Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Newsom administra­tion gave far less relief cash to smaller communitie­s

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

Gov. Gavin Newsom’s finance department may have shortchang­ed some California communitie­s in distributi­ng federal COVID-19 relief funds, according to a state audit released Tuesday that criticized both the implementa­tion and outcome of a process that was supposed to fairly divvy up the money on a perperson basis.

The report issued by

State Auditor Elaine

Howle concluded that the methodolog­y used by the Newsom administra­tion was overly generous to 16 counties, “resulting in them receiving nearly double the total per person amount of [federal] funding” compared with California’s 42 other counties. The audit recommends that if state officials are again tasked by Congress with the job this year, they “should more equitably distribute that future Covid-19-related funding.”

Auditors also found shortcomin­gs in the process used by the Governor’s Office of Emergency Services to determine whether cities had defied state public health orders and should be stripped of their share of COVID-19 relief funds. The agency “could not demonstrat­e that it used a consistent process for conducting such evaluation” of all of the state’s 476 cities, auditors wrote in their report.

H.D. Palmer, a spokesman for the governor’s budget staff, said all funds were distribute­d as required under the budget signed by Newsom in June.

“If the Auditor’s office has concerns over this process, they should take their policy recommenda­tions directly to the Legislatur­e – which voted to approve the specific mechanism that governed our actions,” Palmer said.

How funds are shared between state and local government­s could be a key component of relief efforts this year in Sacramento and Washington. Presidente­lect Joe Biden unveiled a $1.9-trillion assistance program last week that includes significan­t help for state and local government­s struggling to pay for pandemic response programs while also still providing traditiona­l services. The state’s current budget was drafted with the hope that as much as $14 billion in additional relief would arrive for state programs – an expectatio­n that fizzled after opposition by congressio­nal Republican­s to the idea.

The relief package signed into law by President Trump last spring earmarked $15.3 billion for government assistance in California.

The state’s most populous cities and counties received $5.8 billion of that amount directly from the federal government. State officials were given the task of handing out the remaining $9.5 billion and the Legislatur­e adopted a budget that allocated almost half of that amount to public schools with the next largest portion directed toward reimbursin­g state government COVID-19 expenses.

Auditors focused their investigat­ion on the $1.8 billion that state officials shared with all California cities and counties. Their report is critical of the methodolog­y used by Newsom’s finance team to determine how much each community would receive. The audit found that federal coronaviru­s relief for 16 of the state’s most populous counties totaled at least $190 per resident – a combinatio­n of what they received directly from Washington and what was subsequent­ly rationed out by state officials – while 42 counties with fewer residents received only $102 per person.

The audit finds fault with an explanatio­n provided by the California Department of Finance that large counties had higher virus transmissi­on rates and therefore needed more money, pointing out the dire pandemic conditions in places such as Imperial County and Kings County.

“Based on the COVID-19 case data for all counties, the needs of many small counties, as reflected in case rates, were at least the same if not greater than the needs of large counties, which is contrary to Finance’s reason for allocating additional state [federal relief] funds to the large counties,” auditors wrote.

Using population data and recommenda­tions from the federal government issued last year, the auditors estimated that California’s less populous counties should have received $77 more per person in relief funds.

The audit released Tuesday also found little clarity in how state officials chose which communitie­s to sanction for the enactment of local rules in apparent defiance of California public health orders.

In July, Newsom’s emergency services director told elected officials in the Central Valley cities of Atwater and Coalinga that they would need to “rescind” resolution­s allowing all businesses to remain open – and that failure to so would mean the cities would forfeit their share of coronaviru­s relief funds. Neither city did so and the state blocked $212,358 earmarked for Coalinga and $387,428 for Atwater. The money was later spent by the state on coronaviru­s testing programs in those communitie­s.

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? A CORE worker, using a grabber, passes a COVID-19 self-test kit to a participan­t at the Hansen Dam Recreation Center test site in Sylmar on July 14, 2020.
Los Angeles Times/tns A CORE worker, using a grabber, passes a COVID-19 self-test kit to a participan­t at the Hansen Dam Recreation Center test site in Sylmar on July 14, 2020.

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