USDA awards an additional $502 million for high-speed rural broadband access

The funds are coming from the Reconnect Program and will come in loans and grants.

Roughly 20 states will soon get a cut of more than half a billion dollars in an effort to expand high-speed broadband access in rural communities.

The additional $502 million is part of the funding from the Reconnect Program and will come in the form of loans and grants issued by the USDA. Ag Secretary Tom Vilsack says more grants will soon be available through the current Administration’s Infrastructure Law, with funds going to the most vulnerable communities.

“With the announcement today, we’re adding an additional $502 million of investments in 20 states. These resources are divided between loans and grants, with roughly $141 million in loans and $360 million or so in grants. This is a second announcement that has been made by the Biden-Harris Administration. Up to this point in round three, we have announced $858 million of additional investments. We anticipate and expect additional announcements in the very near future,” said Vilsack.

Secretary Vilsack says one condition of the additional funding is that network capacity must be capable of handling 100 up and 100 down, which most internet companies classify as high-speed.

Agriculture Shows
Pivot Bio is dedicated to creating exciting innovations and opportunities for valued customers, including all-new original programming that connects viewers with more powerful ideas as we work together to build the future of agriculture. These shows engage, enlighten, and entertain farmers and communities while supporting organizations like FFA,
Host and comedian Charlie Berens presents each state with commentary, fun facts and thought-provoking questions. These fast-paced, light-hearted episodes explore what makes America, and what Americans make. Chances are something will surprise you.
Farm Next, a new Pivot Bio Original series produced with Farm Progress, is where some of the greatest minds in agriculture take center stage to showcase the next big thing in ag.
The goal of “Where the Food Comes From” is as simple as its name implies — host Chip Carter takes you along on the journey of where our food comes from — and we don’t just mean to the supermarket (though that’s part of the big picture!). But beyond where it comes from, how it gets there, and all the links in the chain that make that happen.
Join markets specialist Scott Shellady, better known as the Cow Guy, as he covers the market-close, breaking down headlines that drive the commodities and equities markets with commentary from respected industry heavyweights.