One program distributes laptops in rural Iowa. Another helped people get back online after Hurricane Helene washed away computers and phones in western North Carolina. Programs in Oregon and rural Alabama teach older people, including some who have never touched a computer, how to navigate in an increasingly digital world.
It all came crashing down this month when President Donald Trump - on his own digital platform, Truth Social - announced his intention to end the Digital Equity Act , a federal grant program meant to help bridge the digital divide. He branded it as "RACIST and ILLEGAL" and said it amounts to "woke handouts based on race." He said it was an "ILLEGAL 2.5 BILLION DOLLAR giveaway," though the program was actually funded with 2.75 billion.
The name seemed innocuous enough when the program was approved by Congress in 2021 as part of a 65 billion investment meant to bring internet access to every home and business in the United States. The broadband program itself was a key component of the 1 trillion infrastructure law pushed through by the administration of Democratic President Joe Biden.
The Digital Equity Act was intended to fill gaps and cover unmet needs that surfaced during the massive broadband rollout. It gave states and tribes flexibility to deliver high-speed internet access to families that could not afford it, computers to kids who did not have them, telehealth access to older adults in rural areas, and training and job skills to veterans.
Whether Trump has the legal authority to end the program remains unknown. But for now the Republican administration can simply stop spending the money.