NYAPRS Note: Senate Republicans released their version of a 4th COVID Relief package that includes a $400 cut in unemployment benefits, no funding for hard hit states and localities and no increases in the federal share of Medicaid or funding for mental health and addiction recovery services. The proposal does include another round of direct stimulus payments to individuals and to the Paycheck Protection Program for small businesses, an extension of the eviction moratorium reportedly till December and a continuation of telehealth expansion policies till at least the end of 2021. See below for details.
Look for a statement later this morning that condemning the proposal’s failure to both replenish and boost payments to state and local governments and deny increases to Medicaid and to mental health and addiction recovery services, failures that will only allow the COVID virus to further ravage our communities and threaten the health and lives of vulnerable individuals across New York and the US.
Republican Leaders Release $1 Trillion Coronavirus Stimulus Proposal
By Alayna Treene Axios July 28, 2020
After days of intense debate, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and other Republican leaders rolled out a roughly $1 trillion proposal for the next round of coronavirus relief funding, which has the White House’s seal of approval.
The HEALS Act (Health, Economic Assistance, Liability Protection, Schools) is viewed as a GOP marker for broader negotiations, since both Democrats and some Republicans have expressed dissatisfaction with key aspects of the bill. It’s expected to change significantly in the coming days.
Washington leaders are hopeful they can pass a final bill by mid-August, though that timetable will be extremely difficult given the stark differences in opinion on the substance of the legislation.
The price tag is also expected to increase given that Democrats want a $4 trillion package, despite sharp opposition from deficit hawks like Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Ron Johnson (R-Wis.). GOP leaders have begrudgingly admitted they’ll need to meet Democrats somewhere in the middle.
Key provisions in the Republican proposal, which was released in pieces Monday night:
-
Unemployment benefits will be extended, but at 70% of an individual’s lost wages rather than the $600 weekly benefit Americans were receiving under the CARES Act. Unemployed Americans will receive a $200 flat weekly benefit until states, many of which have outdated systems, are able to calculate the 70% targeted insurance. The $200 weekly benefit is in addition to state unemployment benefits.
-
The Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) will be extended. Small businesses with 300 or fewer employees that show a revenue loss of 50% will be able to apply for a second loan.
-
Stimulus checks will be doled out under the same guidelines as in the CARES Act. Direct payments of $1,200 will be available to individuals with a yearly income of up to $75,000.
-
Back to work child care grants: This is a key White House priority and is seen as a retention benefit for businesses.
-
Schools will get $105 billion, according to Sen. Richard Shelby (R-Ala.). Roughly $70 billion will go toward K-12 (K-12 schools that reopen will get more immediate access to the funds). $30 billion will go toward higher education. $5 billion will be set aside to give governors flexibility. (Democrats want $430 billion for schools and childcare centers.)
-
Widespread liability protection, which covers claims against a defendant caused by “an actual, alleged, feared or potential exposure to coronavirus.” It covers all alleged injuries that arise from conduct taking place between Dec. 1, 2019, and either the end of the coronavirus emergency declaration or Oct. 1, 2024.
-
Billions for coronavirus testing. This is much more than what the White House had initially wanted and more in line with what Senate Republicans pushed for.
-
State and local governments will not receive additional funding. Instead, the bill extends the time frame in which governments can utilize the $150 billion in funding from the CARES Act while also providing more flexibility — allowing some funds to be used to cover revenue shortfalls.
$1.75 billion for a new FBI headquarters in Washington, D.C.