Millions of Low-Income Families Set to Lose Internet Subsidies

Politics|Millions of Low-Income Families Set to Lose Internet Subsidies https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/23/us/politics/internet-subsidies-affordable-connecticity-program.html You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load. The Affordable Connectivity Program, a $14.2 billion federal effort to make internet service more affordable, is expected to run out […]

Millions of Low-Income Families Set to Lose Internet Subsidies

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Politics|Millions of Low-Income Families Set to Lose Internet Subsidies

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/23/us/politics/internet-subsidies-affordable-connecticity-program.html

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

The Affordable Connectivity Program, a $14.2 billion federal effort to make internet service more affordable, is expected to run out of funding this spring.

A person adjusting a device on top of a long rod on the edge of a flat roof, with other buildings in the city behind him.
A volunteer installing Wi-Fi at a building in Brooklyn. More than 23 million households receive effectively free or reduced-price internet service through a federal program that may be about to end.Credit…José A. Alvarado Jr. for The New York Times

Madeleine Ngo

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.

Ms. 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 Ms. Jackson and millions of other households to afford to stay connected to the internet.

“I really can’t do without it,” said Ms. 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.


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