The Biden Administration's Ridiculously Spendy Broadband Promises
Americans can decide for themselves where to live and which services they need or can do without.

When the Biden administration promised "internet for all" it didn't specify that it meant "at all cost." We should have assumed that was the case, though, given that it started off with a price tag in the tens of billions of dollars, bureaucratic additions to already chaotic federal broadband boondoggles, and subsidies for internet bills guaranteed to incentivize providers to raise prices. Now we learn that some acts of government broadband largesse cost taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars per hookup.
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The $53,000 Broadband Connection
"Nebraska's Winnebago Tribe has long been stuck with sluggish internet service. The federal government plans to fix that by crisscrossing the reservation with fiber-optic cable—at an average cost of $53,000 for each household and workplace connected," The Wall Street Journal's Ryan Tracy reported this week. "That amount exceeds the assessed value of some of the homes getting hookups, property records show. While most connections will cost far less, the expense to reach some remote communities has triggered concerns over the ultimate price tag for ensuring every rural home, business, school and workplace in America has the same internet that city dwellers enjoy."
There's a reason rural and small-town dwellers have less access to the sort of fast internet connections that urban dwellers enjoy: It costs a lot of money to lay fiber-optic cable—"an average cost of $1,000 to $1,250 per residential household passed or $60,000 to $80,000 per mile," according to Dgtl Infra's Jonathan Kim. It's easier to limit and recover costs in densely populated areas where a lot of potential customers live along paved roads than in sparsely settled areas where there's rough terrain and empty space between each household served. Costs rise dramatically in rural areas.
"In a routine release last week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) announced the latest group of grant winners for its ReConnect broadband deployment program," Fierce Telecom's Diana Goovaerts reported last September. "But hidden in the otherwise unassuming announcement were some startling figures. A prime example: The Alaska Telephone Company, which won a $33 million grant, is planning to run fiber to 211 homes and five businesses at a staggering cost of nearly $204,000 per passing."
The article noted that the connections could be made at lower cost with fixed wireless technology, which effectively provides fast-ish speeds without having to lay cable, but nobody applied for those sweet federal dollars with bids including the more economical technology. "Basically what that means is while it's feasible that another technology like fixed wireless access could have been cheaper, no other options were on the table for these areas," Goovaerts added.
Rural Areas Already Have Internet
In fact, wireless internet offering 10-50 Mbps and (increasingly) satellite connections such as HughesNet, Viasat, and Starlink are how we connect to the world in my piece of Arizona. It's a tradeoff you accept if you want open space around you. Well, you accept that tradeoff unless you can rope other people into paying the cost of laying cable.
"The problem is, money is not infinite," Blair Levin, a senior communications policy official in the Clinton and Obama administrations told The Wall Street Journal. "If you're spending $50,000 to connect a very remote location, you have to ask yourself, would we be better off spending that same amount of money to connect [more] families?"
But, as the availability of wireless connections and satellite offerings show (you can search for services in your area via the FCC), reasonably fast internet is available to people living even in sparsely settled areas. It's arguably "sluggish" compared to the connections offered in cities, but every lifestyle choice involves compromises. It really is possible to grow accustomed to streaming movies in SD instead of UHD, and much online activity—including my research and writing, my wife's medical records-keeping, and the classes my son took in the course of his homeschooling—doesn't require high-end connections.
"Not all online activities require the same speeds: For a group video call, 2.5 Mbps speeds suffice, while streaming videos may require 25 Mbps for high-definition quality," John Horrigan of the Technology Policy Institute commented in 2020 as internet use increased during pandemic social distancing. "More complex or technologically advanced tasks may require higher speeds."
Importantly, internet services that naturally evolved to serve more sparsely settled areas are paid for by customers without passing big bills to people living elsewhere. Politicians prefer to make everybody pay.
"President Biden's Bipartisan Infrastructure Law brought together Republicans, Democrats, and Independents to better connect the American people through roads, bridges, airports, and the internet," the White House boasted last year. "The law included a $65 billion investment to ensure all Americans can access affordable, reliable, and high-speed internet – Internet for All."
Pricey Federal Internet Chaos
The Biden administration's expensive ambition to run fiber-optic cable to every corner of America isn't the first federal attempt to extend the availability of fast internet connections. As Reason's Joe Lancaster noted last year, "the 2009 stimulus bill allocated more than $7 billion toward broadband grants for rural areas, and expenditures have grown since." They've grown without any rhyme or reason, I should add, as we've come to expect from government agencies.
"Federal broadband efforts are fragmented and overlapping, with more than 100 programs administered by 15 agencies," found a May 2022 Government Accountability Office report. "Despite numerous programs and federal investment $44 billion from 2015 through 2020, millions of Americans still lack broadband, and communities with limited resources may be most affected by fragmentation."
Of course, the Biden administration further larded its program with subsidies for Americans who may already have broadband internet.
"As part of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, President Biden and Vice President Harris worked with Democrats, Republicans, and Independents to create the Affordable Connectivity Program (ACP), which provides eligible households $30 per month off their internet bills," the White House promises. "ACP-eligible households can also receive a one-time discount of up to $100 to purchase a laptop, desktop computer, or tablet from participating providers."
That's not a $53,000 (or $200,000) broadband hookup, but across the population it's a big commitment. Subsidies are also an effective way to drive up the price that internet providers can charge since tax dollars make up the difference, just as subsidized college loans increase the cost of higher education. That worsens the problems and creates spiraling demand for even more subsidies.
Americans are perfectly capable of deciding for themselves where and how to live and which services they need or can do without, including broadband. They don't need taxpayers subsidizing their choices.
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"Politicians prefer to make everybody pay."
And to pay to the right people, chosen by the politicians, of course.
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That's not pipe. Pipe doesn't come on spools.
That's plastic (nylon of some sort, I believe, similar to PEX tubing) that's used as conduit, basically, to run fiber through. I've carried a load of it on a flatbed tractor trailer. Nice and light.
That's what taxpayers will suck.
We must continue shoveling fodder into the trough. The cattle are getting restless.
$53K per household would buy a Starlink terminal plus 36 years of service.
Oh look, I wasn't the only one. I guess I should have read the comments before agitatedly commenting...
This was a giveaway to big ISPs yet again. They did it in the 90s and are doing it now.
It was a waste then, it's a waste now.
Put your mask back on.
Make sure it's fluid tight, like you would a condom. Or the virus might get through!
Yep, I'm seeing this around my area too. The big cities already have fiber. The tiny rural areas are now getting fiber at incredibly cheap, heavily subsidized costs. The small & medium sized cities? Nope. Nobody's interested in extending us fiber.
"Nebraska's Winnebago Tribe has long been stuck with sluggish internet service. The federal government plans to fix that by crisscrossing the reservation with fiber-optic cable—at an average cost of $53,000 for each household and workplace connected,"
How many years of a Starlink connection would $53k have paid for?
Probably rather a lot.
Turns out I can actually find out how much that costs.
36 years and 4 months of "standard" service, or 17 years and 5 months of the 1TB "Priority" service. At current pricing. But presumably for buying in bulk, they could get a better deal, and make sure that the price stayed steady.
And of course, in 36 years, that fiber will be vastly obsolete. Hell, it might be obsolete in ten years.
---
In completely unrelated news, I hauled a bunch of that tubing. Nice load. Bulky, light, but not a lot of sail area. That was a great load.
Hauling spools of the actual glass fiber, OTOH... that was obnoxious. Heavy. Annoying to secure.
Anyway...
Jesus Zardfarking Christ, and I hadn't even gotten to the $204,000 each in Alaska.
STARLINK, MOTHERFUCKERS!
It really is possible to grow accustomed to streaming movies in SD instead of UHD
It's even possible to grow accustomed to letting the fucking things buffer before watching! Madness.
What? And admit Musk was right? No way.
Starlink doesn't have full-bandwidth coverage above certain latitudes currently; I haven't looked deeply enough to say what portion of Alaska might not be covered well, but the North Slope oil towns are almost certainly in that category.
That said, nobody living in rural Alaska went there thinking that they'd have a solid broadband connection. Most likely went there at least partly to escape "the grid" in the first place.
It's important to the surveillance state that everyone has a high speed connection.
We need to pony up to pay for Fiber for the Ukraine. Unless you want Democracy to die in darkness.
It really is possible to grow accustomed to streaming movies in SD instead of UHD
SD?? No. It is not. It's no more possible to grow accustomed to SD than it is to grow accustomed to wiping your ass with poison ivy.
Am I the only one who thought "Winnebago Tribe" was Jerry Jr.'s cutesy way to say those who require mobile service?
In CA, the "Winnebago Tribe" can be found inhabiting areas like Jefferson Blvd through the Ballona Wetlands and along PCH between Santa Monica and Malibu...
There are many many “inequalities” associated living in the sticks. Police protection, fire stations, water, sewers, garbage, emergency services, must drive to shop food and products, doctor, school, entertainment, hair care, sports – you name it. Constitutional rights?
A massive handout to Democrat voters and telecom lobbyists. What makes you think this isn't working exactly as intended?