Current:Home > InvestRekubit Exchange:White House renews calls on Congress to extend internet subsidy program -FundPrime
Rekubit Exchange:White House renews calls on Congress to extend internet subsidy program
Johnathan Walker View
Date:2025-04-07 09:51:03
The Rekubit ExchangeWhite House is pressing Congress to extend a subsidy program that helps one in six U.S. families afford internet and represents a key element of President Joe Biden’s promise to deliver reliable broadband service to every American household.
“For President Biden, internet is like water,” said Tom Perez, senior adviser and assistant to the president, on a call Monday with reporters. “It’s an essential public necessity that should be affordable and accessible to everyone.”
The Affordable Connectivity Program offers qualifying families discounts on their internet bills — $30 a month for most families and up to $75 a month for families on tribal lands. The one-time infusion of $14.2 billion for the program through the bipartisan infrastructure law is projected to run out of money at the end of April.
“Just as we wouldn’t turn off the water pipes in a moment like this, we should never turn off the high-speed internet that is the pipeline to opportunity and access to health care for so many people across this country,” Perez said.
The program has a wide swath of support from public interest groups, local- and state-level broadband officials, and big and small telecommunications providers.
“We were very aggressive in trying to assist our members with access to the program,” said Gary Johnson, CEO of Paul Bunyan Communications, a Minnesota-based internet provider. “Frankly, it was they have internet or not. It’s almost not a subsidy — it is enabling them to have internet at all.”
Paul Bunyan Communications, a member-owned broadband cooperative that serves households in north central Minnesota, is one of 1,700 participating internet service providers that began sending out notices last month indicating the program could expire without action from Congress.
“It seems to be a bipartisan issue — internet access and the importance of it,” Johnson said.
Indeed, the program serves nearly an equal number of households in Republican and Democratic congressional districts, according to an AP analysis.
Biden has likened his promise of affordable internet for all American households to the New Deal-era effort to provide electricity to much of rural America. Congress approved $65 billion for several broadband-related investments, including the ACP, in 2021 as part of a bipartisan infrastructure law. He traveled to North Carolina last month to tout its potential benefits, especially in wide swaths of the country that currently lack access to reliable, affordable internet service.
Beyond the immediate impact to enrolled families, the expiration of the ACP could have a ripple effect on the impact of other federal broadband investments and could erode trust between consumers and their internet providers.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers recently proposed a bill to sustain the ACP through the end of 2024 with an additional $7 billion in funding — a billion more than Biden asked Congress to appropriate for the program at the end of last year. However, no votes have been scheduled to move the bill forward, and it’s unclear if the program will be prioritized in a divided Congress.
___
Harjai reported from Los Angeles and is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
veryGood! (52)
Related
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- As war grows, those who want peace for Israelis and Palestinians face harrowing test
- Trump sues ex-British spy over dossier containing ‘shocking and scandalous claims’
- Israel warns northern Gaza residents to leave, tells U.N. 1.1 million residents should evacuate within 24 hours
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Massachusetts governor warns state’s shelter system is nearing capacity with recent migrant families
- Massive NYC landfill-to-park project hits a milestone; first section opens to the public
- 6 killed in Russian attacks on Ukraine as Kyiv continues drone counterstrikes
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Florida Judge Jeffrey Ashton accused of child abuse, Gov. DeSantis exec. order reveals
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Even with economic worries, Vivid Seats CEO says customers still pay to see sports and hair bands
- What Google’s antitrust trial means for your search habits
- Italy approves 24 billion-euro budget that aims to boost household spending and births
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Answers About Old Gas Sites Repurposed as Injection Wells for Fracking’s Toxic Wastewater May Never Be Fully Unearthed
- Millie Bobby Brown and Jake Bongiovi's Romance Is a Love Song
- Several earthquakes shake far north coast region of California but no harm reported
Recommendation
Pressure on a veteran and senator shows what’s next for those who oppose Trump
6-year-old boy is buried, mother treated after attack that police call an anti-Muslim hate crime
Trump has narrow gag order imposed on him by federal judge overseeing 2020 election subversion case
Full transcript of Face the Nation, Oct. 15, 2023
Trump issues order to ban transgender troops from serving openly in the military
Even with economic worries, Vivid Seats CEO says customers still pay to see sports and hair bands
Few Republicans have confidence in elections. It’s a long road for one group trying to change that
Italian court confirms extradition of a priest wanted for murder, torture in Argentina dictatorship