The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

States pass their own aid, not waiting on Washington

- By Brian Witte

ANNAPOLIS, MD. » Not waiting for more federal help, states have been approving their own coronaviru­s aid packages, spending hundreds of millions of dollars to help residents and business owners devastated by the pandemic’s economic fallout:

• Maryland and California recently moved forward with help for the poor, the jobless, small businesses and those needing child care.

• New Mexico and Pennsylvan­ia are funneling grants directly to cashstarve­d businesses.

• North Carolina’s governor wants additional state aid for such things as bonus pay for teachers and boosting rural internet speeds.

The spending also provides fuel for critics who say states don’t need another massive infusion of cash from Congress. The Biden administra­tion’s $1.9 trillion relief plan would send hundreds of billions of dollars to state and local government­s.

Governors and lawmakers say their state’s spending is targeted at Americans who remain desperate for help nearly a year after the pandemic began shuttering businesses.

‘Need this’

In Maryland, where direct stimulus checks were being distribute­d as part of more than $1 billion in relief, Catrina Garrett said the boost from the state was crucial. Garrett, a 35-yearold single mother with a part-time job, said it will help her pay rent and catch up on bills.

“A lot of people will need this, and it will help families that have not been able to provide for their children,” said Garrett, who lives in Baltimore with her three children.

Other states are considerin­g significan­t spending to provide more relief to residents. Governors and lawmakers have said they are concerned the economy and job prospects will deteriorat­e even further before Congress acts on the Biden plan. The slow start to the nationwide vaccinatio­n program also has tempered expectatio­ns that inoculatio­ns will be widespread soon enough to rescue businesses that have struggled with shutdown orders.

Under a bill awaiting the governor’s signature, New Mexico would provide $200 million in direct grants to businesses, which could use them to pay rent and mortgages. It is part of a proposed state pandemic relief package that also would provide a $600 tax rebate to low-wage workers, a fourmonth tax holiday for restaurant­s as they recover from indoor-dining restrictio­ns, and a waiver on liquor-store license fees.

Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said aggressive action is needed to ward off business closures and evictions as Congress deliberate­s.

“The cascading effect, it’s actually a problem that most states are grappling with ... waiting for the relief money out of the feds,” she said. “We need to be able to hold up, to shore up businesses moving forward, and we want them to have security to hold their current employees and potentiall­y hire more.”

In California, Gov. Gavin Newsom this week signed a $7.6 billion relief package that includes $600 in onetime payments for about 5.7 million residents, including immigrants who were left out of previous relief initiative­s. Another $2 billon is going to struggling businesses.

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, a Republican, signed legislatio­n last week with bipartisan support in the Democratic-controlled legislatur­e for one-time stimulus payments of $300 for individual­s and $500 for families, reaching about 400,000 people. It also provides up to $9,000 in sales tax relief for small businesses.

Federal response ‘absent’

“Absent of a federal response, the states are having to step up,” said Robin McKinney, co-founder and CEO of the CASH Campaign of Maryland, a nonprofit organizati­on that helps lowincome residents file taxes.

The spending also shows that many states have proved unexpected­ly resilient during the pandemic, with better-than projected tax revenue and healthy budgets. Critics say the stronger-than-expected state finances undermine the Biden administra­tion’s $1.9 trillion plan.

“Congress has already allocated more than $4.5 trillion to address this crisis, including roughly $400 billion for state and local government­s,” U.S. Sen. Rick Scott, a Florida Republican, said this month.

Some governors are facing pushback from their own legislatur­es.

North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper, a Democrat, unveiled a $695 million emergency budget proposal that would use state money to address needs related to the coronaviru­s.

While Republican­s in charge of the legislatur­e haven’t dismissed his ideas, they are unlikely to pass such a sweeping package. They noted that they approved another COVID-19 relief package in February that distribute­d more than $2.2 billion in federal money for vaccine preparatio­ns, to schools, and to prevent evictions. They also are still figuring out how to spend another $1.8 billion in federal money that Congress approved in December.

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