First State Projects From COVID Broadband Fund Approved By U.S. Treasury

June 8, 2022

The U.S. Treasury recently released the first state awards from a $10 billion COVID-19 aid program intended to boost broadband internet access in underserved areas. 

$583 million worth of projects were announced for the states of Virginia, West Virginia, Louisiana and New Hampshire.

The Coronavirus Capital Projects Fund, a low-key provision of President Joe Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act, provides funding for broadband infrastructure and other projects related to work, education and healthcare monitoring.

“In the next three years there should not be any excuse while virtually every home in America, north of 98 per cent, shouldn’t have full high-speed broadband connectivity at an affordable rate,” said Democratic Senator Mark Warner in a press conference.

Virginia will get $219.8 million to expand “last mile” broadband access to 76,873 locations while West Virginia will receive $136.3 million to connect 20,000 locations. Louisiana will receive $176.7 million to connect 88,500 homes and businesses comprising  25 per cent of state locations where high speed internet access remains absent.

Meanwhile, New Hampshire received $50 million to connect 15,000 homes and businesses in rural areas, comprising 50 per cent of locations that lack high-speed internet access. 

Furthermore, the Treasury separately gave some $6 million to more than 30 tribal governments to upgrade their internet service.

For more information, read the original story in Reuters.

Top Stories

Related Articles

December 23, 2025 South Korea will require facial recognition scans to open new mobile phone accounts. The new rule is more...

December 19, 2025 Anthropic is expanding a set of enterprise tools designed to make workplace AI more consistent, manageable and more...

December 12, 2025 Former BlackBerry CEO Jim Balsillie is warning that Canada must quickly reassess its digital and economic policies more...

June 12, 2024 Yesterday we covered a story about how Oracle was now cracking down on licensing Java, which started more...

Jim Love

Jim is an author and podcast host with over 40 years in technology.

Share:
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn