Tech

Biden’s “historic” $65 billion broadband plan approved by Congress

President Joe Biden speaking at a press conference.

Enlarge / President Joe Biden speaks about the passage of the infrastructure bill during a press conference at the White House on November 6, 2021. (credit: Getty Images | Samuel Corum)

President Biden’s $65 billion broadband plan was passed by the House of Representatives on Friday as part associated with the $1. 2 trillion Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act . While it’s not as big as Biden’s original broadband plan, the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society called it “the largest US investment in broadband deployment ever. ”

The biggest portion of the broadband spending is $42. 45 billion for a Broadband Equity, Access, plus Deployment program that would give subsidies to ISPs that build in unserved areas. Another $14. 2 billion goes to an Affordable Connectivity Fund that is essentially a longer-term version regarding the Emergency Broadband Benefit Program created for the pandemic. Under the new version, subsidies with regard to eligible households will be $30 a month instead of the original $50.

Another broadband provision gives $2. 75 billion for digital equity grants to states to “facilitate the particular adoption of broadband by covered populations in order to provide educational and employment opportunities to those populations. ” Grants can cover a variety of needs including training, broadband equipment, and “public access computing centers for protected populations through community anchor institutions. ” Covered populations include low-income households, racial and ethnic minorities, rural residents, veterans, people with disabilities, people with language barriers, and people who are 60 or older.

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