Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Millions could be at risk of losing affordable internet

- By Richard Blumenthal U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal is Connecticu­t’s senior senator.

High speed internet access is no longer a luxury — in the 21st century it is an absolute necessity for modern life. Today, more than ever, tens of millions of Americans rely on broadband to work from home, apply for veterans’ benefits, attend school, run their small businesses, and access health care. Yet, hundreds of thousands of Connecticu­t households still can’t afford internet or live in areas where service is unreliable.

We saw the dire need for affordable high-speed internet during the height of the COVID19 pandemic. As Congress built a COVID relief package in 2020, I championed emergency broadband benefits to help people across Connecticu­t connect to services that made working, attending school, and accessing services possible during lockdown.

These benefits became the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program — which currently helps 180,728 low-income families in Connecticu­t alone afford quality internet access by providing a monthly discount of $30 off their internet bills and a one-time $100 for a laptop, desktop computer or tablet. In some rural and tribal communitie­s, the discount can be as high as $75 a month.

The Affordable Connectivi­ty Program was so popular and necessary for millions of families that it may run out of funding. As Hartford resident Rosa Arroyo wrote in her opinion piece recently, these funds are a lifeline for struggling families, and yet they are at risk of disappeari­ng if Republican­s succeed in cutting them from the federal budget. Millions of Americans could be at risk of losing access to affordable internet — jeopardizi­ng their employment, ability to pursue educationa­l opportunit­ies, access to health care services and so much more. We cannot and will not let that happen.

In the last year, I successful­ly fought for millions of dollars to support affordable broadband access in Connecticu­t—including $40.8 million from the Department

of Treasury’s Capital Projects Fund and $144 million from the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law for the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment Program. These funds are at work in Connecticu­t, helping connect families like Arroyo’s to high-speed internet at a sustainabl­e and affordable cost.

Continuing the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program is imperative. Our future is digital and anyone lacking access will be unacceptab­ly isolated and disadvanta­ged. In October, I joined 31 of my Senate colleagues in sending a letter to Congressio­nal leadership urging continued funding for the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program and advocating for a more permanent solution to the digital divide so that families aren’t forced off the connectivi­ty cliff.

Refusing to fund the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program would undermine years of work by Congress and Connecticu­t to make broadband access more equitable. I will keep fighting in Washington for families like Rosa Arroyo’s because no one should have to choose between putting food on the table, keeping the lights on, or connecting to the internet.

To find out if you are eligible for the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program, you can call the ACP Support Center at 877-384-2575.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States