Funds running out: 23 million Americans may lose Affordable Connectivity Program internet aid
Approximately 1 million veterans rely on these benefits, Republican lawmaker Brian Fitzpatrick revealed. A group of lawmakers support a bipartisan bill to have the plan payments extended.
A bipartisan group of lawmakers is trying to prevent millions of Americans from losing access to the internet, as funds allocated for the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), a plan to help low-income families pay the cost of the internet, will run out at the end of May.
The more than 23 million beneficiaries of the subsidy receive between $30 and $75 per month to pay internet costs. Reps. Yvette Clarke (D-N.Y.) and Brian Fitzpatrick (R-Pa.) are leading the bipartisan push to get Congress to adopt the Affordable Connectivity Program Extension Act, which would maintain the payments through the end of this year.
One million veterans depend on the program
Fitzpatrick called on his party colleagues to join the project and declared that approximately 1 million veterans depend on the program. "This is a pro-veterans bill," he said, adding that it is necessary so that former service members "have access to their telehealth services":
The bill has 206 Democratic and 24 Republican co-sponsors. Clarke stated: