Stamford Advocate

Essential workers can apply for pandemic bonuses

- By Keith M. Phaneuf CTMIRROR.ORG

Health care workers, grocery store employees and other private-sector employees who staffed vital services during the first two years of the coronaviru­s pandemic can begin applying for up to a $1,000 bonus from the state.

Comptrolle­r Natalie Braswell’s office opened the Premium Pay portal on its website Friday. And while applicants can begin filing now, a formal launch will be announced next week.

But it won’t be clear until early October whether applicants will receive as much as $1,000. That’s because legislator­s and Gov. Ned Lamont allocated just $30 million for the program, and labor advocates predict that will be too little to cover all qualified workers adequately.

“Connecticu­t’s essential workers have gone above and beyond during the pandemic to keep our state safe and running,” Braswell said Friday. “This new Premium Pay program is another way for us to return the favor. I look forward to officially launching the program next week and encourage every eligible worker to apply. For these funds to truly be meaningful, every essential worker needs to know they’re available. I’m hoping other government officials, employers, advocacy groups and everyday citizens will help us spread the word so we can get every worker the assistance and relief they deserve.”

To be eligible, an applicant must have worked between March 10, 2020 and May 7, 2022 in one of the occupation­s from categories “1A” or “1B” of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s vaccinatio­n priority lists.

Some of the front-line workers in these categories include health care personnel, food and agricultur­al workers, manufactur­ing workers, grocery store staff, public transit workers, teachers and child care personnel.

Eligible applicants must earn less than $150,000 per year and cannot be employed by a federal, state or municipal government entity.

Full-time workers who earn less than $100,000 can apply for a $1,000 grant. Those earning more than $100,000 but less than $150,000 are eligible for grants on a sliding scale, ranging as low as $200.

Part-timers — working less than 30 hours per week — can apply for a $500 grant.

The applicatio­n period will run until Oct. 1, and the goal is to process requests within a 60-day window, according to Braswell’s office.

On or around Oct. 1, the comptrolle­r also must make a determinat­ion whether grants will be reduced, on a proportion­al basis, in the event demand exceeds available funds.

That potential reduction, which was stipulated by the legislatur­e, is of great concern to labor advocates who argue the program already is far too frugal.

Rep. Robyn Porter, DNew Haven, has called $30 million “a drop in bucket,” especially when compared to the $500 million neighborin­g Massachuse­tts has set aside for front line workers.

“We believe that anyone who took on a risk during the pandemic should be compensate­d for the risk,” Connecticu­t AFL-CIO President Ed Hawthorne told the CT Mirror earlier this summer. The approved $30 million “probably won’t be enough. We hope that the governor and the General Assembly will recognize that.”

Up to 5% of the $30 million can be used for administra­tive costs, leaving at least $28.5 million for grants.

If Connecticu­t ends up awarding an average grant of $500 — which would match the flat grant Massachuse­tts is providing essential workers — it would allow Connecticu­t to provide roughly 57,000 grants.

But the Bay State program already sent payments to 480,000 people in March and another 330,000 in May, according to the commonweal­th’s Executive Office of Administra­tion and Finance.

The Massachuse­tts plan does cover both public- and private-sector workers, but labor advocates here say $30 million just for Connecticu­t’s private sector is far less generous.

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