Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

What airlines, other industries get in relief bill

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At a mind-numbing 5,593 pages, Congress’ $900 billion pandemic relief package covers a lot of ground. The bill passed Monday establishe­s a temporary $300 per week supplement­al jobless benefit, a $600 direct stimulus payment to most Americans and a new round of subsidies for hard-hit businesses, restaurant­s and theaters.

It also provides $82 billion for education, $10 billion for child care and $25 billion in rental assistance. Food stamp benefits would temporaril­y be increased by 15%.

The longest piece of legislatio­n in U.S. history also has numerous cleanenerg­y provisions sought by Democrats with fossil fuel incentives favored by Republican­s, $7 billion to increase access to broadband, $4 billion to help other nations vaccinate their people, $14 billion for cash-starved transit systems, $1 billion for Amtrak and $2 billion for airports and concession­aires.

Here’s a look at what some industries are getting in the bill, which President Donald Trump is expected to sign in the coming days.

Airlines

The airline industry, which was crushed in the spring and summer as people shunned travel because of the virus outbreak, got $15 billion and an extension of its Payroll Support Program from the previous rescue bill in March. The money must be used to pay employees’ salaries, wages and benefits and the airlines are required to recall furloughed employees who were let go in October, when the previous payroll support program expired. Tens of thousands of airline workers will likely return to work soon.

Arts and entertainm­ent

Live venues and theaters, which have been shut down or limited to a fraction of their regular capacity since March, are also getting $15 billion. The bill lists eligible businesses as live venue operators or promoters, theatrical producers, live performing arts organizati­on operators, museum operators, and movie theater operators. The live entertainm­ent industry has been one of the hardest hit by the pandemic, with many storied venues already shutting down for good. Businesses desperatel­y need the funds as they are likely to remain closed in most places through winter as infections remain elevated.

Restaurant­s

There’s no specific provision in the bill for restaurant­s, but they can benefit more than before from the Paycheck Protection Program.

For example, restaurant­s can tap into the PPP a second time at 3.5x monthly payroll. This compares with 2.5x for other industries. Eligibilit­y puts a 300employe­e cap per restaurant location, compared with a 300 allocation cap for other industries. Tax deductions include certain business expenses paid with PPP loans, such as payroll, rent, mortgage interest, utilities and other allowable expenses. This applies to either a first draw or a second draw PPP loan.

The Work Opportunit­y Tax Credit is being extended by five years, supporting restaurant­s that hire, train, and keep employees from target groups. Business meals will be fully deductible next year and in 2022, which is double the previous deductible amount.

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