Sentinel & Enterprise

Senate lays out $3.66B relief plan

Much of the bill matches the House’s blueprint

- By Erin Tiernan

A $3.66 billion plan by state senators to spend about half of the remaining federal coronaviru­s relief dollars mirrors many of the priorities laid out in a House bill passed last week.

Senate President Karen Spilka said the Senate proposal would cover “immediate and critical needs” in mental health care, food security, the struggles of small businesses and access to housing while building up the state’s investment­s in local boards of health.

“At this critical juncture, we must not lose sight of the big picture,” Spilka said, plugging the Senate’s “careful planning” in allocating the $5.3 billion in federal aid at the Legislatur­e’s disposal.

The bill, which was released Wednesday afternoon by Senate Ways and Means, proposes to put about $1 billion into health care, $1.7 billion into economic and workforce developmen­t, $600 million into housing and $450 million to combat climate change.

Senators are also seeking to establish commission­s tasked with oversight of the spending to ensure the cash gets distribute­d equitably and reaches those most impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Senate bill comes on the heels of the House passing it’s own $3.82 billion coronaviru­s spending bill that also relies on American Rescue Plan Act cash and surplus tax dollars.

The Senate version includes many of the same spending priorities. Leaders from both branches want to pass the legislatio­n before the looming mid-November recess when lawmakers break for about seven weeks.

As in the House, big ticket items include a proposed $500 million in unemployme­nt insurance relief for businesses and $500 million in bonus pay for essential workers who remained on the job throughout the COVID-19 pandemic.

Qualified public- and private-sector workers who earned up to 300% of the federal poverty limit — or $79,500 for a family of four — during the pandemic will be eligible for the essential worker bonuses. Checks will be cut for $500 to $2,000 depending on how many qualify for the payout, lawmakers said.

Both bills also make $200 million in tax relief available to small business owners who had to pay personal income taxes on previous state and federal relief grants.

The spending would be paid for with a combinatio­n of $2.5 billion in ARPA funds and up to $1.45 billion of surplus tax revenue.

The Senate bill also proposes $400 million for a “mental and behavioral health reserve,” according to the summary, a major priority for Spilka.

Senators can file amendments to the Senate Ways and Means recommenda­tions until Friday. The full Senate will then debate the ARPA spending bill in formal session next Wednesday.

The House passed its $3.82 billion version of surplus/ARPA spending last Friday night, with the bill ultimately growing by about $170 million after lawmakers considerin­g more than 1,000 amendments.

The much-anticipate­d Senate COVID relief spending bill comes five months after the feds deposited nearly $5.3 billion in unrestrict­ed coronaviru­s relief funds for Massachuse­tts and as Gov. Charlie Baker and administra­tion officials have repeatedly pushed legislator­s to get the money out the door quickly.

 ?? Boston herald File ?? senate president Karen spilka says mental health care, food security, housing and small-business help anchor the senate’s relief plan.
Boston herald File senate president Karen spilka says mental health care, food security, housing and small-business help anchor the senate’s relief plan.

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