Title 47 › Chapter CHAPTER 16— - BROADBAND ACCESS › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER II— - DIGITAL EQUITY ACT OF 2021 › § 1724
Within 30 days after the Assistant Secretary begins giving grants under section 1723(d) (and not before that date), the Assistant Secretary must create the Digital Equity Competitive Grant Program at the Department of Commerce. The program will give grants to help reach digital equity, boost digital inclusion, and get more people in covered groups to use broadband. The Assistant Secretary may work with States to find covered groups and split funds, and must talk with many federal agencies (like Agriculture, HUD, Education, Labor, HHS, Veterans Affairs, Interior, FCC, FTC, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, SBA, the Appalachian Regional Commission, and others) to avoid conflicts with other federal broadband efforts. Grants may go to entities that are not the State’s administering entity under section 1723(b). Eligible applicants include state and local agencies (including adult education and public housing agencies), Indian Tribes and Native organizations, non-profit groups that are not schools, community anchor institutions, local school districts, workforce program providers, and partnerships of these groups or partnerships with other public-interest entities. Applicants must send an application when and how the Assistant Secretary requires, explain how funds will be used, give a spending timeline and budgets, prove they can run the project and follow laws, disclose other funding, and give required assurances. In choosing winners, the Assistant Secretary will consider how well an application increases broadband access and adoption for covered groups, avoids unjust enrichment, adds geographic diversity, and does not duplicate other programs. Grants must support at least one activity such as digital inclusion programs, broadband adoption for education and jobs, training and workforce programs, low- or no-cost devices and services, or public access computing centers. Up to 10% of a grant may be used for measuring and evaluating the work (reports due within 15 months and then yearly), and up to 10% may pay administrative costs. Grantees must spend funds within 4 years (with one extra year for evaluation). The federal share normally may not exceed 90%, but the Assistant Secretary can waive that for financial need. The Assistant Secretary can require reports, create a free public searchable database of applications and grants, deobligate or end grants that are misused (after notice and hearing) and reaward those funds, and make rules to run the program. The Assistant Secretary must reserve 5% of each year’s program funding for program administration, 5% for Tribal and Native entities, and 1% for U.S. territories. The law authorizes $250,000,000 for each of the first 5 fiscal years funds are available, and then whatever sums are needed after that.
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Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Reference
Citation
47 U.S.C. § 1724
Title 47 — Telegraphs, Telephones, and Radiotelegraphs
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73