Albany Times Union

Senate tackles relief bill

Package includes health insurance subsidy, school aid

- By Alan Fram

The Senate voted by the slimmest of margins Thursday to begin debating a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill, after Democrats made eleventh-hour changes aimed at ensuring they could pull President Joe Biden’s top legislativ­e priority through the precarious­ly divided chamber.

Democrats were hoping for Senate approval of the package before next week. They were encounteri­ng opposition from Republican­s arguing that the measure’s massive price tag ignored promising signs that the pandemic and wounded economy were turning around.

Democratic leaders made over a dozen late additions to their package, reflecting their need to cement unanimous support from all their senators — plus Vice President Kamala Harris’ tie-breaking vote — to succeed in the 50-50 chamber. It’s widely expected the Senate will approve the bill and the House will whisk it to Biden for his signature by mid-march, handing him a crucial early legislativ­e victory.

The Senate’s 51-50 vote to start debating the package, with Harris pushing Democrats over the top, underscore­d how they were navigating the package through Congress with virtually no margin for error.

The bill, aimed at battling the killer virus and nursing the staggered economy back to health, will provide direct payments of up to $1,400 to most Americans. There’s also money for COVID-19 vaccines and testing, aid to state and local government­s, help for schools and the airline industry, tax breaks for lower-earners and families with children, and subsidies for health insurance.

The new provisions offered items appealing to all manner of Democrats. Progressiv­es got money boosting feeding programs, federal subsidies for health care for workers who lose jobs, tax-free student loans, and money for public broadcasti­ng and consumer protection investigat­ions.

Moderates won funds for rural health care, language assuring minimum amounts of money for smaller states and a prohibitio­n on states receiving aid using the windfalls to cut taxes.

Even with the late revisions, there was a good chance lawmakers will make yet another one and vote to pare back the bill’s $400 weekly emergency unemployme­nt benefits to $300.

That potential change could also extend those emergency payments another month, through September.

 ?? Anna Moneymaker / New York Times ?? Sen. Ron Johnson, R-wis, with President Joe Biden’s nearly $2 trillion stimulus bill moving toward passage, brought proceeding­s to a halt Thursday by demanding that Senate clerks recite the 628-page plan word by word.
Anna Moneymaker / New York Times Sen. Ron Johnson, R-wis, with President Joe Biden’s nearly $2 trillion stimulus bill moving toward passage, brought proceeding­s to a halt Thursday by demanding that Senate clerks recite the 628-page plan word by word.

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