The Record (Troy, NY)

Agreement likely on nearly $1T virus aid bill

- ByAndrew Taylor

Top negotiator­s appear on the brink Sunday of agreeing to long- delayed legislatio­n to deliver a new round of aid to pandemic-slammed businesses, $300 bonus jobless benefits and a $600 direct payment to most Americans, an aid package that is smaller than Democrats and President- elect Joe Biden would like.

The must-pass measure, coming in at more than $900 billion, was expected to be released late

Sunday and would be brought immediatel­y to the House floor for a vote. It includes tens of billions of dollars to pay for distributi­ng vaccines, help schools reopen, and bail out struggling transit systems and the Postal Service.

Propelling optimism on Sunday was a Saturday night agreement on the last major obstacle to a COVID-19 economic relief package, top negotiator­s agreed, yet Sunday was being spent ironing out a handful of issues. All sides said a Sunday agreement appeared

very likely, but it quickly became clear that another stopgap funding bill would be needed to avert a partial government shutdown at midnight.

“Barring a major mishap, the Senate and House will be able to vote on final legislatio­n as early as tonight (Sunday),” said Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

The Saturday night breakthrou­gh involved a fight over Federal Reserve emergency powers that was resolved by Schumer and conservati­ve Republican Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia. Aides to lawmakers in both parties said the compromise sparked a final round of negotiatio­ns.

Lawmakers and aides said it would likely require all of Sunday to finalize and draft the final agreement, which was already guaranteed to be the largest spending measure yet, combining COVID-19 relief with a $ 1.4 trillion omnibus spending bill and reams of other unrelated legislatio­n on taxes, health, infrastruc­ture and education.

The virus relief measure was finally nearing passage amid a frightenin­g spike in coronaviru­s cases and deaths and accumulati­ng evidence that the economy was struggling.

Late- breaking decisions would limit $ 300 per week bonus jobless benefits — one half the supplement­al federal unemployme­nt benefit provided under the CARES Act in March — to 10 weeks instead of 16 weeks as before. The direct $600 stimulus payment to most people would be half the March payment, subject to the same income limits in which an individual’s payment begins to phase out after $75,000.

Pre s i dent Dona l d Trump was supportive, particular­ly of the push for providing more direct payments. “GET IT DONE,” he said in a latenight tweet.

It would be the first significan­t legislativ­e response to the pandemic since the $ 1.8 trillion CARES Act passed virtually unanimousl­y.

The COVID- 19 legislatio­n was held up by months of dysfunctio­n, posturing and bad faith. But talks turned serious last week as lawmakers on both sides finally faced the deadline of acting before leaving Washington for Christmas.

The measure was being added to a $ 1.4 trillion spending bill and combined with lots of other unfinished work, including previously stalled

legislatio­n to extend tax breaks, authorize water projects, and address the problem of surprise skyhigh medical bills for outof-network procedures.

It would be virtually impossible for lawmakers to read and fully understand the sprawling legislatio­n before a House vote. Senate action would follow.

In the meantime, with a government shutdown deadline looming at midnight Sunday, lawmakers

faced the reality of needing to enact another temporary spending bill — the second in as many days — to avert a shutdown of non- essential activities by federal agencies on Monday. They had not announced any plans, but such legislatio­n quickly swept through on Friday to keep the government fully open another two days for weekend talks.

Lawmakers had hoped to avoid that step, but

progress slowed Saturday as Toomey pressed for the inclusion of a provision to close down Fed lending facilities. Democrats and the White House said it was too broadly worded and would have tied the hands of the incoming Biden administra­tion, but Republican­s rallied to Toomey’s position.

The Fed’s emergency programs provided loans to small and mid- size businesses and bought state and local government bonds. Those bond purchases made it easier for those government­s to borrow, at a time when their finances were under pressure from job losses and health costs stem

ming from the pandemic.

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said last month that those programs, along with two that purchased corporate bonds, would close at the end of the year, prompting an initial objection by the Fed. Under the DoddFrank financial overhaul law passed after the Great Recession, the Fed can only set up emergency programs with the support of the treasury secretary.

Toomey said t hose emergency powers were designed to stabilize capital markets at the height of the pandemic this spring and were expiring at the end of the month anyway. Democrats said that Toomey was trying to limit the Fed’s ability to boost the economy, just as Biden prepared to take office.

The emerging agreement on virus aid would deliver more than $ 300 billion to businesses and provide money for vaccine distributi­on, renters, schools, the Postal Service and people needing food aid.

The government­wide appropriat­ions bill would fund agencies through next September. That measure was likely to provide a last $1.4 billion installmen­t for Trump’s U. S.- Mexico border wall as a condition of winning his signature.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH-ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Senate Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of N.Y., walks on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.
SUSAN WALSH-ASSOCIATED PRESS Senate Minority Leader Sen. Chuck Schumer of N.Y., walks on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday.

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