The Oklahoman

Oklahoma State Fair

Crews are setting up the games, rides and other attraction­s.

- Carmen Forman

State leaders have enlisted the help of two consulting firms to assist with doling out $3.2 billion in federal pandemic aid coming to Oklahoma.

The local and national consulting firms will help state lawmakers and Gov. Kevin Stitt’s office solicit proposals for the stimulus funds designed to help Oklahoma recover from the COVID-19 pandemic, vet and rank the projects and ensure spending follows federal rules.

The state hired Guidehouse, a national consulting company, to provide oversight and management of projects involving American Rescue Plan Act funds and ensure spending is reported to the federal government as required.

Guidehouse will be paid $383,930 for its services, according to a copy of the contract. The costs will be covered with American Rescue Plan funds, said a spokeswoma­n for the Office of Management and Enterprise Services, the state agency that finalized the agreement.

Guidehouse is the third-largest health care management consulting firm, and the company is helping more than 30 states, cities and counties with COVID-19 aid, Jeff Bankowski, a partner with Guidehouse, told state lawmakers last week.

The state previously hired Guidehouse to make recommenda­tions on how to consolidat­e and streamline state government and to review state finances in an attempt to find savings ahead of what was expected to be a tight budget year.

Also helping the state is 929 Strategies, a public policy and government relations consulting company founded by Melissa McLawhorn Houston, a former state labor commission­er who served on Gov. Kevin Stitt’s transition team.

The local consulting firm has signed a yearlong contract and will be paid

$10,000, said Mike Jackson, executive director of the Oklahoma Legislativ­e Services Bureau.

How much money will state get?

Oklahoma will receive half of the state’s $1.87 billion share of federal aid this year and half next year. All funds must be obligated by Dec. 31, 2024, and spent by Dec. 31, 2026.

Roughly $1.32 billion in aid will be divided among Oklahoma localities. The state will play a role in oversight and distributi­on of the local funds.

Nationally, more than $350 billion will be distribute­d to states, tribes and local government­s as part of the COVID-19 stimulus package President Joe Biden signed earlier this year.

Lawmakers have stressed long-term, big-picture thinking in determinin­g how the relief funds are spent.

Compared to the federal CARES Act pandemic relief funds allocated last year, American Rescue Plan funds don’t have to be spent within the year.

“I think it would be very prudent not to award all the money right up front. I think the best approach will be slow and methodical,” said Rep. Kevin Wallace, RWellston, who co-chairs the Joint Committee on Pandemic Relief Funding.

The Oklahoma Legislatur­e formed the 24-member joint committee to oversee federal stimulus spending and review funding requests.

What happens next?

The state will begin accepting requests for pandemic relief funds Oct. 1 through a public website. Proposed projects will be vetted to ensure they meet U.S. Treasury requiremen­ts before going to state legislativ­e working groups, the Joint Committee on Pandemic Relief Funding and, ultimately, the governol.

The joint committee will approve this month a set of goals for spending the federal aid. The state will submit to the federal government next month a strategic plan for how American Rescue Plan funds will be spent.

For more informatio­n on stimulus funds coming to Oklahoma, visit oklahoma.gov/arpa.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States