Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Bipartisan coronaviru­s relief package hits snags over details

- Cq-roll Call (TNS)

WASHINGTON — After making a big splash last week and injecting a sense of optimism into long-delayed coronaviru­s relief talks, a bipartisan $908 billion plan is hung up over the specifics of aid to states and localities and liability protection­s for businesses.

Sources familiar with the talks said those two issues were the main sticking points holding up introducti­on of bill text, after a three-hour conference call on Sunday.

The $908 billion plan is being eyed by some as the baseline for a new aid package lawmakers plan to attach to an omnibus fiscal 2021 spending bill. A oneweek stopgap measure to buy more time to write the massive package and vote on it is on tap this week.

Introducti­on of the plan’s framework by a bipartisan Senate group and members of the House’s Problem Solvers Caucus last week was followed by high-level endorsemen­ts to varying degrees.

President-elect Joe Biden endorsed it with little equivocati­on. Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Minority Leader

Charles E. Schumer said it could use “improvemen­ts,” including more money for state and local government­s.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch Mcconnell initially dismissed the plan and unveiled his own $500 billion-plus version last week, but said he was willing to negotiate. Other GOP senators have since said they could back the bipartisan Problem Solvers plan, depending on details.

President Donald Trump hasn’t expressed a view, but said Saturday in Georgia that “I like the higher number rather than the lower number.”

On Monday, Trump top economic adviser Larry Kudlow told a “Washington Post Live” event that “I believe it is likely he will” sign a version of the bipartisan package. But he added: “It depends importantl­y on some of the policy details inside.”

Senate Republican­s, business groups and the White House have insisted for months that any new aid bill include a liability shield if employers follow basic federal health safety guidelines. Democrats have resisted the effort, saying workers are putting their lives on the line in some cases and deserve the option of a court remedy if they get sick.

The bipartisan framework called for a “short-term” liability shield “with the purpose of giving states time to develop their own response,” according to a summary of the plan’s major provisions. But some GOP senators who were generally sympatheti­c to the larger package balked at that descriptio­n; Thom Tillis of North Carolina, for instance, said he wanted something of “enduring value.”

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce on Monday morning weighed in with a letter imploring lawmakers to act on an aid package, with liability protection­s a critical piece.

“A liability safe harbor will protect small businesses and non-profits from being ruined by unfair litigation. The threat of a debilitati­ng wave of lawsuits is clear,” U.S. Chamber Executive Vice President Neil Bradley wrote. “Personal injury lawyers are spending large sums of money advertisin­g their services for COVID-19 lawsuits, a reliable barometer on tort litigation trends.”

Progressiv­es have hit back at the prospect of any liability protection­s for employers. Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-VT., said in a statement opposing the bipartisan plan that a liability shield would “provide a get-out-of-jail free card to companies that put the lives of their workers and customers at risk.”

House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer, D-MD., said a lawsuit moratorium could be reasonable, however. “Obviously we don’t want to change the rules of the game in terms of how people are compensate­d for wrongdoing of others,” Hoyer told MSNBC Friday. “But if it’s just a moratorium, that’s possibly something we could consider in my view.”

The overall aid plan attempts to find a middle ground on coronaviru­s relief between the roughly $500 billion pushed by Senate Republican­s and $2.4 trillion backed by House Democrats. The package would provide $180 billion for unemployme­nt benefits, $288 billion for small businesses and $160 billion in aid to state and local government­s, among many other things.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear whether the holdup on state and local aid was the total dollar amount, the distributi­on formula or both.

Rep. Tom Reed, R-N.Y., has said the group negotiatin­g the package wants to ensure that communitie­s who didn’t receive an adequate slice of an initial

$150 billion aid round in March is compensate­d this time around.

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