Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wisconsin would receive $5.5B under COVID-19 bill

- Patrick Marley

MADISON - Wisconsin and its local government­s would receive $5.5 billion in federal help to fight COVID-19 and its economic toll — far more than what they got last year — under legislatio­n recently approved by the U.S. House.

The state would receive $3.2 billion and Wisconsin local government­s would receive $2.3 billion in help, according to estimates from the House Committee on Oversight and Reform. Virtually every local government in Wisconsin would receive aid under the proposal approved Saturday, with Milwaukee receiving $406 million and Waukesha County receiving $78

million.

Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett backs the proposal and said he believed it could win public support because it will help communitie­s around the state.

“Our priorities are housing, health, infrastruc­ture, public safety,” Barrett said. “We certainly have a lot of needs and a lot of pressure that were created both during the pandemic and before then.”

How much states and local government­s receive could change because the Senate is likely to alter the bill — perhaps substantia­lly. Both houses are controlled by Democrats but they have differed on the details of the stimulus package championed by President Joe Biden.

An influx of federal aid to Wisconsin could shake up deliberati­ons over the state budget that are just getting underway.

Last year the state received about $2 billion in federal help to deal with the effects of COVID-19, and Democratic Gov. Tony Evers had broad leeway on how to spend it. Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e expressed frustratio­n that they didn’t have a say in how he spent it.

Now, Evers would have responsibi­lity for even more money. But the funds would arrive just as Republican lawmakers carve up the two-year budget Evers proposed last month.

Republican­s have said they believe his $91 billion plan spends too much money and have promised to pare back a number of his proposals, including $1 billion in tax increases.

The $1.9 trillion stimulus package approved by the House would give states and local government­s $350 billion that they could allocate as they saw fit. Hundreds of billions of dollars in additional aid would flow into specific programs that the states help run, such as unemployme­nt aid and food assistance.

Wisconsin communitie­s of all sizes would get help under the House bill, with the most populous ones receiving the most.

Milwaukee would receive $406 million, Milwaukee County $183 million, Dane County $106 million, Waukesha County $78 million, Brown County $51 million, Madison $49 million and Racine $47 million.

Midsize and small municipali­ties would receive help, too. For instance, Brookfield would receive $3.9 million, Oconomowoc $1.7 million, West Milwaukee $405,000 and tiny Butternut in northern Wisconsin would receive $35,000.

Democrats have praised the proposal while Republican­s have bashed it.

“The House of Representa­tives has passed the#AmericanRe­scuePlan —a new #COVID19 package that has broad support across our state and is desperatel­y needed as we continue to fight this pandemic,” Evers tweeted this week. “I hope the Senate acts quickly to pass this bill and send it to the president’s desk.”

All House Republican­s voted against the package.

U.S Rep. Mike Gallagher, a Republican from Green Bay, called the bill a bailout for Democratic states and referred to it as a “liberal wish list poorly disguised as coronaviru­s relief.” Likewise, U.S. Rep. Bryan Steil, a Republican from Janesville, raised concerns about how much money would go to the states.

“The Biden Bailout Bill includes $350 billion to bail out fiscally irresponsi­ble states like Illinois and only a fraction of the total funding will go towards coronaviru­s relief,” he said in a statement.

U.S. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, a Madison Democrat, took a shot at Republican­s like Steil for making such arguments.

“The fact that Wisconsin Republican­s in the House oppose this support for a ‘blue state’ like Wisconsin shows that they are more interested in playing partisan politics when we should be doing everything we can to deliver help for our state and local communitie­s,” she said in a statement.

And during a virtual news conference with other Democratic senators, Baldwin stressed that all states would get help.

“We’re doing that universall­y throughout the country — doesn’t matter if the state (is) red, purple or blue,” she said.

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