Call & Times

Connecticu­t facing growing cost of pandemic bonus pay

- By SUSAN HAIGH and DAVID A. LIEB

HARTFORD, Conn. — A Connecticu­t program that offered “hero pay” to essential workers at the peak of the coronaviru­s pandemic got so many applicants that state lawmakers had to go back into session Monday to provide extra funding and put new limits on who could get the biggest bonuses.

The Connecticu­t General Assembly was meeting to revamp the distributi­on formula for the Premium Pay Program for private sector workers.

Initially, the state had expected to award about $30 million in bonuses to people who had to go to work, in person, in jobs in health care, food distributi­on, public safety and other essential services.

But after getting 155,730 applicatio­ns from eligible people, lawmakers realized they would have to either put more money in or slash benefits.

“This is the first time we’ve ever done a program like this in the history of Connecticu­t, to my knowledge. And guessing what that’s going to be is hard to do,” said Democratic state Rep. Sean Scanlon. “Once we became clear that we did have more oversubscr­iption to the program than there was, we figured out a solution to it.”

Numerous states provided bonuses to certain workers during the coronaviru­s pandemic, often by tapping into federal relief funds.

Half the states have collective­ly budgeted about $2.7 billion for extra pay to public or private-sector workers by using federal American Rescue Plan funds, according to an Associated Press analysis of the most recent data released by the U.S. Treasury Department. Connecticu­t’s program does not rely on the federal funds.

Some states have targeted the extra pay to workers

most likely to come into close contact with people, such as public health and safety employees and teachers. Others have distribute­d money more widely. The “essential employee premium pay program” in Massachuse­tts provided $500 to any individual earning between about $13,000 and $39,000 annually, or earning up to nearly $80,000 for a household of four.

Under the revamped Connecticu­t plan, which cleared the House of Representa­tives and awaited a vote in the Senate on Monday night, funding would be boosted by $76.6 million and a new tiered system would be imposed for the program, which has stopped accepting new applicatio­ns.

Only eligible full-time workers earning $50,000 or less per year — 66,289 people — would receive the full bonus of $1,000. Other applicants would receive reduced sums. The original program had offered full bonuses to workers earning as much as $150,000. Someone earning $150,000 will now receive $100.

Meanwhile, the benefit for eligible part-time workers would drop from $500 to $200.

Connecticu­t’s program covers a fairly wide range of workers who were among the first eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. Those include health care workers, police, firefighte­rs, prison guards, grocery clerks, teachers, bus drivers and employees in various manufactur­ing fields.

There’s been debate among state and city officials across the country about who should receive pandemic bonuses, especially after the U.S. government allowed so-called hero pay for frontline workers as a possible use of federal pandemic relief funds.

“If you wanted to benefit the heroes, you needed to define better what a hero is,” said Rep. Vincent Candelora, the Republican leader of the Connecticu­t House of Representa­tives, who criticized Connecticu­t’s plan for being underfunde­d and making “no sense” as to who receives the money.

Like Connecticu­t, some other state’s bonus programs also far exceeded original estimates.

In Minnesota, checks of $487.45 were cut for qualified frontline workers this fall after the state approved more than 1 million applicatio­ns. State officials had originally estimated the final pool of qualified workers would be around 667,000, with payments of about $750 apiece, but applicatio­ns exceeded expectatio­ns.

Missouri had originally budgeted $24 million to give bonuses to state employees working in institutio­ns such as prisons, mental health facilities and veterans nursing homes.

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