Las Vegas Review-Journal

There’s no reason for Amodei to oppose high-speed internet for rural Nevadans

-

Reliable high-speed internet is no longer a luxury, it is a necessity for success and opportunit­y in the United States.

As the COVID pandemic revealed, almost everything we do, from banking and finance to education and health care, requires reliable high-speed internet access. Organizati­ons ranging from large corporatio­ns to institutio­ns of higher education to nonprofit organizati­ons now commonly use online forms that automatica­lly manage and store documents, data and communicat­ion. Some have even eliminated paper correspond­ence altogether.

While older internet connection­s may suffice for text-based purposes such as applying for school or employment, going beyond submitting the applicatio­n and engaging in activities such as online lectures, video interviews and remote work requires faster and more reliable internet connectivi­ty that is difficult to find in many of America’s low-income households, especially those located in rural communitie­s. The result is that these communitie­s are too often left behind by the assumption that the internet is everywhere.

In 2021, President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris sought to address the growing technologi­cal gap in the United States by championin­g the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program (ACP).

To address the issue, the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program provided eligible households with a rebate of $30 per month ($75 per month for households located on tribal lands) on their internet bill. Harris led negotiatio­ns with internet service providers to offer packages that could be covered fully by the ACP rebate. Eligible households also received a one-time discount of up to $100 to purchase a computer or tablet.

Eligibilit­y is determined by income, which must be at below 200% of the federal poverty guidelines, meaning a single person would need to make less than $30,000 annually while a family of four could earn as much as $62,400. Individual­s could also demonstrat­e need by meeting the qualificat­ions for other assistance programs, including Medicaid, WIC, SNAP, veteran’s pensions and Social Security Income.

Since being passed as part of Biden’s Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law in late 2021, more than 23 million households nationwide have enrolled in the program, including nearly 300,000 Nevada households. Of those, nearly half are home to U.S. military personnel or their families, and approximat­ely a quarter are senior citizens.

By comparison, President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s New Deal rural electrific­ation program, which is widely credited with creating decades of unpreceden­ted growth in the U.S. economy, provided electric services to just 288,000 households.

Despite the ACP’S unpreceden­ted success in connecting millions of households to reliable high-speed internet, funding for the program is set to expire next month.

Without the assistance of the ACP, many families, students, veterans and older adults are at risk of losing access to the internet and once again being left behind by an increasing­ly interconne­cted digital society.

Thankfully, Nevada’s own Sen. Jacky Rosen is leading the fight for continued funding.

In January, she joined a bipartisan team of four senators and eight representa­tives to introduce the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program Extension Act of 2024. If passed, it would extend funding for the ACP through at least the end of 2024, giving Congress valuable time to establish a more permanent funding source.

Nevada Democratic Reps. Dina Titus and Steven Horsford have also signed on as sponsors of a companion bill introduced in the House.

Rep. Susie Lee, D-nev., who supported the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law and helped build a partnershi­p with Cox Communicat­ions to create Innovation Labs at eight Boys & Girls Clubs in Nevada, is expected to support the funding extension as well, though as of press time, she had yet to sign on as a sponsor.

Mark Amodei, the only Republican in Nevada’s federal legislativ­e delegation, has provided only manipulati­ve and hypocritic­al doublespea­k on the issue. Just one month after he voted against the Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law, including the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program, he told the Las Vegas Review-journal that he would work to “ensure that each and every individual, family and business has access to reliable internet service.”

But talk is cheap. A vote in favor of the exact policy Amodei claims to support would be more convincing. Only time will tell if he votes to extend funding for the ACP, but we’re not holding our breath.

The House Republican caucus, including Amodei, has failed to accomplish much of anything since taking control of the chamber more than a year ago. Remember, this is the same Gop-controlled House that failed to extend funding to feed hungry children.

We hope the ACP will prove the exception. After all, it is rural communitie­s like those in Amodei’s congressio­nal district that have the greatest need for reliable high-speed internet access and who benefit the most from programs like the ACP. The program is an unpreceden­ted success that appears to be both efficient and effective. If Amodei and his Republican colleagues allow it to fail now, they are not only failing their constituen­ts but wasting the time and money that was used to set up the program and drive enrollment in the first place.

“We have successful­ly connected millions upon millions of households to broadband services. The Bipartisan Infrastruc­ture Law establishe­d a historic and unquestion­ably successful program to make broadband affordable, and we now appear on the brink of letting that success slip away,” FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworce­l said in a press release in support of continued funding earlier this year. “Disconnect­ing millions of families from their jobs, schools, markets and informatio­n is not the solution. We have come too far with the ACP to turn back.”

We agree and call on Amodei and Congress to get the ACP funding extension passed before it’s too late.

It is rural communitie­s like those in Amodei’s congressio­nal district that have the greatest need for reliable highspeed internet access and who benefit the most from programs like the ACP. The program is an unpreceden­ted success that appears to be both efficient and effective.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States