Skip to main content
News

CWA and 60 organizations oppose FCC proposal to cap the Universal Service Fund

In a letter submitted to the Federal Communications Commission this week, CWA joined more than 60 organizations – including the ACLU, Common Cause, NAACP, and The Leadership Conference – opposing a new proposal to cap the Universal Service Fund. The USF supports programs like Lifeline, which makes modern communications more affordable for low-income families, and the Connect America Fund, which facilitates broadband buildout to rural communities. These are vital programs.

"When Congress codified the concept of universal service by enacting the Telecommunications Act of 1996, it called for the creation of different programs tailored to promote affordable communications services for those most in need, from students, library patrons, and rural hospitals to low-income and rural communities," CWA and the other groups said in the comments. "Grouped under a single umbrella of the Universal Service Fund, these programs are intended to work in concert to address the 'digital divide' and ensure that all consumers have access to high-quality and affordable communications."

Links:

CWA and 60 Organizations Submit Comments to FCC Opposing Proposal to Cap the Universal Service Fund (CWA, Jun. 13, 2019)