granted to an Employee who,
on  the  Date  of Grant is a Ten-Percent Stockholder, shall not be less than one
hundred  and  ten  percent (110%) of the Fair Market Value on the Date of Grant.

          1.21.     "Participant"  means  a  Director,  Employee,  or  Employee
Director  to  whom  an  Award  has  been  granted  hereunder.

          1.22.     "Performance  Goals"  means performance goals established by
the  Committee, which may be based on earnings or earnings growth, sales, return
on  assets,  equity  or  investment,  cash  flow,  total  stockholders  return,
regulatory  compliance, satisfactory internal or external audits, improvement of
financial  ratings, achievement of balance sheet or income statement objectives,
implementation  or  completion  of  one or more projects or transactions, or any
other objective goals established by the Committee, and may be absolute in their
terms  or  measured  against  or  in relationship to other companies comparably,
similarly  or  otherwise situated.  Such performance standards may be particular
to  an Participant or the department, branch, Subsidiary or division in which he
or  she  works,  or  may be based on the performance of the Company, one or more
Subsidiaries  or  the  Company  and one or more Subsidiaries, and may cover such
period  as  may  be  specified  by  the  Committee.

          1.23.     "Plan"  means the Talk America Holdings, Inc. 2003 Long Term
Incentive  Plan,  as  amended  from  time  to  time.

                                        ii


          1.24.     "Related  Option"  means an Option in connection with which,
or  by  amendment  to  which,  a  Right  is  granted.

          1.25.     "Related Right" means a Right granted in connection with, or
by  amendment  to,  an  Option.

          1.26.     "Restricted  Stock"  means  Shares  granted  under  the Plan
pursuant  to  the  provisions  of  Section  9.

          1.27.     "Right"  means  a stock appreciation right granted under the
Plan  in  accordance  with  the  terms  of  Section  7.

          1.28.     "Right  Period" means the period during which a Right may be
exercised.

          1.29.     "Section  422 Employee" means an Employee who is employed by
the  Company  or  a  "parent  corporation"  or "subsidiary corporation" (both as
defined  in  Sections  424(e)  and (f) of the Code) with respect to the Company.

          1.30.     "Share"  means  a  share  of  Common  Stock.

          1.31.     "Subsidiary"  means  a  corporation,  partnership,  business
trust,  limited  liability  company  or  other form of business organization  at
least  50%  of  the total combined voting power of all classes of stock or other
equity  interests  of  which is owned by the Company, either directly or through
one  or  more  other  Subsidiaries.

          1.32.     "Ten-Percent  Stockholder"  means a Section 422 Employee who
(applying  the  rules  of Section 424(d) of the Code) owns stock possessing more
than  10%  of  the  total  combined  voting power of all classes of stock of the
Company  or  a "parent corporation" or "subsidiary corporation" (both as defined
in  Sections  424(e)  and  (f)  of  the  Code)  with  respect  to  the  Company.

     2.     Purpose.  This  Plan  is  intended  to  assist  the  Company and its
Subsidiaries  in  attracting  and  retaining  Directors,  Employees and Employee
Directors  of  outstanding  ability  and  to promote the identification of their
interests  with  those  of  the  stockholders  of  the  Company.

     3.     Administration.  The  Committee shall administer this Plan and shall
have  plenary  authority,  in  its  discretion,  to  grant  Awards to Directors,
Employees  and  Employee Directors, subject to the provisions of this Plan.  The
Committee shall have plenary authority and discretion, subject to the provisions
of  this  Plan,  to  determine the Directors, Employees or Employee Directors to
whom  Awards  shall be granted, the terms (which terms need not be identical) of
all  Awards,  including without limitation the Option Price of Options, the time
or  times  at  which Awards are granted, the number of Shares covered by Awards,
whether  an  Option  shall  be an Incentive Stock Option or a Nonstatutory Stock
Option,  any exceptions to non-transferability, any Performance Goals applicable
to  Awards,  any  provisions relating to vesting, any circumstances in which the
Options  would  terminate,  the  period  during  which Options and Rights may be

                                        iii


exercised,  and  the  period  during  which Restricted Stock shall be subject to
restrictions.  In  making  these  determinations,  the  Committee  may take into
account  the  nature  of  the  services  rendered or to be rendered by the Award
recipients,  their  present  and  potential  contributions to the success of the
Company  and  its  Subsidiaries,  and such other factors as the Committee in its
discretion  shall  deem  relevant.  Subject  to the provisions of this Plan, the
Committee  shall  have  plenary  authority  to  interpret  this  Plan  and  any
Agreements, prescribe, amend and rescind rules and regulations relating to them,
and  make  all  other  determinations  deemed  necessary  or  advisable  for the
administration of this Plan and Awards granted hereunder.  The determinations of
the  Committee on the matters referred to in this Section 3 shall be binding and
final.

     4.     Eligibility.  Options, Rights, Restricted Stock and Incentive Shares
may  be  granted  or awarded only to Employees and Directors, provided, however,
that  Directors,  other  than  Employee  Directors, may not be granted Incentive
Stock  Options.  A  Director, Employee or Employee Director who has been granted
an  Option  or  Right  or  awarded  Restricted  Stock or Incentive Shares may be
granted additional Options and Rights or awarded additional shares of Restricted
Stock  or  Incentive  Shares.

     5.     Stock  Subject  to  Plan.

          5.1.     Subject  to  adjustment  as  provided  in Section 11, (a) the
maximum number of Shares that may be issued under this Plan is 1,250,000 Shares,
and  (b)  the  maximum  number  of  Shares with respect to which an Employee may
receive  Awards  under  this  Plan  during  any  calendar  year  is  250,000.

          5.2.     If  an  Option  or Right expires or terminates for any reason
(other than termination by virtue of the exercise of a Related Option or Related
Right,  as  the  case  may  be)  without  having  been  fully  exercised,  or is
surrendered pursuant to Section 6.3, if shares of Restricted Stock are forfeited
or  if  Shares  covered  by  an  Incentive  Share  Award  are  not issued or are
forfeited,  the  unissued or forfeited Shares that had been subject to the Award
shall  be  available  for  the  grant  of  additional  Awards.

          5.3.     Upon  exercise of a Right (regardless of whether the Right is
settled in cash or Shares), the number of Shares with respect to which the Right
is  exercised  shall  be charged against the number of Shares issuable under the
Plan  and  shall  not  become  available  for  the  grant  of  other  Awards.

     6.     Options.

          6.1.     Options  granted  under  this  Plan shall be either Incentive
Stock  Options  or  Nonstatutory  Stock Options, as designated by the Committee,
provided  that  Incentive  Stock  Options may only be granted to persons who are
Section 422 Employees on the Date of Grant.  Each Option granted under this Plan
shall  be identified either as a Nonstatutory Stock Option or an Incentive Stock
Option  and  shall  be  evidenced  by  an Agreement that specifies the terms and
conditions  of the Option.  Options shall be subject to the terms and conditions
set forth in this Section 6 and such other terms and conditions not inconsistent
with  this  Plan  as  the  Committee  may  specify.  The  Committee  may, in its
discretion,  condition the grant or vesting of an Option upon the achievement of
one  or  more  specified  goals.

                                        iv


          6.2.     The  Option  Period  shall be determined by the Committee and
specifically set forth in the Agreement; provided, however, that an Option shall
not be exercisable after ten years (five years in the case of an Incentive Stock
Option  granted  to  a  Ten-Percent  Stockholder)  from  its  Date  of  Grant.

          6.3.     The Committee, in its discretion, may provide in an Agreement
for  the  right  of  a  Participant  to surrender to the Company an Option (or a
portion thereof) that has become exercisable and to receive upon such surrender,
without any payment to the Company (other than required tax withholding amounts)
that  number  of  Shares (equal to the highest whole number of Shares) having an
aggregate  Fair Market Value as of the date of surrender equal to that number of
Shares  subject  to the Option (or portion thereof) being surrendered multiplied
by  an  amount  equal  to the excess of (i) the Fair Market Value on the date of
surrender  over  (ii) the Option Price, plus an amount of cash equal to the Fair
Market  Value of any fractional Share to which the Participant would be entitled
but  for  the  parenthetical above relating to whole number of Shares.  Any such
surrender  shall  be treated as the exercise of the Option (or portion thereof).

     7.     Rights.

          7.1.     Rights  granted  under  the  Plan  shall  be  evidenced by an
Agreement  specifying  the  terms  and  conditions  of  the  Award.

          7.2.     A  Right  may  be  granted  under  the  Plan:

               (a)  in connection with, and at the same time as, the grant of an
                    Option  under  the  Plan;

               (b)  by  amendment  of  an  outstanding  Option granted under the
                    Plan;  or

               (c)  independently  of  any  Option  granted  under  the  Plan.

          7.3.     A  Right  granted  under  Section 7.2(a) or Section 7.2(b) of
this  Plan  is  a  Related  Right.  A  Related  Right  may,  in  the  Board's or
Committee's discretion, apply to all or any portion of the Shares subject to the
Related  Option.

          7.4.     A  Right  may be exercised in whole or in part as provided in
the applicable Agreement, and, subject to the terms of the Agreement, entitles a
Participant  to receive, without payment to the Company (but subject to required
tax  withholding),  either  cash  or that number of Shares (equal to the highest
whole  number  of  Shares),  or a combination thereof, in an amount or having an
aggregate  Fair Market Value determined as of the Date of Exercise not to exceed
the number of Shares subject to the portion of the Right exercised multiplied by
an  amount  equal  to  the  excess  of  (i) the Fair Market Value on the Date of
Exercise  of the Right over (ii) either (A) the Fair Market Value on the Date of
Grant (or such amount in excess of such Fair Market Value as may be specified by
the  Committee)  of  the  Right  if it is not a Related Right, or (B) the Option
Price  as  provided  in  the  Related  Option  if  the Right is a Related Right.

                                        v


          7.5.     The  Right  Period  shall  be determined by the Committee and
specifically  set  forth in the Agreement, provided that (a) a Right will expire
no later than the earlier of (1) ten years from the Date of Grant, or (2) in the
case  of  a Related Right, the expiration of the Related Option; and (b) a Right
that  is a Related Right to an Incentive Stock Option may be exercised only when
and  to  the  extent  the  Related  Option  is  exercisable.

          7.6.     The  exercise,  in whole or in part, of a Related Right shall
cause a reduction in the number of Shares subject to the Related Option equal to
the  number  of  Shares  with  respect  to which the Related Right is exercised.
Similarly,  the exercise, in whole or in part, of a Related Option shall cause a
reduction  in  the  number  of  Shares subject to the Related Right equal to the
number  of  Shares  with  respect  to  which  the  Related  Option is exercised.

     8.     Exercise  of  Options  and  Rights.

          8.1.     An  Option  or  Right  may,  subject  to  the  terms  of  the
applicable  Agreement  evidencing the Award, be exercised in whole or in part by
the  delivery  to the Company of written notice of the exercise, in such form as
the  Committee  may  prescribe,  accompanied, in the case of an Option, by (a) a
full payment for the Shares with respect to which the Option is exercised or (b)
irrevocable  instructions  to  a  broker to deliver promptly to the Company cash
equal  to  the  exercise  price  of  the  Option.  To the extent provided in the
applicable  Agreement,  payment  may be made in whole or in part by (i) delivery
(including  constructive  delivery)  of  Shares  (provided  that such Shares, if
acquired  pursuant  to  an  option or other award granted hereunder or under any
other  compensation  plan maintained by the Company or any Subsidiary, have been
held by the Participant for at least six (6) months) valued at Fair Market Value
on  the  Date  of  Exercise or (ii) delivery of a promissory note as provided in
Section  8.2  hereof.

          8.2.     To  the  extent  provided  in  an  Agreement and permitted by
applicable  law,  the Committee may accept as payment of all or a portion of the
Option Price a promissory note executed by the Participant evidencing his or her
obligation  to make future cash payment thereof.  Promissory notes made pursuant
to  this  Section  8.2  shall be payable upon such terms, and include such other
terms,  as  may  be determined by the Committee, shall be secured by a pledge of
the  Shares  received  upon  exercise  of  the  Option,  or other securities the
Committee  may  deem to be acceptable for such purposes, and shall bear interest
at  a  rate  fixed  by  the  Committee.

          8.3.     Options and Rights made under this Plan shall be transferable
by  will, the laws of descent and distribution, and as otherwise may be provided
by  the  Committee  in  an  Agreement.

     9.     Restricted  Stock  Awards.

          9.1.     Restricted  Stock  granted  under  this Plan shall consist of
Shares that are restricted as to transfer, subject to forfeiture, and subject to
such  other  terms  and  conditions as may be determined by the Committee.  Such
terms  and  conditions  may provide, in the discretion of the Committee, for the
lapse  of  such  transfer restrictions or forfeiture provisions to be contingent
upon  the  achievement  of  one  or  more  specified  Performance  Goals.

                                        vi


          9.2.     Each  grant  of  Restricted  Stock  under  this Plan shall be
evidenced  by  an  Agreement  specifying  the terms and conditions of the Award.
Each  Agreement  evidencing  an  Award  of  Restricted  Stock  shall contain the
following:

               (a)  a  requirement  that each certificate representing Shares of
Restricted Stock shall be deposited with the Company, or its designee, and shall
bear  the  following  legend:

               "This  certificate and the shares of stock represented hereby are
               subject  to  the  terms  and  conditions  (including the risks of
               forfeiture  and  restrictions  against transfer) contained in the
               Talk America Holdings, Inc. 2003 Long Term Incentive Plan, and an
               Agreement  entered  into  between  the  registered owner and Talk
               America  Holdings,  Inc.  Release  from such terms and conditions
               shall be made only in accordance with the provisions of this Plan
               and  the  Agreement,  a  copy  of each of which is on file in the
               office  of  the  Secretary  of  Talk America Holdings, Inc."; and

               (b)  the  terms  and  conditions  upon  which  any  restrictions
applicable  to  shares of Restricted Stock shall lapse and new certificates free
of  the  foregoing  legend  shall  be  issued to the Grantee or his or her legal
representative.

          9.3.     The  Committee  may  include  in  any  Agreement evidencing a
Restricted  Stock  Award  a  requirement  that,  in  the  event  of  a Grantee's
termination of employment for any reason prior to the lapse of restrictions, all
shares  of  Restricted  Stock  shall  be forfeited by the Grantee to the Company
without  payment of any consideration by the Company and neither the Grantee nor
any  successors, heirs, assigns or personal representatives of the Grantee shall
thereafter  have  any  further rights or interest in the Shares or certificates.

     10.     Incentive  Share Awards.  Each grant of Incentive Shares under this
Plan  shall  be evidenced by an Agreement that: (a) provides for the issuance of
Shares  to  a  Grantee  at  such  times  and  (b)  contains such other terms and
conditions,  as determined by the Committee, including without limitation, terms
that  condition  the  issuance  of  Shares  upon  the achievement of one or more
Performance  Goals.

     11.     Dividends  and  Dividend  Equivalents.  The  terms of an Award may,
subject  to  such  terms  and conditions as the Committee may specify, provide a
Participant  with  the right to receive dividend payments or dividend equivalent
payments  with  respect  to  Shares  covered by the Award, which payments may be
either made currently or credited to an account established for the Participant,
and  may  be  settled  in  cash  or  Shares,  as  determined  by  the Committee.

     12.     Capital Adjustments.  In the event of any change in the outstanding
Common  Stock  by  reason  of  any  stock  dividend, split-up, recapitalization,
reclassification,  combination  or  exchange of shares, merger, consolidation or
liquidation  and  the  like, the Committee may, in its discretion, provide for a
substitution  for or adjustment in (i) the number and class of Shares subject to
outstanding  Awards,  or  the  type  of  consideration  to  be received upon the
exercise  or vesting of outstanding Awards, (ii) the Option Price of Options and

                                        vii


the  base price upon which payments under Rights that are not Related Rights are
determined,  (iii)  the  aggregate  number  and class of Shares for which Awards
thereafter  may be granted under this Plan and (iv) the maximum number of Shares
with  respect  to  which  an  Employee  may  be granted Awards during the period
specified  in  Section  5.1.

     13.     Termination  or Amendment.  The Board may amend, alter or terminate
this  Plan  in any respect at any time; provided, however, that, after this Plan
has  been  approved by the stockholders of the Company, no amendment, alteration
or  termination of this Plan shall be made by the Board without approval of (i)-
the  Company's  stockholders to the extent stockholder approval of the amendment
is  required  by  applicable  law  or  regulations  or  the  requirements of the
principal  exchange or interdealer quotation system on which the Common Stock is
listed  or quoted, if any, and (ii) each affected Participant if such amendment,
alteration  or  termination  would  adversely  affect  his  or  her  rights  or
obligations  under  any  Award  granted  prior  to  the  date of such amendment,
alteration  or  termination.

     14.     Modification,  Substitution.

          14.1.     Subject  to  the  terms  and  conditions  of  this Plan, the
Committee  may modify, extend or renew outstanding Options and Rights, or accept
the  surrender  of  outstanding  Options  and  Rights granted under this Plan or
options  and  stock  appreciation  rights  granted  under  any other plan of the
Company or a Subsidiary (to the extent not theretofore exercised), and authorize
the  granting  of  new  Options and Rights pursuant to this Plan in substitution
therefor.  Any  substituted Options or Rights may specify a lower exercise price
than  the  surrendered options and stock appreciation rights, a longer term than
the  surrendered  options  and  stock  appreciation  rights,  or  have any other
provisions  that  are  authorized  by  this  Plan.  Subject  to  the  terms  and
conditions  of  this Plan, the Committee may modify the terms of any outstanding
Awards  of Restricted Stock or Incentive Shares.  Notwithstanding the foregoing,
however,  no  modification  of  an  Award  shall,  without  the  consent  of the
Participant,  alter  or  impair  any  of the Participant's rights or obligations
under  such  Award.

          14.2.     Anything  contained  herein to the contrary notwithstanding,
Awards  may,  at  the discretion of the Committee, be granted under this Plan in
substitution  for  stock  options  and  other  awards  covering capital stock of
another  corporation  which  is  merged  into,  consolidated  with,  or all or a
substantial  portion  of  the  property  or  stock  of which is acquired by, the
Company  or one of its Subsidiaries.  The terms and conditions of the substitute
Awards  so granted may vary from the terms and conditions set forth in this Plan
to  such  extent  as  the Committee may deem appropriate in order to conform, in
whole  or  part,  to the provisions of the Awards in substitution for which they
are  granted.  Such  substitute  Awards  granted  hereunder shall not be counted
toward  the  Share  limit  imposed by Section 5.1(b), except to the extent it is
determined  by  the Committee that counting such Awards is required in order for
Awards  granted  hereunder  to  be  eligible  to  qualify  as "performance-based
compensation"  within  the  meaning  of  Section  162(m)  of  the  Code.

          14.3     Any  provision  of  the Plan or any Agreement to the contrary
notwithstanding,  the  Committee  may  cause  any  Award granted hereunder to be
canceled  in  consideration  of  a cash payment or alternative Award made to the
holder  of  such  canceled Award equal in value to the Fair Market Value of such
canceled  Award.

                                        viii


     15.     Effectiveness  of  this  Plan.  This Plan and any amendments hereto
requiring stockholder approval pursuant to Section 13 are subject to approval by
vote of the stockholders of the Company at the next annual or special meeting of
stockholders  following  adoption  by  the  Board.

     16.     Withholding.  The  Company's  obligation to issue or deliver Shares
or  pay any amount pursuant to the terms of any Award granted hereunder shall be
subject  to  satisfaction of applicable federal, state and local tax withholding
requirements.  To  the  extent  provided  in  the  applicable  Agreement  and in
accordance with rules prescribed by the Committee, a Participant may satisfy any
such  withholding  tax  obligation  by  any  of  the  following  means  or  by a
combination  of  such means:  (i) tendering a cash payment, (ii) authorizing the
Company  to  withhold  Shares  otherwise  issuable  to the Participant, or (iii)
delivering  to  the  Company  already-owned  and  unencumbered  Shares.

     17.     Term  of this Plan.  Unless sooner terminated by the Board pursuant
to  Section  13,  this Plan shall terminate on date that is ten (10) years after
the  earlier  of  that date that the Plan is adopted by the Board or approved by
the  Company's  stockholders, and no Awards may be granted or awarded after such
date.  The  termination  of this Plan shall not affect the validity of any Award
outstanding  on  the  date  of  termination.

     18.     Indemnification  of Committee.  In addition to such other rights of
indemnification  as  they  may have as Directors or as members of the Committee,
the  members  of  the  Committee shall be indemnified by the Company against all
reasonable expenses, including attorneys' fees, actually and reasonably incurred
in  connection  with  the  defense  of  any  action,  suit  or proceeding, or in
connection  with any appeal therein, to which they or any of them may be a party
by reason of any action taken or failure to act under or in connection with this
Plan  or  any  Award  granted  or  awarded  hereunder,  and  against all amounts
reasonably paid by them in settlement thereof or paid by them in satisfaction of
a judgment in any such action, suit or proceeding, if such members acted in good
faith and in a manner which they believed to be in, and not opposed to, the best
interests  of  the  Company.

     19.     General  Provisions.

          19.1.     The  establishment  of  this  Plan shall not confer upon any
Director, Employee or Employee Director any legal or equitable right against the
Company,  any  Subsidiary or the Committee, except as expressly provided in this
Plan.

          19.2.     This  Plan  does  not constitute inducement or consideration
for  the  employment  of any Employee or the service of any Director or Employee
Director,  nor  is  it  a contract between the Company or any Subsidiary and any
Director,  Employee  or Employee Director.  Participation in this Plan shall not
give  a  Director, Employee or Employee Director any right to be retained in the
service  of  the  Company  or  any  Subsidiary.

          19.3.     Neither  the adoption of this Plan nor its submission to the
Company's stockholders shall be taken to impose any limitations on the powers of
the  Company  or  its Subsidiaries to issue, grant, or assume options, warrants,
rights,  or restricted stock, or other awards otherwise than under this Plan, or
to  adopt  other  stock option, restricted stock or other plans or to impose any
requirement  of  stockholder  approval  upon  the  same.

                                        ix


          19.4.     The interests of any Director, Employee or Employee Director
under  this  Plan are not subject to the claims of creditors and may not, in any
way,  be  assigned,  alienated or encumbered except as provided in an Agreement.

          19.5.     This  Plan  shall be governed, construed and administered in
accordance  with  the  laws  of  the  State  of  Delaware.

          19.6.     The  Committee  may  require  each  person  acquiring Shares
pursuant  to Awards granted hereunder to represent to and agree with the Company
in  writing  that  such  person  is  acquiring  the  Shares  without  a  view to
distribution  thereof.  The  certificates for such Shares may include any legend
which  the  Committee deems appropriate to reflect any restrictions on transfer.
All  certificates  for  Shares  issued pursuant to this Plan shall be subject to
such  stock  transfer  orders  and  other restrictions as the Committee may deem
advisable  under the rules, regulations and other requirements of the Securities
and  Exchange Commission, any stock exchange upon which the Common Stock is then
listed  or  interdealer  quotation  system  upon  which the Common Stock is then
quoted,  and any applicable federal or state securities laws.  The Committee may
place a legend or legends on any such certificates to make appropriate reference
to  such  restrictions.

          19.7.     The  Company  shall not be required to issue any certificate
or  certificates  for  Shares with respect to Awards granted under this Plan, or
record  any  person  as a holder of record of such Shares, without obtaining, to
the  complete  satisfaction  of  the  Committee,  the approval of all regulatory
bodies  deemed  necessary by the Committee, and without complying to the Board's
or  Committee's  complete  satisfaction,  with  all rules and regulations, under
federal,  state  or  local  law  deemed  applicable  by  the  Committee.

                                       x


                           TALK AMERICA HOLDINGS, INC.
                           12020 Sunrise Valley Drive
                             Reston, Virginia 20190

           THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED ON BEHALF OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS
             FOR THE ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS ON JUNE 18, 2003

The  undersigned holder of shares of Common Stock of Talk America Holdings, Inc.
hereby  appoints  Gabriel  Battista  and Aloysius T. Lawn, IV, and each of them,
with  full  power  of  substitution,  as proxies to vote all shares owned by the
undersigned  at  the Annual Meeting of Stockholders to be held on June 18, 2003,
at  10:00 a.m., Eastern time, at The Sheraton Reston Hotel, 11810 Sunrise Valley
Drive,  Reston,  Virginia 20191, and any adjournment or postponement thereof.  A
majority of said proxies, or any substitute or substitutes, who shall be present
and  act at the meeting (or if only one shall be present and act, then that one)
shall  have  all  the  powers  of  said  proxies  hereunder.

Please  mark, date and sign the proxy and return it promptly in the accompanying
business  reply  envelope,  which  requires  no  postage if mailed in the United
States.  If  you  plan  to  attend  the meeting, please so indicate in the space
provided  on  the  reverse  side.

The  shares  represented by this Proxy, if signed and returned, will be voted as
specified on the reverse side.  IF NO SPECIFICATION IS MADE, YOUR SHARES WILL BE
VOTED  FOR  APPROVAL  OF THE ELECTION OF THE DIRECTOR NOMINEES, ARTHUR MARKS AND
EDWARD  B.  MEYERCORD,  III, FOR RATIFICATION AND APPROVAL OF THE APPOINTMENT OF
PRICEWATERHOUSECOOPERS  LLP  AS THE INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS FOR
THE COMPANY FOR 2003 (THE "AUDIT PROPOSAL"), AND FOR APPROVAL OF THE ADOPTION OF
THE  2003  LONG  TERM  INCENTIVE  PLAN.

      IMPORTANT: PLEASE MARK, SIGN AND DATE THIS PROXY ON THE REVERSE SIDE.

THE  BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  RECOMMENDS A VOTE FOR APPROVAL OF THE ELECTION OF TWO
DIRECTORS,  FOR APPROVAL OF THE AUDIT PROPOSAL AND FOR APPROVAL OF THE 2003 LONG
TERM  INCENTIVE  PLAN.

(SEE  REVERSE  SIDE)



ITEM 1  Election of Directors

Arthur Marks     / / FOR the nominee  / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for nominee
Edward B.
  Meyercord, III / / FOR the nominee  / / WITHHOLD AUTHORITY to vote for nominee

ITEM 2  To approve the Audit Proposal   / /  FOR   / /  AGAINST   / /  ABSTAIN

ITEM 3  To approve the 2003 Long
  Term Incentive Plan                   / /  FOR   / /  AGAINST   / /  ABSTAIN

         MARK HERE IF YOU PLAN TO ATTEND THE MEETING   / /

                                   In  their  discretion,  the  proxies  are
                                   authorized  to  vote upon such other business
                                   as  may  properly  come before the meeting or
                                   any  postponement  or  adjournment  thereof.

                                   THIS  PROXY  IS  SOLICITED  ON  BEHALF OF THE
                                   BOARD  OF  DIRECTORS  AND  WILL  BE  VOTED IN
                                   ACCORDANCE  WITH THE SPECIFICATIONS APPEARING
                                   ON  THIS  SIDE.  IF A CHOICE IS NOT INDICATED
                                   WITH  RESPECT  TO  ITEM  1, ITEM 2, OR ITEM 3
                                   THIS PROXY WILL BE VOTED "FOR" SUCH ITEM. THE
                                   PROXIES  WILL  USE  THEIR  DISCRETION  WITH
                                   RESPECT  TO ANY OTHER MATTER PROPERLY BROUGHT
                                   BEFORE  THE MEETING OR ANY POSTPONEMENT. THIS
                                   PROXY  IS  REVOCABLE AT ANY TIME BEFORE IT IS
                                   EXERCISED.

                                   Receipt  herewith  of the Company's Notice of
                                   Annual  Meeting of Stockholders to be held on
                                   June 18, 2003 and the related proxy statement
                                   dated  May  6, 2003 and Annual Report on Form
                                   10-K  for  the fiscal year ended December 31,
                                   2002,  are  hereby  acknowledged.

                                         PLEASE SIGN, DATE AND MAIL TODAY

                                   Signature(s) of Stockholder(s)
                                                                 ---------------
                                                              Date       ,  2003
                                                                  -------

                                   Joint  owners  must  EACH  sign.  Please sign
                                   EXACTLY  as  your  name(s)  appear(s) on this
                                   card.  When  signing  as  attorney, executor,
                                   administrator, trustee, guardian, partner, or
                                   corporate  officers,  please give FULL title.