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Biden's New $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Plan Includes $65 Billion for Universal Broadband (cnet.com) 131

CNET News: President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris on Thursday agreed to a $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure plan that includes building out high-speed universal broadband across the nation. The infrastructure framework will use two-thirds of the resources from Biden's proposed American Jobs Plan, and also includes clean transportation, clean water infrastructure, renewable energy infrastructure and climate change resilience. Under the plan, $65 billion will be invested in broadband for all. It proposes state and local investment in broadband infrastructure as well as using the proceeds from 5G spectrum auctions. It's a step backwards from the $2.25 trillion infrastructure plan previously proposed by Biden in March, which included $100 billion for broadband infrastructure. In March, Biden spoke about the digital divide, and how more than 30 million Americans have no access to broadband while those living in urban and suburban markets face broadband bills that are too expensive.
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Biden's New $1.2 Trillion Infrastructure Plan Includes $65 Billion for Universal Broadband

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  • I wonder if Starlink will qualify.

    • Probably not. I think the money will be primarily spent on fiber to rural areas. I'm not sure Starlink has enough bandwidth and radio spectrum to meet that kind of demand.
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Probably, but not until it's actually providing service to the areas in question. I live in a rural area of the Southeast, and there is no broadband to the farm I live on and Starlink does not offer service around here. Their website says that they will someday, but not now.

      At the moment, I have to use a cellular service that gives me about 3-8 MB of bandwidth and a hard 200 gb datacap for $300/month, and that is the ONLY thing available to me. I'm only about 20 miles from a major research university but

      • by crow ( 16139 )

        The first shell of satellites are all in orbit, but many are still slowly moving into their operational orbit (much higher than their initial launch orbit). Sometime this fall, they should be good to roll out a lot more service. They'll also need a much more expansive license for the ground stations from the FCC, but I doubt that will be a problem.

        They've taken a break in Starlink launches since completing the first shell. I think the next series of launches will be in a polar orbit for better coverage i

      • Starlink is 50-300MB download, $100 a month and no data gap at present. Clearly a better deal when available.
      • There are 19 million Americans in the same situation as mine. This is the infrastructure we need to build.
        Unfortunately the other 190 million voters (or how many it might be) think that you are an poor asshole and deserve to have no fast internet.

        Meanwhile in old Germany there is a roll out program for fibre (because 30 years ago, telecom minister Schwarzschilling put everything into ISDN/DSL because his wife was the main share holder in a big German copper smelting facility - and no one really objected or

  • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Thursday June 24, 2021 @03:21PM (#61517604) Homepage
    We need Fiber-optic cable Internet to all neighborhoods, controlled by the city or county governments. Then there will be choices, and no one company can charge high prices or be otherwise abusive.
    • And when there's an outage you show up to your monthly city council meeting to submit a help request? I agree with the goals I'm just not sure about how you efficiently roll out and maintain fiber everywhere.
      • An Internet outage would be handled the same way electricity, water, and natural gas outages are handled.

        When was the last time you had an electricity or water outage?
      • The one who owns the cables, does not need to be the one who runs them.

        Perhaps you should look into other countries and figure how they are doing it :P

        Hint: it is less retarded then USA, that is why it is basically every were on the planet much much cheaper to have fast internet: be it fibre or G4/G5.

    • Wait, you're contradicting yourself. You're saying that it should be a municipal utility - i.e. a local government monopoly. That's one choice, not multiple competing options.

      And let's not overlook the existing issue where municipal governments lack the resources to maintain a reasonable security posture regarding what they already have, so what do you think will happen when they have so much more to deal with?

      Besides, paying for something with tax dollars doesn't mean it's cheaper, just that you can'

  • Prediction (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fahrbot-bot ( 874524 ) on Thursday June 24, 2021 @03:26PM (#61517612)

    I betting that this will turn out to be another stall tactic by the Republicans -- negotiating in bad faith, like with the ACA -- and that an insufficient number of Republicans will actually vote for it in the Senate for it to pass. The goal of the Republican Party is to impede the Biden/Democrat goals and agendas with the hope of winning back control of the Senate and possibly House in 2022, then using that control to win the Presidency in 2024. As Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) has said, "one-hundred percent of our focus is on stopping this new administration."

    • From your lips to God's ears, as the saying goes. The last thing we need is a larger federal government. Honestly, I can't believe people still want to give these pols even more money after their utter failures during the pandemic. Heck, they may have even funded the virus!

      If you give more money to these people you are ENCOURAGING more of the same.

      • by Dan667 ( 564390 )
        uh, are you not seeing what is going on with comcast and at&t? Why would anyone want more of that? I'll take municipal broadband in a heartbeat.
    • Re:Prediction (Score:5, Informative)

      by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Thursday June 24, 2021 @03:55PM (#61517692)

      Don’t know why this is modded troll. Mitch Mcconnell has been saying for years his only goal is to block progressive legislation. https://thehill.com/homenews/s... [thehill.com]

      • Don’t know why this is modded troll. Mitch Mcconnell has been saying for years his only goal is to block progressive legislation. https://thehill.com/homenews/s... [thehill.com]

        Because this is /. and some people have trouble handling The Truth.
        To be fair, mods like that often get reversed later by more level-headed people.

      • Which is a good thing Conservatives/Republicans should be doing. "Progressives" want to make radical, ill-conceived, ill-considered, changes that should be blocked. They want to "fix" things that aren't broken and that they don't even understand. They're unhappy people who can't tell good from bad and just want to tear everything down in their depressed ignorance.

        Preventing bad changes from taking place is what Conservatives do. They preserve rules and principals that are moral and functional - "know

    • Good? We don't need to spend $65 billion to provide rural broadband, Starlink is already solving that. Furthermore, I simply do not buy the argument that it's too expensive in cities and suburbs. Mine costs a little more than my water bill, and less than my power bill.

      This is supposed to be an infrastructure bill. Physical infrastructure like roads, bridges and rails. Not a renewable energy bill, not a broadband bill, not a healthcare bill; a god damned roads and bridges bill. We're already way in

      • No wonder that your country is turning more and more into a third world country, or even less, when its citizens don't even consider affordable internet an infrastructrue.

        Hint: we are still in the middle of a pandemic.
        Hint: people want to work from home in future.

    • I betting that this will turn out to be another stall tactic by the Republicans -- negotiating in bad faith, like with the ACA -- and that an insufficient number of Republicans will actually vote for it in the Senate for it to pass.

      Biden has addressed this criticism directly. [whitehouse.gov]

      Number one, I’ve worked with a lot of these people who are in the room. I know them. Everybody knows and you guys know: When certain senators tell you something, they mean it. Snd others you take — you discount.

      Where I come from and the — in my years in the Senate, the single greatest currency you have is your word — keeping your word. Mitt Romney has never broken his word to me. You know, the senator from Alaska and the senator

  • More money down the hole. Change this, don't retry the same old mo' money scheme.

    • More money down the hole. Change this, don't retry the same old mo' money scheme.

      What exactly makes you think those that pocketed the money and got rich last time, aren't the same ones who will pocket the money and get rich this time?

      Wake up.

      • Making my point. Thanks.

        • Making my point. Thanks.

          You're the one under the illusion that "change this" will do anything.

          Neither one of us has the ability to do fuck-all about this problem, so why even complain? Not even your "Representative" gives a shit about this corruption.

          • As you read, I sure don't think money is the answer to making broadband 'universal'. That's been tried. So stop with the money.

            Your turn.

            • As you read, I sure don't think money is the answer to making broadband 'universal'. That's been tried. So stop with the money.

              Your turn.

              The Disease of Greed, has plagued mankind for thousands of years. It will likely be our species demise.

              21st Century Digital Greed, is no different.

              Either solve for the Disease of Greed, or set your expectations.

            • As you read, I sure don't think money is the answer to making broadband 'universal'. That's been tried. So stop with the money.
              The answer is pretty simple. Just build it. Ooops, that was so easy again.

  • Sure the number is a number that is easy for a reporter to copy-paste into a headline. Great, some millions or billions or trillions of dollars.

    So. The actual question, how does this bill improve accountability so that recipients of this money will actually do what we are paying them for?

  • so... hooray I guess. Meanwhile the entire Southwest is running out of water and it'll take decades to solve the problem if we ever decide we want to. Not that there's a lot of will to do that, a couple of billionaires are buying up water rights in the region and looking forward to a big money pay day in the near future.
    • It won't take decades to build a large water desalination plant.
      • by sfcat ( 872532 )

        It won't take decades to build a large water desalination plant.

        Won't take decades to build the gas power plants to power them either. If you like golf, don't retire to Arizona, how hard is that?

  • He announced that he won't sign it unless the Green New Deal is also passed alongside it. Zero chance of that happening.

    Biden: "I demand all or nothing"

    Repubicans: "Offer accepted. You get nothing"

    • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

      When did he announce that?

      Are you sure that wasn't just some right wing talking head's fantasy of why the Republicans should block infrastructure?

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by _xeno_ ( 155264 )

        Today? Straight from NPR: [npr.org]

        The president made clear that just because he was willing to compromise on the infrastructure deal, it should not signal to Republicans that Democrats will not move ahead on progressive priorities without bipartisan support.

        "I'm prepared to do whatever needs to get done to move the country forward," he said.

        And referring to the infrastructure package, he said: "If this is the only thing that comes to me, I'm not signing it. It's in tandem."

        Right there.

        It's dead, because there are enough Democrats in the Senate who don't want to push the insane progressive agenda of some part of the Democratic Party. It'll never pass the Senate, even if it were to come to a vote, which will also never happen.

        President Trump knew how to make deals to get things done and could make deals with Democrats. The current senile coot inhabiting the White House? Well, let's just say that on a good day, he can remember which one is his wife and

        • by Ksevio ( 865461 ) on Thursday June 24, 2021 @05:53PM (#61518178) Homepage

          So basically nothing you said was true. Biden said he was looking to compromise on this and future bills, nothing about the Green New Deal. Biden won the election with a large majority, it should come as no surprise that he wants to push forward the popular items in his agenda

          But I guess you can't expect very good logic from someone conned into believing Trump is a good negotiator. Trump was so bad at negotiating, he was actually able to get less money for a border wall than the Democrats originally offered.

          • by _xeno_ ( 155264 )

            Democrats can't even negotiate with themselves.

            You know who's going to torpedo this entire thing? Democrats in the Senate.

            All I know is that things were better under President Trump than they have been so far under Biden. President Trump was able to get COVID stimulus done. Democrats devolved into failing to come to an agreement with themselves and provided a useless watered-down package that has only really succeeded in keeping businesses closed as no one is willing to work.

            • by PPH ( 736903 )

              You know who's going to torpedo this entire thing? Democrats in the Senate.

              In related news, popcorn sales are up.

            • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

              Yes, the unnecessary trade wars were great under Trump. You might be happy to hear that Biden also got COVID stimulus done. It happened because it was a pretty bipartisan issue. If you look at anything more complicated like one of Trump's campaign promises of healthcare - total disaster.

              The Democrats represent a larger portion of the center and left of the US so they have a much harder time than the Republicans who just block anything no matter how popular it is

              • Democrats certainly represent more of the Left, that much at least is true. The rest was mostly wrong. What "trade wars"? We may have been close to one with China (maybe not close enough), but being tough in negotiations with other trade partners is no trade war, it's just sensible.

                Trump also got COVID stimulus done. Then Democrats dragged their feet on a second round as a campaign strategy. Since January, we haven't actually needed more stimulus, Biden just wanted to buy some support at the cost of

                • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

                  Being "tough in negotiations" only works if you have an end goal, but we got nothing out of it. Trump got us out of some deals, but his inability to make new ones shows what a fraud he is. Case and point - his biggest achievement you point out is that he managed to get a stimulus bill passed DURING a pandemic. What could be easier than that?

                  Voting ID is popular, so is early voting, automatic registration, more polling places. Democrats want more people to vote, GOP wants fewer. GOP is worried about vir

          • Most of this "Human Infrastructure" bill they want to sign in tandem is literally the Green New Deal. It's cost are somewhere in the ballpark of $6 trillion. They want free day care, free community college, expansion of medicare down to 60 and the list goes on. It's basically everything they want done "this time". Next time they'll want the government to start socializing more and more "essential" industries.

            No way the Republicans will go for and as _xeno_ pointed out, there are even a few Democrats that wi

            • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

              You make it seem like it's a bad thing to achieve the bare minimum that all other first world countries (and even many third world countries) have.

              • I suppose I've seen government spend money time and time again but the problems still persist. It's like giving money to ISPs to build out the Internet. We've paid for that at least twice already and yet it is still a problem. Nothing was ever done about it not getting finished either.

                Last thing I really want to see is even more inflation to the dollar. All that money will likely go to enriching people already doing well then truly fixing the serious problems we actually have.

              • Yeah, but you know: most third world countries (those don't exist anymore since decades anyway), have no carriers. I don't mean "NO CARRIER", I mean no carriers. Somehow that is something americans are super proud about.

          • by tomhath ( 637240 )

            Biden said he was looking to compromise on this and future bills

            Go back and read what he actually said. He said he would only sign both bills together, and the second bill had to be the $6 Trillion "Green New Deal that isn't the Green New Deal". So there is no deal on the infrastructure bill, everything is still on the table.

            • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

              Ok, but you realize it's not at all like the "Green New Deal" that was released, right? He was talking about a bill that includes popular items like child care and power infrastructure. Is everything related to sustainability just "Green New Deal" now for the right?

          • What popular items on his agenda? What agenda did he run on? Don't you have to campaign to say you ran on an agenda?

            And I just heard him say that while he accepts the bi-partisan bill, he's hoping that Democrats can rewrite it in reconciliation so they don't actually have to compromise.

            • by Ksevio ( 865461 )

              Well obviously there was getting COVID under control, but that was kind of an obvious one for anyone but Trump. Then there's voting rights, expanding broadband, expanding education, improving healthcare.

              All of these he campaigned for, and all are extremely popular across the country, but they weren't very interesting so there wasn't much media coverage of it.

        • “Look, having nuclear—my uncle was a great professor and scientist and engineer, Dr. John Trump at MIT; good genes, very good genes, OK, very smart, the Wharton School of Finance, very good, very smart —you know, if you’re a conservative Republican, if I were a liberal, if, like, OK, if I ran as a liberal Democrat, they would say I’m one of the smartest people anywhere in the world—it’s true!—but when you’re a conservative Republican they try—oh, d

        • Just a thought -

          If you want to point out how the Dems are screwing things up and doing stupid things, and unable to even come to an agreement with each other, that's cool. That can be useful information.

          If you gratuitously include some "some was bipartisan and so great" stuff there, that makes it so people won't hear/believe your message unless they are *also* willing to believe that Trump is great. A lot of people aren't going to believe that, so including the Trump stuff just makes your message less effe

          • That was supposed to be:

            If you gratuitously include some "TRUMP was bipartisan and so great" stuff there, that makes it so people won't hear/believe your message unless they are *also* willing to believe that Trump is great.

            If you want to point out AOC once again saying something incredibly stupid, just do that. No need to add "Trump is bipartisan and smart and the greatest deal maker" in there. That just makes 55% of the readers stop reading what you wrote.

  • $65,000,000,000. Say that there are 330,000,000 Americans and they ALL are impoverished as well as living in rural huts in the outskirts of Montana. That's $200 per EVERY man, women, and BABY! We all know that this scenario is not real, but this is crazy. How much of this will end up in Democrat's pockets and some off-the-wall pork spending?
    • Wow, enough for about 3 months of Charter internet service at whatever tier it is I have. Hardly seems worth the cost.

      Especially since a company like Starlink can solve the rural broadband issue in a year. Assuming they don't have to compete with the government to do it.

  • by MacMann ( 7518492 ) on Thursday June 24, 2021 @10:34PM (#61518802)

    The people that are ready to build the nuclear power plants aren't asking for money, they are asking for permission. Even so there needs to be money in the bill to pay for the people that issue the permits, perform the inspections, and build the government facilities for waste disposal. Because any large civil project costs a lot of money it's rare for a private bank to be able to issue a loan so the government steps in as the lender or as a guarantee on the loan, and that needs to be on the budget.

    Such loans guarantees were given to solar power in the past, why not more for nuclear too?
    https://www.theguardian.com/us... [theguardian.com]

    There is no path to zero carbon emissions without nuclear power. If there's no money for nuclear power, but money to burn in the solar power dumpster fire, then these are not serious people. Serious people look to solve problems. Unserious people want to look like they are solving problems so they can recycle the same fears for their next election campaign.

  • What the 65B is REALLY going to do is pad a bunch of executive bonuses...

  • And what does it do about the fact that we don't have 1.2 trillion to spend on this and the country is going dangerously further into debt and/or printing money to cover it, causing massive inflation and destroying the currency's value?
  • Universal broadband is just another name for giving free money to the "poor."

    • Universal broadband is just another name for giving free money to the "poor."
      Strange that people with so stupid arguments always forget that universal means it is for everyone. The poor, the lower class, the middle calls and ... ta, ta, ta, ta: for the rich, too!

C'est magnifique, mais ce n'est pas l'Informatique. -- Bosquet [on seeing the IBM 4341]

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