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Trump Team鈥檚 Reworking Delays Billions in Broadband Build-Out

Millions of Americans who have waited decades for fast internet connections will keep waiting after the Trump administration threw a $42 billion high-speed internet program into disarray.

The Commerce Department, which runs the massive Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment Program, in early June requiring states 鈥 some of which were ready to begin construction later this year 鈥 to solicit new bids from internet service providers.

The delay leaves millions of rural Americans stranded in places where health care is hard to access and telehealth is out of reach.

鈥淭his does monumental harm to rural America,鈥 said , a professor of telecommunications at Penn State.

The Biden-era program, known as BEAD, was hailed when created in 2021 as a national plan to bring fast internet to all, including millions in remote rural areas.

A yearlong 麻豆女优 Health News investigation, with partner Gray Media鈥檚 InvestigateTV, found nearly 3 million people live in mostly rural counties that lack broadband as well as primary care and behavioral health care providers. In those same places, the analysis found, people live sicker and die earlier on average.

The program adopts a technology-neutral approach to 鈥済uarantee that American taxpayers obtain the greatest return on their broadband investment,鈥 according to the June . The program previously prioritized the use of fiber-optic cable lines, but broadband experts like Ali said the new focus will make it easier for satellite-internet providers such as to win federal funds.

鈥淲e are going to connect rural America with technologies that cannot possibly meet the needs of the next generation of digital users,鈥 Ali said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e going to be missing out.鈥

Republicans have criticized BEAD for taking too long, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick to get rid of its 鈥渨oke mandates.鈥 The revamped 鈥淏enefit of the Bargain BEAD Program,鈥 which was released with a fact sheet titled 鈥,鈥 includes eliminating some labor and employment requirements and obligations to perform climate analyses on projects.

The requirement for states to do a new round of bidding with internet service providers makes it unclear whether states will be able to connect high-speed internet to all homes, said , director of policy engagement at the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society.

Garner said the changes have caused 鈥減ure chaos鈥 in state broadband offices. More than half the states have been knocked off their original timeline to deliver broadband to homes, he said.

The change also makes the program more competitive for satellite companies and wireless providers such as Verizon and T-Mobile, Garner said.

Garner what the possible increase in low-Earth-orbit satellites would mean for rural America. He found that fiber networks are generally more expensive to build but that satellites are more costly to maintain and 鈥渕uch more expensive鈥 to consumers.

Commerce Secretary Lutnick said in a June release that the new direction of the program would be efficient and deliver high-speed internet 鈥渁t the right price.鈥 The National Telecommunications and Information Administration, the Commerce Department agency overseeing BEAD, declined to release a specific amount it hopes to save with the restructuring.

The NTIA also declined to respond on the record to questions about program revisions and delays.

More than 40 states had already begun selecting companies to provide high-speed internet and fill in gaps in underserved areas, according to created to track state progress.

In late May, the website was altered and columns showing the states that had completed their work with federal regulators disappeared. Three states 鈥 Delaware, Louisiana, and Nevada 鈥 had reached the finish line and were waiting for the federal government to distribute funding.

The tracker, which 麻豆女优 Health News saved , details the steps each state made in their years-long efforts to create location-based maps and bring high-speed internet to those missing service. West Virginia had completed selection of internet service providers and a of its proposed plan shows the state was set to provide fiber connections to all homes and businesses.

Sen. Shelley Moore Capito (R-W.Va.) praised removal of some of the hurdles that delayed implementation and said she thought her state would not have to make very many changes to existing plans during a .

West Virginia鈥檚 broadband council has worked aggressively to expand in a state where 25% of counties lack high-speed internet and health providers, according to 麻豆女优 Health News鈥 analysis.

A man with a blonde beard and wearing a tan shirt and zippered sweatshirt sits outside and smiles at the camera.
Gary Vance lives with diabetes and 鈥渁ll kinds of crap,鈥 like deteriorating bones. But, he says, his home in Lincoln County, West Virginia, lacks phone and internet service as well as running water. (Sarah Jane Tribble/麻豆女优 Health News)

In Lincoln County, West Virginia, Gary Vance owns 21 acres atop a steep ridge that has no internet connection. Vance, who sat in his yard enjoying the sun on a recent day, said he doesn鈥檛 want to wait any longer.

Vance said he has various medical conditions: high blood sugar, deteriorating bones, lung problems 鈥 鈥渁ll kinds of crap.鈥 He鈥檚 worried about his family鈥檚 inability to make a phone call or connect to the internet.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 call nobody to get out if something happens,鈥 said Vance, who also lacks running water.

麻豆女优 Health News, using data from federal and academic sources, found more than 200 counties 鈥 with large swaths in the South, Appalachia, and the remote West 鈥 lack high-speed internet, behavioral health providers, and primary care doctors who serve low-income patients on Medicaid. On average, residents in those counties experienced higher rates of diabetes, obesity, chronically high blood pressure, and cardiovascular disease.

The gaps in telephone and internet services didn鈥檛 cause the higher rates of illness, but Ali said it does not help either.

Ali, who traveled rural America for his book 鈥,鈥 said telehealth, education, banking, and the use of artificial intelligence all require fast download and upload speeds that cannot always be guaranteed with satellite or wireless technology.

It鈥檚 鈥渢he politics of good enough,鈥 Ali said. 鈥淎nd that is always how we鈥檝e treated rural America.鈥

Fiber-optic cables, installed underground or on poles, consistently provide broadband speeds that meet the Federal Communications Commission鈥檚 requirements for broadband download speed of 100 megabits per second and 20 Mbps upload speed. By contrast, a , performed by Ookla, a private research and analytics company, found that only 17.4% of Starlink satellite internet users nationwide consistently get those minimum speeds. The report also noted Starlink鈥檚 speeds were rising nationwide in the first three months of 2025.

In March, West Virginia鈥檚 Republican governor, Patrick Morrisey, to collaborate with the Trump administration on the new requirements.

Republican state Del. , who has been working with Morrisey鈥檚 office, said his goal is to eventually get fiber everywhere but said other opportunities could be available to get internet faster.

In May, the West Virginia Broadband Enhancement Council signaled it preferred fiber-optic cables to satellite for its residents and signed that noted 鈥渇iber connections offer the benefits of faster internet speeds, enhanced data security, and the increased reliability that is necessary to promote economic development and support emerging technologies.鈥

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