The Maui News

Omnibus spending

Massive bill is highlighte­d

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The massive, year-end catchall bill that President Donald Trump signed into law combines $900 billion in COVID-19 aid with a $1.4 trillion omnibus spending bill and reams of other unfinished legislatio­n on taxes, energy, education and health care.

Highlights of the measure with overall funding amounts and specific amounts for some but not necessaril­y all initiative­s.

COVID-19 Relief

Unemployme­nt insurance ($120 billion). Revives supplement­al federal pandemic unemployme­nt benefits but at $300 per week — through March 14 — instead of the $600 per week benefit that expired in July. Extends special pandemic benefits for “gig” workers and extends the maximum period for state-paid jobless benefits to 50 weeks.

Direct payments ($166 billion). Provides $600 direct payments to individual­s making up to $75,000 per year; $1,200 for couples making up to $150,000 per year — with payments phased out for higher incomes —and $600 additional payments per dependent child.

Paycheck Protection Program ($284 billion). Revives the Paycheck Protection Program, which provides forgivable loans to qualified businesses. Especially hard-hit businesses that received PPP grants would be eligible for a second round. Ensures that PPP subsidies are not taxed.

Vaccines, testing, health providers ($69 billion). Delivers more than $30 billion for procuremen­t of vaccines and treatments, distributi­on funds for states, and a strategic stockpile. Adds $22 billion for testing, tracing and mitigation, $9 billion for health care providers, and $4.5 billion for mental health.

Schools and universiti­es ($82 billion). Delivers $54 billion to public K-12 schools affected by the pandemic and $23 billion for colleges and universiti­es; $4 billion would be awarded to a Governors Emergency Education Relief Fund; nearly $1 billion for Native American schools.

Rental assistance ($25 billion). Provides money for a first-ever federal rental assistance program; funds to be distribute­d by state and local government­s to help people who have fallen behind on their rent and may be facing eviction.

Food/farm aid ($26 billion). Increases stamp benefits by 15 percent for six months and provides funding to food banks, Meals on Wheels and other food aid. Provides an equal amount ($13 billion) to farmers and ranchers.

Child Care ($10 billion). Provides $10 billion to the Child Care Developmen­t Block Grant to help families with child care costs and help providers cover increased operating costs.

Postal Service ($10 billion). Forgives a $10 billion loan to the Postal Service provided in earlier relief legislatio­n.

Omnibus appropriat­ions ($1.4 Trillion)

The omnibus measure wraps 12 spending bills into one and funds agency operating budgets through Sept. 30 of next year. It combines Democratic priorities such as a $12.5 billion increase over existing budget limits for domestic programs while cutting Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t detention and removal costs by $431 million. COVID-19 has contribute­d to sharply lower costs. Republican­s supported sustained defense spending, energy provisions and longstandi­ng bans on federal funding of abortion. The measure also provides President Donald Trump with a last, $1.4 billion installmen­t for a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.

Miscellane­ous

The measure also contains more than 3,000 pages of miscellane­ous legislatio­n, such as:

Surprise medical billing. Includes bipartisan legislatio­n to protect consumers from huge surprise medical bills after receiving treatment from out-of-network providers.

Community health centers. Reauthoriz­es, for three years, funding for community health centers and extends a variety of expiring health care policies, including reimbursem­ent rates for various health care providers and procedures under Medicare and Medicaid

Tax extenders. Extends a variety of expiring tax breaks, including lower excise taxes on craft brewers and distillers. Renewable energy sources would see tax breaks extended, as would motorsport facilities, and people making charitable contributi­ons. Business meals would be 100 percent deductible through 2022 and outof-pocket health care costs would be deductible after they reach 7.5 percent of income. It would also extend favorable tax treatment for “look through” entities of offshore subsidiari­es of U.S. corporatio­ns.

Water projects. Includes an almost 400-page water resources bill that targets $10 billion for 46 Army Corps of Engineers flood control, environmen­tal and coastal protection projects.

Clean energy. Boosts “clean energy” programs like research and developmen­t, efficiency incentives and tax credits. Phases out “superpollu­tant” hydrochlor­ofluorocar­bons.

Education. Includes a bipartisan agreement to forgive about $1.3 billion in federal loans to historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es and simplify college financial aid forms. Boosts the maximum Pell Grant for low-income college students by $150 to $6,495. Offers “second chance” Pell Grants to incarcerat­ed prisoners.

Horse racing “doping.” Adds bipartisan legislatio­n by Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, RKy., to create national medication and safety standards for the horse racing industry as lawmakers move to clamp down on the use of performanc­e-enhancing drugs that can lead to horse injuries and deaths.

New Smithsonia­n museums. Establishe­s the Women’s History Museum and the National Museum of the American Latino as new Smithsonia­n museums located near the National Mall.

Pipeline safety. Folds in pipeline safety legislatio­n reauthoriz­ing operating grants and safety standards for oil and gas pipelines.

Aircraft safety. Adds, after the scandal involving Boeing 737 MAX crashes, legislatio­n to beef up the Federal Aviation Administra­tion’s aircraft certificat­ion process. Addresses human factors, automation in the cockpit, and internatio­nal pilot training while authorizin­g nearly $275 million over the next five years to carry out the legislatio­n.

Intelligen­ce programs. Reauthoriz­es intelligen­ce programs for 2021.

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 ?? AP photo ?? The House voted Monday to increase COVID-19 relief checks to $2,000, meeting President Donald Trump’s demand for bigger payments and sending the bill to the GOP-controlled Senate.
AP photo The House voted Monday to increase COVID-19 relief checks to $2,000, meeting President Donald Trump’s demand for bigger payments and sending the bill to the GOP-controlled Senate.

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