- Federal agenciesIncreases rural entities' capacity to prepare successful grant and loan applications, improving access to federal broad…
- Local governmentsAccelerates broadband deployment by funding feasibility, technical design, and financing identification support for loc…
- CitiesStrengthens institutional capacity at tribes, colleges, cooperatives, and nonprofits to manage and operate broadband fa…
Rural Broadband Assistance Act
Referred to the Committee on Agriculture, and in addition to the Committee on Energy and Commerce, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for cons…
This bill amends section 701 of the Rural Electrification Act of 1936 to create a broadband technical assistance program.
The Secretary of Agriculture would make grants to private, nonprofit, and public organizations to provide training and technical assistance to eligible rural entities.
Eligible assistance includes grant application support, financing identification, feasibility and environmental studies, management improvement, data collection, and other Secretary-identified needs.
Technocratic, bipartisan-friendly measure with modest fiscal implications; absence of explicit funding reduces immediate implementability and may require inclusion in an appropriations package.
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill creates a new USDA grant authority to provide broadband technical assistance in rural areas with reasonably clear purpose, defined allowable assistance activities, and an explicit list of eligible recipients. It establishes selection priority for experienced organizations and allows national or multi-State on-site technical assistance applications.
Liberal emphasizes equity and Tribal/HBCU inclusion benefits
Who stands to gain, and who may push back.
- Targeted stakeholdersAdds administrative costs and implementation workload for USDA without specifying appropriations.
- Federal agenciesCould duplicate existing federal, state, or nonprofit technical assistance programs, causing inefficient overlap.
- Local governmentsBroad eligible entity list risks funds flowing to nonlocal corporations rather than grassroots rural providers.
Why the argument around this bill splits.
Liberal emphasizes equity and Tribal/HBCU inclusion benefits
Generally supportive because it targets known barriers to rural broadband adoption and includes Tribes and HBCUs.
Concerned about potential private-profit capture and lack of explicit funding, accountability, and community benefit requirements.
Cautiously favorable: pragmatic capacity-building addressing application and planning gaps that slow rural broadband.
Wants clear metrics, coordination with existing programs, and budgetary clarity to limit duplication and waste.
Skeptical of expanded federal grant programs; supports rural broadband goals but worries about increased federal involvement and taxpayer-funded assistance to private entities.
Would prefer market-driven solutions and tighter eligibility limits.
The path through Congress.
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Reached or meaningfully advanced
Still ahead
Still ahead
Still ahead
Technocratic, bipartisan-friendly measure with modest fiscal implications; absence of explicit funding reduces immediate implementability and may require inclusion in an appropriations package.
- No explicit authorization level or appropriation included
- Overlap with existing USDA broadband programs and authorities
Recent votes on the bill.
No vote history yet
The bill has not accumulated any surfaced votes yet.
Go deeper than the headline read.
Liberal emphasizes equity and Tribal/HBCU inclusion benefits
Technocratic, bipartisan-friendly measure with modest fiscal implications; absence of explicit funding reduces immediate implementability a…
Relative to its intended legislative type, this bill creates a new USDA grant authority to provide broadband technical assistance in rural areas with reasonably clear purpose, defined allowable assistance activities, an…
Go beyond the headline summary with full stakeholder mapping, legislative design analysis, passage barriers, and lens-by-lens tradeoff breakdowns.