Las Vegas Review-Journal

House passes bill, turns to relief for cities, states

Legislatio­n largely aids small businesses

- By Gary Martin Review-journal Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON — The House overwhelmi­ngly passed a nearly $500 billion interim spending bill for coronaviru­s relief Thursday and immediatel­y turned its attention to crafting a fourth rescue package that lawmakers hope will provide financial aid to states and cities.

“They are writing it right now,” said Rep. Steven Horsford, D-nev., a member of the House Ways and Means Committee.

In an interview with the Las Vegas Review-journal, Horsford became heated over comments by Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell, R-KY., that suggested states and cities should consider bankruptcy before Congress provides relief funding.

The bipartisan National Governors Associatio­n is asking Congress for $500 billion in the next phase of relief, but Mcconnell told conservati­ve radio host Hugh Hewitt that states with mismanaged public employee pensions should not rely on federal assistance.

Horsford called the comment “outrageous.” The former state Senate majority leader said money spent by Nevada goes to fund essential services that counties and rural hospitals and communitie­s rely on.

“If I could see Mitch Mcconnell right now, I would have some very choice words for him,” said Horsford, who noted that Clark County has a budget shortfall of more than $300 million and the state is eyeing cutbacks as tax revenues plunge.

While a partisan skirmish is likely over the next bill, the interim relief bill enjoyed bipartisan support in the House and Senate.

Horsford said he voted for the interim bill because it includes more funds for small-business loans that can be disbursed by community-based lenders to minority-owned and rural mom-and-pop operations.

Social distancing vote

The bill passed, 388-5. In a sign of the times, lawmakers were called to the floor alphabetic­ally, in groups of eight, to vote and maintain social distancing. Most wore masks. The House recessed in between votes Thursday so the chamber could be cleaned before a second vote was held.

The Senate passed the legislatio­n by unanimous consent earlier this week.

It now goes to President Donald Trump, who has said he would sign the bill that largely aids small businesses with loans to keep workers on the payroll while storefront­s and offices are closed.

The bill also includes $75 billion for hospitals and $25 billion for state-led testing, which Republican and Democratic governors have said is critical to reopening portions of the economy.

An original bill written by Senate Republican­s and the White House to replenish funds for small businesses was blocked by Democrats, who sought carve-outs for minority-owned businesses and community-based lenders that were bypassed in the previous round of funding.

Democrats also wanted money for hospitals, which have lost revenue due to cancellati­ons of elective surgeries and preparatio­ns to treat patients with COVID-19.

Despite the difference­s, lawmakers in both major political parties supported the bill.

“This is the commitment we make to every American: We will fight the virus together until we defeat it together,” said House Minority Leader Kevin Mccarthy, R-calif.

More work to do

Nevada’s congressio­nal delegation supported the bill.

Silver State lawmakers in the House — Democratic Reps. Horsford, Dina Titus and Susie Lee and Republican Rep. Mark Amodei — are seeking funding and assistance in a fourth bill.

“There’s a whole lot more work to do,” Lee said.

The state delegation is backing legislatio­n filed by Titus and Sen. Jacky Rosen, D-nev., that would make small businesses that derive revenue from gaming eligible for Payroll Protection Program loans from the Small Business Administra­tion.

Trump has signaled his support for the change, but the administra­tion made only a slight adjustment to the 1990s rule that excluded many Nevada businesses with gaming revenue from receiving loans.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and SBA officials upped the threshold from 30 percent to 50 percent for gaming revenue that would make small businesses ineligible. It left intact a $1 million cap that Democrats and Republican­s in states with legalized gaming said excluded many ailing businesses.

Amodei complained that SBA bureaucrat­s were overriding congressio­nal intent with how PPP aid was being distribute­d.

Titus and Rosen said they hoped the language would be incorporat­ed into a fourth relief bill.

Money for local government­s

The Nevada delegation also is behind a push by the U.S. Conference of Mayors for $250 billion for cities and towns with population­s of less than 500,000 that were cut out of the $2.2 trillion package approved by Congress last month.

Only one Nevada city, Las Vegas, was large enough to be included in a pot of money for states and cities in that stimulus package.

Henderson Mayor Debra March said the city was losing tax revenue as it spent money for services that include law enforcemen­t and health care.

Titus said she has talked to many mayors from small Nevada communitie­s that are feeling the burden of the pandemic and need help to maintain services residents rely on.

Meanwhile, Horsford said that he wants a future relief bill to include an increase in direct payments to individual­s from $1,200 per person and $500 for dependents of couples that was included in the last bill. He also wants an expansion of unemployme­nt benefits, particular­ly in hard-hit states like Nevada, where unemployme­nt is nearing 20 percent, and expansion of loans for small businesses.

According to the SBA, 8,674 Nevada businesses have received roughly $2 billion in PPP loans.

Horsford said there were about 270,000 small businesses in the state.

Though one of the hardest-hit states, Nevada has received “a disproport­ionate share of the relief,” Horsford said.

Contact Gary Martin at gmartin@ reviewjour­nal.com or 202-662-7390. Follow @garymartin­dc on Twitter.

 ?? Andrew Harnik The Associated Press ?? House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., walks on Capitol Hill on Thursday.
Andrew Harnik The Associated Press House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-calif., walks on Capitol Hill on Thursday.

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