Oroville Mercury-Register

Highlights of the relief bill advancing in Congress

- By Kevin Freking

The House is expected to pass a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package late Friday that includes $1,400 checks for most Americans and billions of dollars for schools, state and local government­s and businesses.

Republican­s are overwhelmi­ngly against the bill, raising concerns that the spending is vastly more than necessary and designed to advance policy priorities that go beyond helping Americans get through the pandemic. Democrats and President Joe Biden counter that a robust aid package is necessary to prevent a long and painful recovery from the pandemic.

Democrats are also seeking to raise the minimum wage to $15 an hour by attaching it the COVID relief.

A look at some highlights of the legislatio­n:

More checks

The legislatio­n provides a rebate that amounts to $1,400 for a single taxpayer, or $2,800 for a married couple that files jointly, plus $1,400 per dependent. Individual­s earning up to $75,000 would get the full amount as would married couples with incomes up to $150,000.

The size of the check would shrink for those making slightly more with a hard cut- off at $100,000 for individual­s and $200,000 for married couples.

Some Republican­s want to cut the size of the rebate as well as the pool of Americans eligible for it, but Biden has insisted on $1,400 checks, saying “that’s what the American people were promised.” The new round of checks will cost the government an estimated $422 billion.

Bigger tax break for households with kids

Under current law, most taxpayers can reduce their federal income tax bill by up to $2,000 per child. The package moving through the House would increase the tax break to $3,000 for every child age 6 to 17 and $3,600 for every child under the age of 6.

The legislatio­n also calls for the payments to be delivered monthly instead of in one lump sum. If the secretary of the Treasury determines that isn’t feasible, then the payments are to be made as frequently as possible.

Also, families would get the full credit regardless of how little they make in a year, even just a few hundred dollars, leading to criticism that the changes would serve as a disincenti­ve to work.

Aid to states, cities

The legislatio­n would send $350 billion to state and local government­s and tribal government­s. While Republican­s in Congress have largely objected to this initiative, Biden’s push has some GOP support among governors and mayors.

Many communitie­s have taken hits to their tax base as millions of people have lost their jobs and as people stay home and avoid restaurant­s and stores to prevent getting COVID-19. Many areas have also seen expenses rise as they work to treat the sick and ramp up vaccinatio­ns.

But the impact varies from state to state and from town to town. Critics say the funding is not appropriat­ely targeted and is far more than necessary with billions of dollars allocated last spring to states and communitie­s still unspent.

Aid to schools

The bill calls for $130 billion in additional help to schools for students in kindergart­en through 12th grade. The money would be used to reduce class sizes and modify classrooms to enhance social distancing, install ventilatio­n systems and purchase personal protective equipment. The money could also be used to increase the hiring of nurses, counselors and to provide summer school.

Spending for colleges and universiti­es would be boosted by $40 billion, with the money used to defray an institutio­n’s pandemic-related expenses and to provide emergency aid to students to cover expenses such as food and housing and computer equipment.

Aid to businesses

The bill provides another round of relief for airlines and eligible contractor­s, $15 billion, so long as they refrain from furloughin­g workers or cutting pay through September. It’s the third round of support for airlines.

A new program for restaurant­s and bars hurt by the pandemic would receive $25 billion. The grants provide up to $10 million per entity with a limit of $5 million per physical location. The grants can be used to cover payroll, rent, utilities and other operationa­l expenses.

The bill also provides another $7.25 billion for the Paycheck Protection Program, a tiny fraction of what was allocated in previous legislatio­n. The loans are designed to help borrowers meet their payroll and operating costs and can potentiall­y be forgiven.

Aid to the unemployed

Expanded unemployme­nt benefits from the federal government would be extended, with an increase from $300 a week to $400 a week. That’s on top of what beneficiar­ies are getting through their state unemployme­nt insurance program.

Health care

The bill provides money for key elements of the Biden administra­tion’s COVID-19 response, while also trying to advance longstandi­ng Democratic priorities like increasing coverage under the Obama-era Affordable Care Act.

On “Obamacare,” it dangles a fiscal carrot in front of a dozen states, mainly in the South, that have not yet taken up the law’s Medicaid expansion to cover more low-income adults. Whether such a sweetener would be enough to start wearing down longstandi­ng Republican opposition to Medicaid expansion is uncertain.

The bill provides $ 46 billion to expand federal, state and local testing for COVID-19 and to enhance contract tracing capabiliti­es with new investment­s to expand laboratory capacity and set up mobile testing units.

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