Starkville Daily News

Lawmakers earmark $1.25 billion in CARES money for schools, businesses, health care, unemployme­nt

- By GEOFF PENDER

Before ending their 2020 session – for now – lawmakers late Wednesday night finalized spending $1.25 billion in federal coronaviru­s relief funds.

The Legislatur­e earmarked the spending for small business grants, internet access in rural areas and computers to help schools provide distance learning in the pandemic, and to reimburse hospitals, cities, colleges and other institutio­ns for pandemic-related expenses.

Gov. Tate Reeves did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Thursday or indicate whether he would sign off on the Legislatur­e’s CARES Act spending.

The Legislatur­e’s earmarking of the funds comes after a heated battle between Reeves and the Legislatur­e over control of the federal coronaviru­s relief spending. Reeves said that emergency spending should be controlled by the governor, and cited precedent including federal Hurricane Katrina relief. Lawmakers said control of state spending is the constituti­onal duty of the Legislatur­e.

For now, lawmakers have prevailed. The Legislatur­e’s spending plan passed Wednesday night provides Reeves with $50 million in a “discretion­ary fund” he will control.

The largest block of CARES Act spending, which lawmakers had already approved in May, is $300 million for small businesses. This spending is well underway, with $240 million going for grants up to $25,000 each for qualified businesses with less than 50 employees. Another $60 million went for quick, emergency grants of $2,000 to about 30,000 small businesses.

“We believe that getting Mississipp­i’s economy back starts with small businesses,” House Speaker Philip Gunn said of the business grant program. Lt. Gov. Delbert

Hosemann noted that Mississipp­i was one of the first state’s to get CARES Act relief money out to small businesses.

Lawmakers directed nearly $182 million of the CARES Act money to the state’s unemployme­nt trust fund, to cover unpreceden­ted payment of unemployme­nt benefits to Mississipp­ians during the pandemic shutdown. Gov. Reeves has warned lawmakers that failure to adequately fill the fund – he estimated about $500 million may be needed – would result in an automatic tax increase to businesses who pay into the fund when they can least afford it.

To address concerns about increased costs for businesses, lawmakers temporaril­y changed laws so that large unemployme­nt rates caused by the pandemic would not force businesses to pay extra for now.

The CARES Act spending faces a deadline of the end of the year to be spent under federal guidelines. The Legislatur­e

included a caveat that any unspent money by late in the year will go to the unemployme­nt trust fund.

For some of the CARES Act earmarks, state contractin­g and purchasing rules were reduced, to hasten spending the money as “emergency contracts” by the federal deadline. Some lawmakers questioned whether this is a recipe for trouble.

“I understand that falls under emergency spending, and it has to be fast-tracked,” said Rep. Jerry Turner, Rbaldwyn, who has been a champion of contractin­g and purchasing reform. “But I can tell you, any time you limit accountabi­lity and transparen­cy and limit competitiv­e (bidding), there’s an opportunit­y for misuse. I understand the need for fasttracki­ng, but I would much rather it be different.”

Sen. John Polk, R-hattiesbur­g, another lawmaker who has led contractin­g reform, was successful in ensuring the CARES spending comes under emergency purchasing regulation, as opposed to being totally exempt from state requiremen­ts. Polk said he believes claims that following state purchasing and contractin­g requiremen­ts would slow things down too much to be spurious.

“The way they were initially worded would have allowed any agency head to buy anything they wanted for any price,” Polk said.

A breakdown of the $1.25 billion in CARES Act spending approved by the Legislatur­e:

Small business grant program: $300 million Governor’s discretion­ary fund: $50 million Broadband access:

$75 million

Health care: $129.7 million. This includes $80 million for hospitals, and nearly $50 million for other health providers and nonprofits, including food pantries.

Mississipp­i Emergency Management Agency: $40 million

Cities and counties:

$70 million

Correction­s: $20 million Tourism: $15 million K-12 Distance learning: $150 million

K-12 Internet connectivi­ty: $50 million Universiti­es: $50 million Community colleges:

$50 million

Private schools and colleges: $10 million Workforce developmen­t: $55 million

Elections: $1 million Courts and judiciary:

$2.5 million Unemployme­nt trust fund: $181.8 million Lawmakers on Wednesday night also finalized most of a $6 billion state budget. But because of disagreeme­nt over spending $52 million in federal Gulf restoratio­n money, they left without passing a budget for the Department of Marine Resources. They are likely to come back into session in coming days to address the DMR budget.

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