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Support the Emergency Connectivity Fund

The homework gap is the digital divide that millions of children faced prepandemic and will continue to impede learning without support from Congress. Even before COVID-19, children across the country would stay after school to use their schools’ devices or sit in a fast-food parking lot to access high-speed internet. The near-total shutdown of schools across the country due to the pandemic created a new sense of urgency to connect the 16.9 million children without high-speed home internet, including 1 in 3 Black, Latinx, and American Indian/Alaska Native households and 2 in 5 rural families.

To address the homework gap, Congress established the Emergency Connectivity Fund (ECF), a $7.171 billion program created under the American Rescue Plan of 2021 that helps schools and libraries provide students and library patrons with home internet access and connected devices. More, most of the funding from the program will be depleted by the end of 2023 and many applications that are currently pending will not be funded unless Congress provides additional resources this year. 

Demand Outpaced Supply by $2 billion

Funding Available$7.171 Billion
Funding Requested$9.25 billion
ECF By The Numbers

Connections:

7,117,336

Devices:

11,549,103

Children Served

15,000,000

We appreciate all who signed-on to support the Emergency Connectivity Fund.