The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

How will Connecticu­t spend nearly $1B in new COVID relief?

- By Keith M. Phaneuf

Fresh off extending Gov. Ned Lamont’s emergency powers, state legislator­s are pressing the governor on how and when he will divvy up nearly $1 billion in new federal relief earmarked for education and housing — and they aren’t alone.

The largest lobbying group for cities and towns also wants to know when more than half of that money — approved by Congress more than a month ago — will go to local school districts.

And behind those questions is another big one:

Can Lamont, whose emergency powers to handle the coronaviru­s pandemic recently were extended until April 20, make those decisions by himself — even though he insists he won’t?

“We should know who has the ability to draw this [federal money] down. We should know the exact time frame — all of that,” said Rep. Toni E. Walker, D-New Haven, co-chair of the budget-writing Appropriat­ions Committee. “We are finding this by going to other sources rather than from the administra­tion, and that is very concerning.”

The committee’s other co-chair, Sen. Cathy Osten, D-Sprague, added, “We should be getting informatio­n out to local school districts so they can properly reset their budget.”

Not long after Congress enacted a $900 billion relief bill on Dec. 21 — which President Trump signed six days later — Connecticu­t learned it included nearly $750 million to support education here, and more than $230 million for affordable housing.

The linchpin of this new money was $492 million for elementary and secondary schools. Another $225 million was earmarked for higher education, and $28 million for emergency education needs identified by the governor.

But since then, the Lamont administra­tion has said little about this.

The administra­tion responds that things aren’t as simple as they seem. Federal guidance for much of this funding wasn’t released until January, and some details didn’t come out until just one week ago. And Paul Mounds Jr.,

Lamont’s chief of staff, said that while the administra­tion isn’t legally compelled to work with legislator­s to craft a funding distributi­on plan, it nonetheles­s has pledged to make it a collaborat­ive process.

“I can tell you this, this administra­tion will be putting forth a [plan] that will take that into account,” he said.

Senate President Pro Tem Martin M. Looney, a New Haven Democrat, said Wednesday that legislativ­e leaders’ decision to endorse extending Lamont’s emergency powers until April 20 was with the understand­ing that all spending decisions must go through the legislatur­e.

“The legislativ­e branch will continue to exercise its constituti­onal and statutory authority to appropriat­e any and all funds distribute­d to the state of Connecticu­t where federal law allows for such discretion,” he said. “We of course will continue to work with Gov. Lamont and his staff over the coming months to draft a budget all sides can agree to.”

But some questioned whether the governor isn’t rushing funds to local school districts now so the administra­tion can grab bigger headlines in a few more weeks.

Lamont will submit his next two-year budget proposal to legislator­s on Feb. 10. And if the rollout plan for this federal money is released then, some say it could give the appearance the Democratic governor — and not Congress — is channeling this muchneeded relief to Connecticu­t’s schools.

“I would be very disappoint­ed if I find out this money is incorporat­ed into his biennial budget proposal — to give the governor personal accolades,” said state House Minority Leader Vincent J. Candelora,

R-North Branford, adding school districts already are developing their budgets for the next fiscal year and already should have received details on what to expect.

Max Reiss, Lamont’s communicat­ions director, responded that the governor has been consistent in protecting education throughout the pandemic.

“The Lamont administra­tion has supported institutio­ns across the state, large and small, through the use of federal funds since the start of the pandemic,” he said. “The approach has been successful, as it’s led to hundreds of thousands of school children having an inperson experience this year. The next round of funds, as prescribed by federal guidance, will focus on continued support for safe in-person learning and to focus on educationa­l recovery and learning accelerati­on for every student.”

But Joe DeLong, executive director of the Connecticu­t Conference of Municipali­ties, said the dearth of immediate details is the latest in a general “lack of transparen­cy” that has typified the state’s handling of federal funding since the pandemic began in March.

The General Assembly, which adjourned the regular 2020 session two months early last March, has been limited largely to virtual committee meetings since.

Lamont declared a sixmonth public health and civil preparedne­ss emergency that gives him sweeping powers — provided the legislatur­e does not block him. Leaders of the Democratic majorities in the state House and Senate have endorsed two extensions since then.

But DeLong said Wednesday that legislator­s need to form a special commission to track all federal dollars received, how they’ve been assigned and when they are disbursed, to keep both lawmakers and the public informed.

“Everyone needs to understand where those expenditur­es are going and why they’re going where they’re going,” he added.

Both Candelora and Senate Minority Leader Kevin Kelly, R-Stratford, said the latest extension was a mistake. The GOP favored limiting any further extensions to 30 days, provided lawmakers also begin an immediate review of all executive orders issued by Lamont during the pandemic.

“Connecticu­t is where constituti­onal government was born. The people have a right to know what’s going on,” Kelly said, adding that the lack of informatio­n on federal funding “erodes the people’s trust.”

And Candelora added that the stakes in this debate are huge.

President Joe Biden’s new administra­tion has proposed another massive round of stimulus that includes $350 billion in new flexible aid for states and municipali­ties — meaning it could be used not only to cover pandemic-related costs but also temporaril­y replace eroding revenues in their budgets.

If such a proposal were to pass, that likely would mean billions of dollars for Connecticu­t.

“Democratic legislator­s are in no position to cry about how the governor is spending all of the federal money when they have, time and again, handed the car keys over to him,” Candelora said, adding the legislatur­e must “reassert itself as a coequal branch of government.”

 ?? Timothy A. Clary / Getty Images ?? Gov. Ned Lamont
Timothy A. Clary / Getty Images Gov. Ned Lamont

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