Miami Herald

Millions could lose internet access if this federal program expires

- BY RUBEN VIVES AND ANDREA CASTILLO Los Angeles Times

Four years ago, Claudia Aleman and her family had only one way to get online — through their cellphones. Without internet service on a computer, her youngest daughter couldn’t get homework assignment­s in on time, her parents couldn’t keep up with online doctor visits and the English classes that she wanted to sign up for were out of reach.

Then came a gamechange­r: The federal government started offering a subsidy that covered $30 of the family’s $80 monthly internet bill.

But while opening mail at her home in South

Gate, California, two months ago, Aleman came across a letter from the Federal Communicat­ions Commission announcing that the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program that they had come to rely on would end in May unless Congress approved more funding.

“My husband is the only one who works, and everything is so expensive right now,” Aleman said. “Sometimes, we don’t have $30 to spare.”

“The program made a significan­t difference in our lives,” she added. “Without it, life is going to be difficult, and I’m sure I’m not the only one who feels this way.”

The program, which was created after the COVID-19 pandemic forced many Americans to turn to the internet to connect with work and school, has 23 million enrollees nationwide.

Since 2021, it has provided a $30 monthly subsidy for low-income households and $75 for those on tribal lands. But the $14.2 billion funded through the Infrastruc­ture Investment and Jobs Act has run out.

April was the last month of full program benefits, but households could receive a partial discount in May.

In a letter to Congress this month, FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworce­l warned that not funding the program would have widespread impact, especially for senior citizens, veterans, schoolchil­dren and residents of rural and tribal communitie­s.

“Households across the country are now facing hard choices about what expenses they have to cut, including food and gas, to maintain their broadband access, with some households doubtful they can afford to keep their broadband service at all,” she wrote.

Internet-service providers have their own programs for low-income households.

But finding a cheaper alternativ­e can be difficult. Rural households sometimes have just one provider, and families who can’t afford it have little recourse.

Rep. Salud Carbajal, D-California, is among

228 bipartisan co-sponsors of the Affordable Connectivi­ty Program Extension Act of 2024, which would provide an additional $7 billion to keep the program afloat for another year.

“You’ve got to have your head in the sand to not understand the value of what this is doing to enhance our economy, enhance the skills and opportunit­ies for so many Americans,” Carbajal said. Allowing the program to expire, he said, “will undo the progress we’ve made in closing the digital divide. It would take us back to the dark ages.”

But the bill hasn’t been brought for a standalone floor vote in the GOP-led House amid criticism from some Republican­s who say the program subsidizes households that already had internet service. They also pointed to findings from the FCC’s internal watchdog last year that providers failed to comply with the program’s rules and improperly claimed funds.

In a statement last year, Sens. John Thune, RSouth Dakota, and Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said the program was “subject to massive waste, fraud, and abuse of taxpayer dollars.”

In an FCC survey of 5,300 households conducted in December, more than two-thirds of respondent­s said they had inconsiste­nt or no internet before joining the federal program, the majority citing affordabil­ity. About one-third of respondent­s said they had both mobile and home internet service.

In October, the Biden administra­tion sent Congress a supplement­al request for $6 billion to keep the program running, but it didn’t pass.

Letting the program lapse, even if it could be restarted later, would require additional spending on outreach and reenrollme­nt, Carbajal said. He also worries that people who benefit from it will feel a sense of whiplash and lose trust in the federal government.

Still, Carbajal said he’s optimistic something will take hold before May 1. Similar circumstan­ces have played out favorably at the last minute, he said.

Since learning that the program would end, Aleman said she has been applying for jobs to help her husband cover bills. In May, her husband will pay the internet bill, possibly with credit cards.

Beyond that, she said, “there’s always the library.”

 ?? GENARO MOLINA Los Angeles Times/TNS ?? Luis Coronado Jr., 12, uses his home computer to do homework in Huntington Park, California, on April 19.
GENARO MOLINA Los Angeles Times/TNS Luis Coronado Jr., 12, uses his home computer to do homework in Huntington Park, California, on April 19.

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