East Bay Times

Business: Low-income households can now apply for internet discount.

Program provides $50 subsidy to those who qualify

- By Cecilia Kang

Millions of low-income Americans became eligible Wednesday for an emergency discount on highspeed internet service and devices to get online, an effort aimed at providing relief to families that have struggled during the pandemic as school, work and health care have moved online.

The Federal Communicat­ions Commission’s subsidy program, the Emergency Broadband Benefit, can be used for $50 monthly discounts for individual­s on SNAP or Medicaid, recipients of Pell grants, and families with children on free and reduced-price lunch plans. Low-income households on tribal lands can apply for $75 in monthly broadband subsidies. The program also allows for a one-time $100 subsidy for a laptop or tablet.

The FCC said 825 broadband providers have agreed to offer the discounts.

The program, which Congress approved $3.2 billion for late last year, is one of several efforts to bring broadband internet to all

U.S. homes. The FCC earlier this week also approved a $7.2 billion program to give students high-speed internet access through schools and libraries. President Joe Biden has promised to make broadband affordable and available for all and has proposed a $100 billion effort to connect every rural and lowincome home to high-speed internet service.

The Emergency Broadband Benefit program comes late in the pandemic, with schools and workplaces beginning to open again. The delay was largely because of wrangling over details of the subsidies in Congress and at the FCC during the Trump administra­tion. And it is unclear what will happen once the one-time emergency benefit fund runs out.

The program will end either when the $3.2 billion fund is depleted or six months after the Department of Health and Human Services declares an end to the pandemic.

“High-speed internet service is vital for families to take advantage of today’s health, education and workplace opportunit­ies,” Jessica Rosenworce­l, the acting chair of the FCC, said in a statement. “And the discount for laptops and desktop computers will continue to have positive impact even after this temporary discount program wraps up.”

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 ?? TAMIR KALIFA — THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Rylee Hinds does coursework while a crew installs broadband internet in her family’s home in Mantachie, Mississipp­i. The FCC says 825 broadband providers have agreed to offer discounts to low-income Americans.
TAMIR KALIFA — THE NEW YORK TIMES Rylee Hinds does coursework while a crew installs broadband internet in her family’s home in Mantachie, Mississipp­i. The FCC says 825 broadband providers have agreed to offer discounts to low-income Americans.

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