Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Wisconsin did see $63 billion in COVID-19 relief, but ...

- D.L. Davis

Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, has clashed for nearly three years with Republican lawmakers over how pandemic aid sent to the state was being spent.

Aid packages passed in 2020 and 2021 under then-President Donald Trump and later under President Joe Biden sent billions upon billions to Wisconsin. Much of that money has been solely controlled by Evers.

As the state grinds through budget season, at least one Republican lawmaker argues it’s that federal aid that has allowed Evers to tout successes, including a $7.1 billion budget surplus, the largest in state history.

“It is easy for Governor Evers to tout historic investment­s and record high surpluses because Wisconsin has seen over 63 billion dollars of federal pandemic-related funding funnel into our state over his tenure,” state Sen. Joan Ballweg, R-Markesan, said in a tweet and news release, issued in response to Evers’ State of the State address. That’s an eye-popping number. Was more than $63 billion in federal pandemic-related funding funnel sent to the state?

Let’s take a look.

Pandemic aid report

When asked for backup, Ballweg’s staff pointed to an April 2022 research report from the Wisconsin Policy Forum, a nonpartisa­n, independen­t statewide policy research organizati­on.

The report, titled “Despite massive influx, Wisconsin lagged most states in pandemic aid,” noted that in Wisconsin, a greater percentage of money was directed to businesses and economic developmen­t than in other states. Then came a paragraph that is relevant here:

“Notably, the federal relief funds detailed above are only a fraction of the total awarded to state and local government­s, businesses, nonprofits, and individual­s in Wisconsin. Over the past two years, the state has been awarded at least $63.99 billion in federal pandemic funding, according to figures compiled by Federal Funds Informatio­n for States and provided by the Wisconsin Department of Administra­tion.”

Jason Stein, vice president and research director of the forum, said the figure cited by Ballweg is being accurately quoted, with a caveat that the report was released last year and “some of the numbers may have changed somewhat.”

But there’s a more important considerat­ion about the claim.

Ballweg leaves the impression that the pandemic relief money went largely to the state itself, when in reality the vast majority went to other government­s or directly to businesses, families and individual­s.

Tatyana Warrick, communicat­ions director of the state Department of Administra­tion, called the claim misleading.

“A significant share directly assisted recipients — small businesses in the form of Paycheck Protection Program, Economic Injury Disaster Loans and to individual­s with Economic Impact Payments and Federal Pandemic Unemployme­nt Compensati­on,” Warrick said in an email to PolitiFact Wisconsin.

Britt Cudaback, Evers’ communicat­ions director, said only about $5 billion of the federal pandemic-related funding Wisconsin has received was under the sole discretion of the governor to allocate. A Department of Administra­tion spreadshee­t provides a very precise figure: $4,846,838,315.96.

“The total overall federal pandemic relief funds …. also include other funding passed through from the federal government to other government­al units (e.g., cities and counties), for noncompeti­tive grants, for direct individual assistance programs, to administer and implement federal programs or requiremen­ts, and other various investment­s and one-time supplement­s to existing programs as directed by the federal government,” Cudaback said.

The statement

“It is easy for Governor Evers to tout historic investment­s and record high surpluses because Wisconsin has seen over 63 billion dollars of federal pandemic-related funding funnel into our state over his tenure.”

The verdict

The $63 billion in funding is on point, but Evers had direct control over only about $5 billion of that.

Our ruling

Ballweg said: “Wisconsin has seen over 63 billion dollars of federal pandemic-related funding funnel into our state over (Gov. Tony Evers’) tenure.”

While the $63 billion in funding is on point, Evers had direct control over only about $5 billion of that. The rest went to other units of government, or directly to businesses, families and individual­s through various programs.

That said, this money still benefited the state’s economy, by keeping families afloat and people employed during the depths of the pandemic.

For a statement that is accurate but needs clarification or additional informatio­n, our rating is Mostly True.

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