Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Supplies, meals provided to kids

Report breaks down how $538M in CARES Act funds were spent

- By Jeff Horseman jhorseman@scng.com

Test kits, hospital supplies, office renovation­s, hot meals, emergency housing and laptops for schoolchil­dren were among the items Riverside County bought with $538 million in federal coronaviru­s relief funding.

A report on today’s Board of Supervisor­s agenda outlines how the county used its allocation of CARES Act money. The funding, approved by Congress and signed by President Donald Trump in March 2020, was part of a $2.2 trillion stimulus bill that came at the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic in the United States.

As America’s 10th most-populous county, Riverside County received $431 million directly from the CARES Act. Another $56 million was funneled through the state and $51 million came from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Here’s a breakdown of how the $531 million was spent:

• The biggest chunk — $376.4 million or roughly 70% — went to what the county calls “response and preparatio­n.”

This includes the purchase of personal protective equipment, county hospital supplies, coronaviru­s testing supplies and lab costs, vaccine-related costs, contact tracing expenses, renovating county buildings for social distancing and 1.3 million meals for seniors provided by restaurant­s through the Great Plates program.

The category also includes $7 million for Project Roomkey, which paid for emergency housing for more than 900 homeless people, about a third of whom later moved into permanent housing.

• $54.7 million — 10% — went to “housing and workforce solutions.” This includes $30 million to help more than 5,700 households avoid eviction and $11 million to help children with distance learning, including the purchase of laptops and internet hotspots.

• $53.6 million — 10% — went to “business and community services.” Most of this helped struggling small businesses stay open. More than 5,000 businesses received grants through this effort.

• $31 million — 6% — paid for equipment, training, testing and cleaning costs in congregate care facilities such as nursing homes.

• $22.7 million — 4% — supported 17 acute-care hospitals in the county.

The county has spent all of its CARES Act money. But it is getting $479 million from the second round of federal COVID-19 relief known as the American Rescue Plan. In general, the county plans to use that money for one-time expenses and constructi­on projects and not for ongoing expenses in the new budget, which takes effect July 1.

As of Monday, Riverside County has recorded more than 632,000 cases of COVID-19. More than 6,500 county residents have died from the virus. About 59% of county residents have received two vaccine doses with 29% receiving booster

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States