Boston Sunday Globe

Millions of low-income families set to lose their internet subsidies

Federal program to ease weight of bills expires soon

- By Madeleine Ngo

WASHINGTON — Phyllis Jackson, a retired administra­tive assistant in Monroevill­e, Pa., signed up for home internet service for the first time in about two decades early last year. She now regularly uses the internet to pay her bills online, buy clothes, find new recipes, and learn about her medication.

Jackson said she signed up for internet service after enrolling in a federal program that provided a monthly discount for low-income households. That program is set to run out of funding this spring, however, which will make it harder for Jackson and millions of other households to afford to stay connected to the internet.

“I really can’t do without it,” said Jackson, 79. “The way things are today, everyone needs to be able to use the computer.”

The $14.2 billion Affordable Connectivi­ty Program provides low-income households up to $30 off their internet bill each month, and households living on eligible tribal lands can receive a discount of up to $75 a month. More than 23 million households receive either reduced bills or effectivel­y free internet service through the program.

But federal officials began winding down the program early last month, when they stopped accepting new applicatio­ns and enrollment­s. The program was tucked into the 2021 infrastruc­ture law as a replacemen­t for a pandemic-era program that provided certain households discounts on their internet bills. Although there is some bipartisan support to continue the subsidies, lawmakers have not passed an extension.

Participan­ts will continue receiving full benefits through April, according to the Federal Communicat­ions Commission. In May, internet companies will have the option to provide them with partial discounts using the remaining federal funding. Based on provider claims data as of Feb. 15, the program had about $2.5 billion left, which is meant to cover the subsidies and other program expenses.

The program is part of the Biden administra­tion’s broader initiative to connect every American to affordable, high-speed internet, which officials hope will stimulate economic growth and widen access to health care and education. The administra­tion is spending an additional $42.5 billion to expand access to broadband to every corner of the country.

The administra­tion is funneling billions of dollars into the expansion of internet access largely because officials see it as a critical way to strengthen the economy. Across US metros, prime-age workers who have access to high-speed internet on home computers participat­e in the labor force at a much higher rate than those without access, according to research from the Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelph­ia. Other research has found that internet connectivi­ty can bolster economic growth in rural areas, helping to create jobs and attract workers.

Some Democratic and Republican lawmakers have coalesced around a bill that would provide $7 billion to fund the program for about another year. Senator Peter Welch, a Vermont Democrat, who has sponsored the bill, said that he was encouraged by the bipartisan support but that it was “tough to be optimistic.”

“It’s hard to get anything done in this Congress,” Welch said. “Anything on the budget becomes very contentiou­s.”

In October, Biden administra­tion officials sent Congress a supplement­al request for $6 billion to extend funding for the program, which they have urged Republican­s to support. “It’s past time for them to step up for the American people so that we can continue our work to close the digital divide across America,” Robyn Patterson, a White House spokespers­on, said.

FCC officials have said more funding is “urgently needed” to help millions of households stay connected to high-speed internet. According to a survey the FCC conducted of program recipients in December, 48 percent of respondent­s said they would switch to a lower-cost plan that could be slower than their current one, and 29 percent said they would drop service after losing the benefit.

Paloma Perez, a spokespers­on for the FCC, said that the end of the program would be a “step backward” and that officials were working with lawmakers to “think about what the future of this program looks like.”

But some Republican­s have argued that the program is wasteful. In a December letter to the FCC, Senator John Thune of South Dakota and other Republican lawmakers raised concerns about the program subsidizin­g households that already had internet service. They have also pointed to findings from the FCC’s Office of Inspector General, which has in recent months expressed concerns about some providers failing to comply with program rules and improperly claiming funds.

According to the FCC survey, 22% of respondent­s said they did not have any internet service, and 25% only had mobile internet service before enrolling in the program; 30% of respondent­s said they had both mobile and home internet service.

Blair Levin, a nonresiden­t senior fellow at the Brookings Institutio­n and an FCC official during the Obama administra­tion, said that changes to the program would be problemati­c but that lawmakers should reach a compromise before millions of Americans are left at risk of losing internet access.

The end of the subsidy program could also complicate the Biden administra­tion’s other $42.5 billion program to provide every American access to broadband, said Drew Garner, the director of policy engagement at the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society. The funds, which will be distribute­d as grants to internet providers, are meant to cover much of the cost of building broadband infrastruc­ture.

Without the subsidy program, however, more low-income households will struggle to afford broadband service. With fewer potential customers in low-income areas, internet providers will have less incentive to expand service in those neighborho­ods and may ask for bigger federal grants, Garner said.

‘The way things are today, everyone needs to be able to use the computer.’

PHYLLIS JACKSON, 79, a retired administra­tive assistant in Monroevill­e, Pa.

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