Washington, D.C. – Today, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), along with Commerce Committee Ranking Member Maria Cantwell (D-WA), and Senator Ben Ray Luján (D-NM), sent the following letter to Commerce Secretary Lutnick and President Trump demanding that the Commerce Department immediately release the $42 billion allocated for the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program.
Today, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY), along with Ranking Member of the Commerce Committee, Maria Cantwell (D-WA), and Ranking Member of the Senate Commerce Committee’s Subcommittee on Telecommunications and Media, Ben Ray Luján (D-NM), sent the following letter to Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and President Trump demanding the immediate release the $42 billion allocated for the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program as part of the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act. This program was designed to help our country on its path to creating universal access to high-speed internet – vital for remote work, education, job training and applications, telehealth, emergency services, and more. With the endless delays to get the crucial funding out the door and into American communities, 25 million people across our country risk going without access to the internet.
“States have spent years developing implementation plans under the BEAD program to reach every American with high-speed internet access. These plans reflect local needs, technical realities, and the bipartisan intent of Congress,” the Senators wrote. “States are ready to put shovels in the ground and have been waiting for months to get started connecting communities and building networks that will support the industries of tomorrow. Additional delays and onerous changes to the program at this stage threaten to further stall urgently needed deployment and leave communities behind.”
The Senators also noted that beyond everyday applications of high-speed internet, this money is also essential to ensuring that America is able to maintain its competitive edge over countries such as China. Al systems – including data centers, chip manufacturing facilities and more – require access to power and internet. Without proper broadband networks in place, communities will not be able to house these job-creating facilities. Our government must work to ensure that all areas in our country – especially rural ones – are able to contribute to America’s innovative edge and technological dominance. Without BEAD funding getting out the door, these rural communities risk falling either further behind.
States have spent months developing plans to break ground and build high-speed, scalable, and reliable networks everywhere. The Trump administration should not throttle this process or delay it just to give more money to the world’s richest man. The Senators urge the immediate and swift release of all BEAD program funding.
BEAD Grant Allocations By State
State |
Amount |
Texas |
$3,312,616,455.45 |
California |
$1,864,136,508.93 |
Missouri |
$1,736,302,708.39 |
Michigan |
$1,559,362,479.29 |
North Carolina |
$1,532,999,481.15 |
Virginia |
$1,481,489,572.87 |
Alabama |
$1,401,221,901.77 |
Louisiana |
$1,355,554,552.94 |
Georgia |
$1,307,214,371.30 |
Washington |
$1,227,742,066.30 |
West Virginia |
$1,210,800,969.85 |
Mississippi |
$1,203,561,563.05 |
Florida |
$1,169,947,392.70 |
Pennsylvania |
$1,161,778,272.41 |
Kentucky |
$1,086,172,536.86 |
Wisconsin |
$1,055,823,573.71 |
Illinois |
$1,040,420,751.50 |
Arkansas |
$1,024,303,993.86 |
Alaska |
$1,017,139,672.42 |
Arizona |
$993,112,231.37 |
Indiana |
$868,109,929.79 |
Colorado |
$826,522,650.41 |
Tennessee |
$813,319,680.22 |
Oklahoma |
$797,435,691.25 |
Ohio |
$793,688,107.63 |
Oregon |
$688,914,932.17 |
New Mexico |
$675,372,311.86 |
New York |
$664,618,251.49 |
Minnesota |
$651,839,368.20 |
Montana |
$628,973,798.59 |
Idaho |
$583,256,249.88 |
South Carolina |
$551,535,983.05 |
Kansas |
$451,725,998.15 |
Nevada |
$416,666,229.74 |
Iowa |
$415,331,313.00 |
Nebraska |
$405,281,070.41 |
Wyoming |
$347,877,921.27 |
Puerto Rico |
$334,614,151.70 |
Utah |
$317,399,741.54 |
Maine |
$271,977,723.07 |
Maryland |
$267,738,400.71 |
New Jersey |
$263,689,548.65 |
Vermont |
$228,913,019.08 |
South Dakota |
$207,227,523.92 |
New Hampshire |
$196,560,278.97 |
Guam |
$156,831,733.59 |
Hawaii |
$149,484,493.57 |
Massachusetts |
$147,422,464.39 |
Connecticut |
$144,180,792.71 |
North Dakota |
$130,162,815.12 |
Rhode Island |
$108,718,820.75 |
Delaware |
$107,748,384.66 |
District of Columbia |
$100,694,786.93 |
Northern Mariana Islands |
$80,796,709.02 |
American Samoa |
$37,564,827.53 |
U.S. Virgin Islands |
$27,103,240.86 |
The letter can be seen here and below.
***
Dear Sec. Lutnick and President Trump,
Congress created the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) Program as part of the bipartisan Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act to finish the job of connecting everyone and building high-speed, scalable, and reliable networks everywhere. For six months, states have been waiting to break ground on scores of projects, held back only by the Commerce Department’s bureaucratic delays. If states are forced to redo or rework their plans, they will not only miss this year’s construction season but next year’s as well, delaying broadband deployment by years. That’s why we urge the Administration to move swiftly to approve state plans, and release the $42 billion allocated to the states by the BEAD Program.
Universal access to high-speed internet is essential for jobs, education, and telehealth—and also for the bandwidth-hungry innovation economy, from artificial intelligence and advanced robotics to smart manufacturing and semiconductor production. Further delay means 25 million Americans continue to wait for high-speed internet and the economic benefits it brings. It also means that we risk falling behind China, which is aggressively building out digital infrastructure to support its AI, advanced manufacturing, and semiconductor ambitions.
States have already developed plans to address these needs, and restarting or slowing down the process will only hold back progress. States must maintain the flexibility to choose the highest quality broadband options, rather than be forced by bureaucrats in Washington to funnel funds to Elon Musk’s Starlink, which lacks the scalability, reliability, and speed of fiber or other terrestrial broadband solutions.
High-speed, reliable, and scalable connectivity is essential for jobs, education, and telehealth. It’s also the backbone for the advanced industries of today and tomorrow. AI systems require massive volumes of data and low-latency networks to operate effectively. Data centers, smart warehouses, robotic assembly lines, and chip fabrication plants all depend on fast, stable, and scalable bandwidth. If we want these job-creating facilities built throughout the United States, including rural areas, we must ensure the infrastructure—including high-speed internet networks—is in place to support them. If we want AI developed and deployed in the United States, if we want to win the race for semiconductor dominance, if we want the next generation of manufacturing jobs to be created here, then we must act now—and we must build the high-speed, high-capacity networks those technologies demand.
States have spent years developing implementation plans under the BEAD program to reach every American with high-speed internet access. These plans reflect local needs, technical realities, and the bipartisan intent of Congress. States are ready to put shovels in the ground and have been waiting for months to get started connecting communities and building networks that will support the industries of tomorrow. Additional delays and onerous changes to the program at this stage threaten to further stall urgently needed deployment and leave communities behind.
We urge you to move forward with the submitted BEAD plans and deliver on the promise of the BEAD program without further delay. Every American and every community needs access to reliable, scalable, and high-speed internet if we are to remain the world’s innovation leader.
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