Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Lawmakers’ delay on virus relief bill cost state $25M

Sessions not scheduled despite consensus

- Molly Beck

MADISON - Wisconsin lost out on $25 million in federal funding to help pay for unemployme­nt benefits during the coronaviru­s pandemic because Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e didn’t act quickly enough, according to the state’s workforce agency.

The missed funding comes as the state Department of Workforce Developmen­t released projection­s showing the state fund that will cover that $25 million and billions more in unemployme­nt payments could be depleted as early as October.

Federal relief legislatio­n passed in late March known as the CARES Act included provisions that would reimburse states for unemployme­nt benefits as long as the state did not require the jobless to wait one week before they could receive aid.

Wisconsin lawmakers passed a state relief package in mid-April that suspended the state’s one-week waiting period and sought to take advantage of the federal reimbursem­ents by including a provision that covered benefits retroactiv­ely, to early March.

It was initially unclear whether the federal legislatio­n would honor a retroactiv­e provision in state legislatio­n and provide reimbursem­ent for benefits paid before lawmakers acted, but GOP legislativ­e leaders were warned of the possibilit­y it wouldn’t be by Democratic members in the state’s federal delegation in a letter dated April 3.

All along, Wisconsin lawmakers and Gov. Tony Evers agreed the state’s one-week waiting period should be suspended — a rare consensus made soon after Evers declared a public health emergency in early March when the virus began to spread in Wisconsin.

Evers proposed a $700 million package to GOP legislativ­e leaders on March 21, which included suspension of the one-week waiting period.

But GOP legislativ­e leaders didn’t schedule floor sessions to pass the legislatio­n until the week of April 13, two

weeks after the federal CARES Act was passed.

“Within those two weeks, the federal government will not reimburse us,” DWD spokesman Ben Jedd said Thursday.

Kit Beyer, spokeswoma­n for Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, said lawmakers drafted the state relief package to apply retroactiv­ely because it was their understand­ing that the federal government would provide the reimbursem­ent if the state eliminated the one-week waiting period and entered into an agreement with the federal government, which DWD Secretary Caleb Frostman signed on March 28.

Beyer said the Evers administra­tion through DWD “got the federal parameters on reimbursem­ent on April 30 but has made no move to pursue the federal reimbursem­ent we believe we’re entitled to.”

The regional office of the U.S. Department of Labor told DWD on April 20 the CARES Act did not allow Wisconsin to receive the reimbursem­ent for benefits paid before the state relief package

“We truly believe that there is a way to move this state forward and protect the health and safety of our citizens while also keeping an eye on the economic reality that so many are facing.” Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke

was signed into law, according to

Jedd.

Department of Labor officials told state officials the state’s agreement with the department did not take effect until the waiting period was repealed and the state workforce department was paying benefits, he said.

“This is one of the many reasons that the governor urged the legislatur­e to act quickly and without delay,” Evers’ spokeswoma­n Melissa Baldauff said in a statement.

Fitzgerald and Vos said at the time they wanted to wait until the CARES Act was signed by President Donald Trump before acting on state legislatio­n to ensure the state wasn’t on the hook for massive spending it couldn’t pay for.

The state relief package and floor sessions were ultimately introduced and scheduled just a few days before the state would have lost out on hundreds of millions of dollars to pay for Medicaid-related costs, leaving little time to make changes to the bill. By that time Wisconsin was one of only a few states that had not acted to provide relief for the sick and unemployed during the pandemic.

As of Wednesday, the unemployme­nt insurance trust fund stood at more than $1.9 billion, but due to a flood of claims, the trust is at risk of running dry this year if the current rate of claims continues — putting more pressure on Evers to consider allowing more people to go back to work.

Evers said in an appearance Thursday on WTMJ-AM (620) that he envisions the state to be in a better spot to reopen more businesses by May 26, when his order to stay home expires — restrictio­ns that have forced scores of businesses to close.

Republican lawmakers held news conference­s in Appleton, Chippewa Falls and Wausau Thursday to urge Evers to lift restrictio­ns in regions where fewer cases of the virus exist.

“We truly believe that there is a way to move this state forward and protect the health and safety of our citizens while also keeping an eye on the economic reality that so many are facing,” Assembly Majority Leader Jim Steineke, R-Kaukauna, told reporters at Lamers Dairy in Appleton.

About 300,000 claims are being made a week for unemployme­nt insurance, about 194% higher than the number of claims made in the first year of the Great Recession, according to the DWD. If that level of claims continues for the next several months, the fund would run dry by Oct. 11, according to department projection­s.

If the claims slow, the fund wouldn’t likely be exhausted until about a year later.

Jedd said at that point, the state could borrow from the federal government to ensure benefits are paid no matter what happens to the state fund.

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