TECHTechnology

The $42 Billion Broadband Failure

A smoldering heap of wreckage at Cape Canaveral serves as a grim metaphor for the $42.45 billion BEAD program. Designed to bridge the digital divide through the 2021 Build Back Better initiative, the massive federal effort has stalled, leaving rural communities waiting while billions flow toward the satellite ambitions of tech moguls.

June 23, 20263,110 reads0

The Blue Origin New Glenn rocket explosion on May 28th halted the launch of Amazon Leo satellites, a centerpiece of a venture intended to utilize taxpayer funding for infrastructure. While the program originally prioritized durable fiber optic networks for underserved regions, the shift in political administration has turned the initiative into a bureaucratic quagmire. Five years since the program's inception, only a fraction of the promised upgrades have materialized.

Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk now emerge as primary beneficiaries of these federal funds, yet the promised high-quality connectivity remains elusive. Instead of connecting the country, the BEAD program faces accusations of becoming a slush fund for billionaires. As state-level implementation drags on, the original goal of future-proofing American broadband is being traded for short-term satellite deployment, leaving millions of citizens without the reliable internet access they were promised.

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