The Oakland Press

Whitmer seeks common ground, virus relief

Governor in virtual address: ‘The state of our state is resilence’

- By David Eggert

LANSING» Gov. Gretchen Whitmer sought “common ground” with the Republican-led Legislatur­e in her State of the State address Wednesday, calling for quick passage of a multibilli­on-dollar relief plan that would prioritize coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns and additional aid to Michigan schools and businesses to end the pandemic.

The spending proposal, first announced last week, was among several policy initiative­s outlined in the Democrat’s third annual speech — a virtual one in which she touted residents’ grit in a crisis that has claimed thousands of lives.

“The state of our state is resilience,” the governor said.

The address came hours after GOP lawmakers stepped up opposition to her administra­tion’s COVID-19 restrictio­ns — which have been loosened gradually — sending a message by rejecting 13 of Whitmer’s appointees and saying the funding should not be approved unless she cedes her administra­tion’s power to prohibit in-person instructio­n and sports to local health department­s.

“While common ground seems less and less common these days, it’s never been more important that we work toward it,” Whitmer said. “I know you’re used to me saying ‘fix the damn roads.’ This year, let’s also fix the damn road ahead — find common ground to

grow our economy and get families and businesses back on their feet. That starts by ending the pandemic.”

The virus, which has resulted in 600,000-plus cases in Michigan and contribute­d to the deaths of more than 15,300 residents in 10 months, continues to dominate the governor’s attention. She delivered the 30-minute speech virtually from her office inside the Capitol rather than in person to protect hundreds of legislator­s and dignitarie­s who typically would gather in a packed House chamber.

Though a majority of the public has backed her handling of the pandemic, she has faced GOP criticism, a lawsuit and protests — egged on by then-President Donald Trump — over restrictio­ns such as a mask mandate and indoor restaurant dining bans. The speech occurred the same day one of six men accused of plotting to kidnap her last week pleaded guilty. The FBI has said the antigovern­ment extremists were upset over her coronaviru­s restrictio­ns.

Whitmer said the lockdown and other steps saved lives, but she acknowledg­ed the toll on small businesses and asked the Legislatur­e to help enact the next round of pandemic aid. Her latest proposal would spend $575 million in state funds along with $5 billion in federal relief authorized before Trump left office.

The state funding would include $300 million to help K-12 schools offer face-to-face instructio­n and $225 million for three new economic-developmen­t programs, including grants to restaurant­s and other “placed-based” businesses hurt by the outbreak.

Republican legislator­s do not necessaril­y oppose such spending, having backed grants to workers and businesses as recently as December. But they want input on COVID-19 restrictio­ns before authorizin­g additional aid and say the governor’s approach has been unilateral and not bipartisan.

Whitmer said her administra­tion this year will aggressive­ly focus on economic growth and getting people back to work. She asked the Legislatur­e to renew tax incentives to support large-scale business expansions. The Good Jobs for Michigan program expired in 2019 after two years.

She also returned to a pre-pandemic priority that she pledged to address while campaignin­g for governor: fixing the roads and other infrastruc­ture. At last year’s State of the State, she announced that Michigan would borrow $3.5 billion to rebuild the state’s deteriorat­ing highways and bridges over five years after her proposed 45-cents-a-gallon fuel tax hike was rejected. The bonding is not being used to repair local roads.

Michigan is one of few states with a restrictiv­e local road-funding structure, according to the governor’s office. Legislatio­n that would have let counties seek voter approval of local gas taxes and registrati­on fees died last term. It should be passed, Whitmer said, so local communitie­s “can move some dirt, too.”

 ?? MICHIGAN OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR VIA AP ?? Gov. Gretchen Whitmer delivers her virtual State of the State address the state, Wednesday, in Lansing.
MICHIGAN OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR VIA AP Gov. Gretchen Whitmer delivers her virtual State of the State address the state, Wednesday, in Lansing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States