Skip to main content
August 10, 2021 | H.R. 3684

The Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), passed by congress and signed into law by President Biden, provided hard working Americans this long overdue investment. It makes historic investment in our nation’s core infrastructure priorities -- including broadband, roads and bridges, rail, transit, ports, airports, the electric grid, and water systems-- and invests in communities that have too often been left behind. The IIJA centers around the creation of good union jobs so that our economy can grow sustainably and equitably for all--and for the first time ever includes labor standards on federal broadband funding. This means that the IIJA presents a major opportunity for us to secure good union jobs for CWA members and grow our union.

Major provisions of the legislation include, but are not limited to:

  • $65 billion to help ensure that every American has access to reliable high-speed internet through a historic investment in broadband infrastructure deployment.
  • $55 billion to expand access to clean drinking water for households, businesses, schools, and child care centers;
  • $110 billion in additional funding to repair our roads and bridges and support major, transformational transportation projects;
  • $89.9 billion in guaranteed funding for public transit over the next five years;
  • $17 billion in port infrastructure and waterways and $25 billion in airports to address repair and maintenance backlogs, reduce congestion and emissions near ports and airports, and drive electrification and other low-carbon technologies;
  • $7.5 billion to build out a national network of EV chargers in the United States;
  • $65 billion to upgrade our power infrastructure, by building thousands of miles of new, resilient transmission lines to facilitate the expansion of renewables and clean energy, while lowering costs;
  • $50 billion to protect against droughts, heat, floods and wildfires, in addition to a major investment in weatherization.

The $65 billion in funding for broadband in the IIJA supports the expansion and affordability of broadband by investing:

  • $42.5 billion in block grants for states, territories and the District of Columbia to deploy affordable, high-speed networks and support a range of initiatives to bridge the digital divide;
  • $2 billion of additional support for rural communities administered through the Department of Agriculture;
  • $2 billion in block grants for the Tribal Broadband Connectivity Program, which will be made available to entities for broadband deployment as well as for digital inclusion, workforce development, telehealth and distance learning;
  • $1 billion to create the Enabling Middle Mile Broadband Infrastructure Program, a program for the construction, improvement or acquisition of middle-mile infrastructure -- The “middle mile” is a backbone fiber network that connects major arteries and enables “last mile” broadband to the home;
  • $2.75 billion to promote digital inclusion and equity for communities that lack the skills, technologies and support needed to take advantage of broadband connection -- Grants can be used to accelerate the adoption of broadband through digital literacy training, workforce development, devices access programs, and other digital inclusion measures;
  • $14.2 billion to make permanent the FCC’s Affordable Connectivity Fund, building on the Emergency Broadband Benefit, providing $30 monthly  vouchers for low-income families to use toward any internet service plan of their choosing; and
  • $600 million for states to use Private Activity Bonds (PABs) to finance broadband deployment, specifically for projects in rural areas

This is Good for working people.

Vote result:
Passed

YEAs: 69 | NAYs: 30
Legislator Sort descending State Party Vote
Sen. John Hoeven ND Republican Yes
Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith MS Republican No
Sen. James M. Inhofe OK Republican No
Sen. Ron Johnson WI Republican No
Sen. Tim Kaine VA Democrat Yes
Sen. Mark Kelly AZ Democrat Yes
Sen. John Kennedy LA Republican No
Sen. Angus King ME ID ID Yes
Sen. Amy Klobuchar MN Democrat Yes
Sen. James Lankford OK Republican No
Sen. Patrick J. Leahy VT Democrat Yes
Sen. Mike Lee UT Republican No
Sen. Ben Ray Luján NM Democrat Yes
Sen. Cynthia M. Lummis WY Republican No
Sen. Joe Manchin III WV Democrat Yes
Sen. Edward J. Markey MA Democrat Yes
Sen. Roger Marshall KS Republican No
Sen. Mitch McConnell KY Republican Yes
Sen. Robert Menendez NJ Democrat Yes
Sen. Jeff Merkley OR Democrat Yes
2021 Senate Key Votes
  1. Confirmation of Janet Yellen as the Secretary of the Department of Treasury
  2. Freedom to Vote: John R. Lewis Act
  3. NLRB Joint Employer Congressional Review Act
  4. Ending Forced Arbitration of Sexual Assault and Sexual Harassment Act
  5. Equality Act
  6. Protecting the Right to Organize Act - Motion to Recommit
  7. American Rescue Plan Act
  8. Protecting the Right to Organize Act
  9. For the People Act
  10. Protecting the Right to Organize Act
  11. Raise the Wage Act
  12. Families First Coronavirus Response Act
  13. Expanding Access to Capital Act
  14. CARES Act
  15. Confirmation of Nicole Berner to U.S. Circuit Judge for the Fourth Circuit
  16. Families First Coronavirus Response Act
  17. Paycheck Fairness Act
  18. American Rescue Plan Act
  19. For the People Act
  20. Confirmation of Katherine Tai as the United States Trade Representative
  21. Confirmation of Marty Walsh as the Secretary of the Department of Labor
  22. Confirmation of Ketanji Brown Jackson to Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
  23. Paycheck Fairness Act
  24. Default on America Act
  25. Confirmation of Gwynne A. Wilcox to the National Labor Relations Board
  26. Equality Act
  27. Paycheck Fairness Act
  28. For the People Act
  29. John Lewis Voting Rights Advancement Act
  30. CHIPS and Science Act
  31. Confirmation of Jennifer Abruzzo as NLBR General Counsel
  32. Confirmation of Gwynne Wilcox as Member of the NLRB
  33. Confirmation of David Prouty as Member of the NLRB
  34. Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA)
  35. Inflation Reduction Act
  36. DISCLOSE Act
  37. DISCLOSE Act
  38. Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA)
  39. Build Back Better Act (BBB)
  40. CHIPS and Science Act
  41. Inflation Reduction Act
  42. CARES Act