There is a glimmer of hope that ISPs that won state grants that were funded from the Capital Project Fund (CPF) can get an extension of six months to complete grant construction.
The Capital Project Fund was created by the 2021 American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) and provided almost $10 billion to states and territories for making broadband-related grants. The program was administered by the Department of the Treasury, which gave block grants to States. Each State then made awards through State Broadband grant programs to ISPs. I’ve seen estimates that CPF grants have funded projects to bring new broadband infrastructure to roughly 2 million rural passings. The grants could also be used to purchase devices like laptops and computers for qualifying households. The final approved use of the funds was to construct or improve physical community hubs where citizens can remotely access work, education, and telehealth services.
Many State grants awarded under this program have been constructed and up and operating. But as inevitable, some grant winner had delays and don’t expect to finish grant construction by the end of this year when the funding expires.
On May 6, the Department of the Treasury updated the Coronavirus Capital Project Fund FAQs. The update includes a process where some projects can get an extension to complete construction for six months, until June 30, 2027, under the following new rules:
- States must make requests for an extension by July 31 of this year.
- Extension requests are not generic and must be related to a specific project.
- To be eligible for an extension, a project must have already made material progress toward completion. The project must certify that it can’t complete construction by the legislative end of the CPF program of December 31, 2026.
- The reasons for the extension must be to extenuating circumstances beyond the grantee’s control. The FAQ lists eligible extenuating circumstances to include, but are not limited to, permitting or regulatory delays, supply chain disruptions, labor shortages, or severe weather events.
- ISPs can’t ask for an extension for reasons like inadequate planning, project management deficiencies, failure to secure financing, or other avoidable causes.
- Treasury is not obligated to grant the extensions and will review each extension request based on the specific facts and merits.
This is very good news for projects that were delayed by external events. For example, I know there are CPF projects in North Carolina that were significantly delayed due to Hurricane Helene. The State government here has already started the process of identifying projects that might benefit from the extension.
Note that not all state broadband grants were funded through Capital Project Fund dollars. For example, around $350 billion was given directly to state and local governments to meet infrastructure needs through the State and Local Fiscal Recovery Plan (SLFRF). This covered a lot more than broadband and could also be used for a wide range of infrastructure projects like dams, bridges, roads, etc. I’ve seen estimates that over $8 billion of this money made it into State broadband grant programs.
SLFRF is being administered by NTIA, and at this point, there are no announced plans for any extension of this funding, which expires on December 31, 2026.








