HR-9521-119
Referred to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.
Sponsored by Addison McDowell (R-NC)
What it does
This bill would extend the deadline by which states, localities, and territories may spend certain already-allocated federal funds on broadband infrastructure projects. Specifically, it would allow State Fiscal Recovery Funds to be spent through September 30, 2027, Local Fiscal Recovery Funds through the same date, and Capital Projects Funds through January 1, 2028 — each beyond the current expiration dates set in the Social Security Act. The bill does not appropriate any new money; it only changes when existing funds must be spent.
Who benefits
State and local governments that have already received funds but have not yet completed broadband projects — particularly those in rural or underserved areas where permitting, construction, and contracting timelines are longer. Residents in areas awaiting broadband deployment who would benefit from completed projects. Broadband construction contractors and equipment suppliers whose projects would otherwise be cancelled or defunded. Internet service providers partnering with governments on these projects.
Who is hurt
Taxpayers and federal budget managers who prefer funds be spent or returned promptly, as extended deadlines reduce accountability pressure. Competing infrastructure priorities that might benefit if unspent broadband funds were recaptured and reallocated. Communities that have already completed projects on time and received no additional flexibility. Oversight bodies that must monitor fund usage over a longer period, increasing administrative burden.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that broadband infrastructure projects — especially in rural and remote areas — face uniquely long timelines due to permitting requirements, geographic challenges, and supply chain constraints that were not anticipated when the original deadlines were set. They contend that allowing funds to lapse before projects are completed would waste money already committed, leave underserved communities without promised connectivity, and undermine the original congressional intent of closing the digital divide.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that extending spending deadlines reduces fiscal discipline and accountability, allowing governments to sit on federal funds without consequence. They contend that the original deadlines were set deliberately to ensure timely deployment and that repeated extensions signal poor planning at the state and local level. Critics may also argue that funds not spent within the original window should be returned to the Treasury or redirected to jurisdictions that demonstrated readiness to deploy broadband more efficiently.