Call & Times

While asking for more, RI slow to spend virus aid

- By GEOFF MULVIHILL

Many states have yet to spend the federal funding they received more than a month ago to help with soaring costs related to the coronaviru­s crisis, complicati­ng governors’ arguments that they need hundreds of billions more from U.S. ta[payers.

The Associated Press reviewed plans from governors or lawmakers on how they plan to use the money from the coronaviru­s relief bill and found that at least a do]en states have started distributi­ng the money. But far more have not.

The reasons vary. Some governors want permission to use the federal aid to plug budget holes after business closures and stay-at-home orders eroded the ta[ revenue that pays for government operations. 2thers are holding back because they fear a resurgence of the virus could mean another wave of e[penses. And in other states, governors and lawmakers are wrestling over who controls the spending decisions

³If I knew today that another billion dollars was coming to Rhode Island to help solve our budget deficit, I’d spend the . billion now,´ Democratic *ov. *ina Raimondo said about the state’s portion of the money.

2f other states that have started spending the aid, she said ³They’re taking a gamble, and I’m just not ready to do that yet.´

Congress approved billion for state and local government­s in late March as part of a . trillion response to the virus outbreak, and the money was distribute­d within a month.

In May, the +ouse approved an additional trillion aid package, with nearly a third of that dedicated to

state and local government­s. Republican­s say it’s too much and want to move slowly in the Senate, preferring to see how states spend the first batch of money.

“We need to slow down a little bit here, see what works best in the CARES Act, see what mistakes were made, weigh the consequenc­es of having debt this size in terms of the future of our country and then cautiously make a decision about whether there should be another bill,” Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said this past week at a news conference in his home state of Kentucky.

On a call with governors, Vice President Mike Pence said a majority of states had not yet sent money to cities and counties, some of which had to furlough staff as tax revenue dropped sharply. He encouraged them “with great respect” to get money out the door.

The AP survey found that at least 32 states are considerin­g sharing a portion of the federal aid with local government­s.

Governors say more federal help is important because they need to approve balanced budgets before the start of the fiscal year, which for most is July 1. Several states — including California, the most populous — are projecting deficits equal to about 20 of the budgets they proposed before the virus took hold.

They’re warning about deep cuts to K-12 education and other core services, as well as layoffs, furloughs or pay cuts for state workers.

Congress intended for the money to primarily address government­s’ rising costs to respond to the virus outbreak. U.S. Treasury Department guidance says states must use most of it for that purpose, not to make up for lost tax revenue.

The limits were one reason Alabama lawmakers scrapped a proposal to use some of their funding to build a new Capitol building.

“The number one priority is to use the money for revenue replacemen­t,” said Tennessee Finance and Administra­tion Commission­er Butch Eley, who was appointed by Republican Gov. Bill Lee. “But that’s not permitted at

this time.”

In Arizona, Gov. Doug Ducey said he’s giving local government­s leeway on how they spend their allocation­s.

“I don’t like it when the federal government makes governors stand in line and beg, ‘Mother may I?’” the Republican said during a discussion with mayors this week. “And I don’t want to do that to our local leaders, either.”

Some states are using part of their federal aid as reimbursem­ent for the costs of coronaviru­s testing, contact tracing and other health-related costs of the pandemic. Others have plans to replenish fast-depleting unemployme­nt insurance funds, buy more laptops so government employees can work remotely and help schools cover the costs of holding

classes online.

Arkansas and North Dakota have considered using the federal money for hazard pay for front-line workers. North Carolina and Wyoming are using it to start grant or loan programs for businesses. Other states, including New Jersey and Colorado, plan to use it for rental, mortgage or utility assistance.

In some states, such as Texas and Florida, spending decisions aren’t being made quickly because the legislatur­es are out of session. Idaho is holding on to $800 million, or nearly two-thirds of its $1.2 billion allocation, in case of a future wave of coronaviru­s cases.

Elsewhere, how the money is being spent — or even who gets to decide — has created a rift.

The Connecticu­t

Conference

of Municipali­ties blasted Gov. Ned Lamont for using $2 million to pay a consultant for reopening plans while taking longer to send money to cities and counties. Lamont, a Democrat, said help is on the way.

Lawmakers and governors in several states are arguing over who controls the money. In New Hampshire, the disagreeme­nt led to a lawsuit.

Mississipp­i Gov. Tate Reeves, a Republican, said he had the authority to spend the $1.2 billion under a 40-yearold state law. Lawmakers, including the GOP leaders, said the state Constituti­on gives them spending power.

They eventually agreed to cooperate. Since then, Reeves signed a bill adopted by lawmakers that will allocate $300 million to small businesses.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States