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7/15/2022

Treasury Announces Four Additional Capital Projects Fund Awards to Increase Access to Affordable, High-Speed Interne…

Treasury Announces Four Additional Capital Projects Fund
Awards to Increase Access to Affordable, High-Speed Internet
July 14, 2022

Kansas, Maine, Maryland, and Minnesota are approved to receive funds under the American
Rescue Plan and will connect over 83,000 homes and businesses to a ordable, high-speed
internet

WASHINGTON — Today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury announced the approval of an
additional group of four states under the American Rescue Planʼs Coronavirus Capital Projects
Fund (CPF): Kansas, Maine, Maryland, and Minnesota. The CPF provides $10 billion to states,
territories, freely associated states, and Tribal governments to fund critical capital projects
that enable work, education, and health monitoring in response to the public health
emergency. A key priority of the program is to make funding available for reliable, a ordable
broadband infrastructure and other digital connectivity technology projects. In addition to
the $10 billion provided by the CPF, many governments are using a portion of their State and
Local Fiscal Recovery Funds (SLFRF) toward meeting the Biden-Harris Administrationʼs goal
of connecting every American household to a ordable, reliable high-speed internet. Through
these two programs, the American Rescue Plan is supplying considerable federal broadband
funding and laying the groundwork for future funding provided in the Infrastructure
Investment and Jobs Act.
“The pandemic upended life as we knew it—from work to school to connecting with friends
and family—and exposed the stark inequity in access to a ordable and reliable high-speed
internet in communities across the country, but especially in rural, Tribal, and low-income
communities,” said Deputy Secretary Wally Adeyemo. “This funding will lay the foundation for
the Biden-Harris Administrationʼs historic investments to increase access to high-speed
internet and reduce broadband bills for American households and businesses.”
The state plans approved in this group will support broadband infrastructure and are
designed, upon project completion, to deliver reliable internet service that meets or exceeds
symmetrical download and upload speeds of 100 megabits per second (Mbps), speeds that
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7/15/2022

Treasury Announces Four Additional Capital Projects Fund Awards to Increase Access to Affordable, High-Speed Interne…

are needed for a household with multiple users to simultaneously access the internet to
telework and access education and health monitoring. Treasury designed its guidance to
prioritize connecting families and business with poor and inadequate service—particularly
those in rural and remote areas. Treasury also requires states to explain why communities
they have identified to be served with funds from the CPF have a critical need for those
projects.
In accordance with Treasuryʼs guidance, each stateʼs plan requires service providers to
participate in the Federal Communications Commissionʼs (FCC) new A ordable Connectivity
Program (ACP). The ACP helps ensure that households can a ord the broadband they need for
work, school, healthcare, and more by providing a discount of up to $30 per month (or up to
$75 per eligible household on Tribal lands). The FCC estimates that about 48 million families
are eligible for the program—nearly 40% of households. President Biden and Vice President
Harris recently announced the administration had secured commitments from 20 leading
internet service providers—covering more than 80% of the U.S. population—to o er all ACPeligible households high-speed, high-quality internet plans for no more than $30 per month. As
a result, these households will receive internet access at no cost, helping to close the digital
divide for millions of Americans who could not previously have a orded internet service.
Beyond the ACP, Treasuryʼs guidance requires recipients to consider whether the federally
funded networks will be a ordable to the target markets in their service area and encourages
recipients to require that a federally funded project o er at least one low-cost option at
speeds that are su icient for a household with multiple users.
In June, Treasury announced the first four state recipients of CPF awards with plans to
connect over 200,000 homes and businesses to a ordable, reliable, high-speed internet.
Treasury has already approved awards to 50 Tribal governments and intends to continue
approving state and Tribal plans on a rolling basis. States must submit their plans to Treasury
by September 24, 2022, and all four states have until this deadline to submit plans for the
remainder of their funds. The following descriptions summarize the four state plans that
Treasury approved today.
Kansas, approved for $83.5 million (representing 58% of its available CPF funding),
estimates it will connect 21,300 homes and businesses by building high-speed internet
service in areas where there is a demonstrated need. The Broadband Acceleration Grant
Program, a competitive grant program, will contribute to bridging the digital divide by

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Treasury Announces Four Additional Capital Projects Fund Awards to Increase Access to Affordable, High-Speed Interne…

providing access to reliable high-speed internet connections. CPF dollars will help build
reliable infrastructure that is a ordable in the areas the program is designed to serve.
Maine, approved for $110 million (representing 86% of its available CPF funding),
estimates it will connect 22,500 homes and businesses by supporting the Maine
Infrastructure Ready to invest in qualified locations that can be served by line extensions
of existing networks or new networks. This competitive grant program is focused on
serving locations that currently lack access to reliable high-speed internet access ,
including remote locations in Maineʼs most rural counties.
Maryland, approved for $95 million (representing 55% of its available CPF funding),
estimates it will connect 16,667 homes and businesses by supporting the Network
Infrastructure Grant Program, a competitive broadband grant program that will provide
funding directly to internet service providers (ISPs) for qualifying large-scale broadband
projects in areas that lack service. The program aims to close the racial and
socioeconomic digital divide across the state.
Minnesota, approved for $68.4 million (representing 38% of its available CPF funding),
estimates it will connect 23,517 homes and businesses by using the funds for its Borderto-Border Broadband Development Grant Program, a competitive grant program
designed to provide financial resources for new and existing ISPs to invest in building
broadband infrastructure in areas of the state that currently lack high-speed internet.

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