End of E-rate for Wi-Fi Hotspots in Schools may be Near (May 10, 2025)

According to K-12 Dive, on May 8, 2025 the end of E-rate eligibility for Wi-Fi hotspots came one step closer as the Senate voted 50-38 along party lines to overturn a 2024 expansion of the program overseen by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

A similar House resolution was introduced in February to strike down the recent inclusion of Wi-Fi hotspots in the E-rate program, which has helped connect schools and libraries to affordable telecommunications services for the last 29 years.

In fiscal year 2025, schools and school districts requested a total of $27.5 million for Wi-Fi hotspots alone, which are often used to help students who don’t have home internet access complete homework assignments that require digital connections.

The FCC’s decision to expand E-rate to include hotspots followed the expiration of the Emergency Connectivity Fund established by the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. The pandemic-era fund allocated $123 million to the FCC to purchase hotspots for schools and libraries.

Both Senate and House measures were introduced by Republicans who say the FCC’s partisan move under the Biden administration to expand the E-rate program was overreach under the federal law.

In a related issue, a survey shows that a 74% of school districts report the loss of the E-rate program would have a “catastrophic” or “major” impact if the U.S. Supreme Court rules that the federal broadband discount for schools and libraries is unconstitutional. A ruling in that case is expected this term.

For more details from K-12 Dive, click here.