Science

At least 23 million Americans could lose internet access as Biden's $30 a month subsidy program is running out of funds – and families rely on the extra cash for health care bills


Over 23 million low-income households across America are set to be without internet due to federal subsidies coming to an end.

Biden established the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP) in 2021, which gave low-income families $30 a month to put toward their internet bill and $75 monthly to both indigenous tribes and those living where internet access is more expensive.

Many of these Americans have long relied on the program, which has allowed them to pay for health care bills — including one Illinois mother, who spoke with DailyMail.com and whose daughter struggles with cerebral palsy.

‘I will do anything I have to do to keep the internet going,’ that mother, Cindy Westman of Eureka, told DailyMail.com, ‘because everything in life now is starting to move to the tech side of things, where it’s dependent on internet access.’

The ACP launched with $14.2 billion on New Year’s Eve of 2021, less than three years ago, and will run out of funding either this month or sometime in May, according to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) and the Biden White House.

Westman said that since she enrolled in ACP she truly depends on the subsidy for her health care — adding she would sell ‘anything that I own’ to stay connected.

Over 23 million low-income households across America are set to be without internet, due to federal subsidies coming to an end. Above a map breaking down which states will be most impacted, if Congress does not past the bipartisan bill now sitting idle on Capitol Hill

Over 23 million low-income households across America are set to be without internet, due to federal subsidies coming to an end. Above a map breaking down which states will be most impacted, if Congress does not past the bipartisan bill now sitting idle on Capitol Hill

The Biden White House's Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), created by an act of Congress in 2021, will run out of funding either this month or in May

One ACP enrollee, Cindy Westman of Eureka, Illinois , (above) who has been caring for her 12-year-old daughter who has cerebral palsy and autism, said 'It's essential for me to keep the internet going'

The Biden White House’s Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), created by an act of Congress in 2021, will run out of funding either this month or sometime in May. One ACP enrollee, Cindy Westman, (right) who has been caring for her 12-year-old daughter with cerebral palsy and autism, said ‘It’s essential for me to keep the internet going’

Westman has been living with her own genetic and immune system disorders while also caring for her 12-year-old daughter who has cerebral palsy and autism, she explained.

‘When you have low income and you are living on disability and your daughter’s disabled,’ Westman told KFF Health News, ‘every dollar counts.’

Westman told DailyMail.com that she’s continuing to speak on the need to renew funding of ACP because she knows of many other Americans who are worse off.

‘I know a lot of people out there are working with less money per month than I am,’ she said Friday in a telephone interview.

Westman explained that she uses the extra $30 to buy a week’s worth of gas for travelling to her daughter’s medical appointments 30 minutes away in Peoria, as well as her own physical therapy appointments and other errands.

The internet connection itself has also allowed her to get easy access to medical records online, she noted, and to switch to telehealth appointments when the timing of that hour-long drive to Peoria doesn’t work with her schedule.

Since this January, a bipartisan bill that would reload the program by $7 billion has languished for months on Capitol Hill without a floor vote.

The legislation, which has 216 co-sponsors in the House, including 21 Republicans, and three in the Senate, was spearheaded by Senator Peter Welch, a Vermont Democrat, and Senator J.D. Vance, an Ohio Republican.

Outside Selma, Alabama, one program enrollee, Leon Hudson, had previously struggled to persuade internet service providers to lay broadband in his community. Above, Dave Wallace, owner of Silica Broadband, digs a route to pass fiber cables under Louisville, Kentucky, in 2021

Outside Selma, Alabama, one program enrollee, Leon Hudson, had previously struggled to persuade internet service providers to lay broadband in his community. Above, Dave Wallace, owner of Silica Broadband, digs a route to pass fiber cables under Louisville, Kentucky, in 2021

Prior to the program, Leon Hudson in Alabama said he had no choice but to try a $200-per-month satellite internet service, HughesNet, that turned out to be slow, unreliable, and expensive. Above US Census data on counties in the continental US without broadband

Prior to the program, Leon Hudson in Alabama said he had no choice but to try a $200-per-month satellite internet service, HughesNet, that turned out to be slow, unreliable, and expensive. Above US Census data on counties in the continental US without broadband

Program enrollee Cindy Westman of Eureka, Illinois said the internet subsidy has allowed her to easily access medical records online and switch to telehealth appointments when the her ordinary hour-long drive to appointments won't work. Above, Silica Broadband's Dave Wallace

Program enrollee Cindy Westman of Eureka, Illinois said the internet subsidy has allowed her to easily access medical records online and switch to telehealth appointments when the her ordinary hour-long drive to appointments won’t work. Above, Silica Broadband’s Dave Wallace

‘There are really no good options in a world in which Congress leaves us without any funding,’ one senior Biden administration official told CNN

‘So we want to work as hard as possible to make sure we avoid that possibility.’ 

This Tuesday, FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel sent a letter to Congress urging lawmakers to consider the social impact of letting the ACP sunset.

‘It is worth noting that they will have special impact on certain vulnerable populations, including senior citizens,’ Rosenworcel wrote. ‘We know that nearly half of ACP households are led by someone over the age of 50.’

In the rural outskirts of Selma, Alabama, for example, 50-year-old ACP enrollee Leon Hudson had previously struggled to even get a petition signed with high enough numbers to persuade internet service providers to lay broadband in his community.  

Tuesday, FCC chair Jessica Rosenworcel urged Congress to consider the social impact of letting ACP sunset: 'They will have special impact on certain vulnerable populations, including senior citizens [...] Nearly half of ACP households are led by someone over the age of 50'

Tuesday, FCC chair Jessica Rosenworcel urged Congress to consider the social impact of letting ACP sunset: ‘They will have special impact on certain vulnerable populations, including senior citizens […] Nearly half of ACP households are led by someone over the age of 50’

Above, 2023 data on which US states have the fastest and slowest internet

Above, 2023 data on which US states have the fastest and slowest internet 

Prior to the program, he had no choice but to try a $200-per-month satellite internet service, HughesNet, that turned out to be slow, unreliable, and expensive, he said.

Hudson has come to depend on the ACP which got him an Xfinity mobile internet deal that has proved crucial in getting his online business off the ground. 

With the program likely ending, as he explained his situation to Capital B news, ‘I have no choice but to figure it out.’

Blair Levin, an analyst at the market research firm New Street Research, told CNN that the $7 billion re-up bill, called the Affordable Connectivity Program Extension Act, would likely pass quickly if Republican House Majority Leader Mike Johnson would allow Congress to put it to vote.

‘So far, he has not said anything about it,’ Levin said, ‘but it appears he will not allow the House to vote on the legislation.’ 

‘He has not, to my knowledge, said anything substantive about the legislation or the program,’ Levin noted.

Westman, the mother and ACP enrollee in Illinois, attributed this political gamesmanship to partisan gridlock holding back this badly needed new funding for the program.

‘It’s an election year,’ Westman told DailyMail.com via phone.  

‘We are spending money on every last thing that we don’t need to be spending on right now,’ she continued, ‘when there should be funding for more important things like the American people and helping them survive through the economic struggles that are currently all over the United States.’

The 23 million households that benefit from the program are comprised of approximately 59 million low-income US citizens and taxpayers, including veterans, students, and the elderly.

In addition to the monthly internet service discount, the ACP offers a one-time subsidy of $100 for eligible low-income households in need of a laptop, desktop computer or tablet. 

In 2021, the program had been instituted to replace the Emergency Broadband Benefit, which had previously given households a $50 discount – $20 more than eligible ACP applicants have received each month.

The Emergency Broadband Benefit was also available to households with income at or below 135 percent of the federal poverty guidelines or those who participate in certain assistance programs, such as SNAP, Medicaid, or Lifeline.



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