Sentinel & Enterprise

Baker unveils plan to spend $2.8B of funding

- By matt murphy

In an attempt to end the battle over who gets to spend nearly $5.2 billion in federal relief money, Gov. Charlie Baker on Thursday pitched a plan that would see him cede much of his control over the aid to the Legislatur­e, as long as lawmakers agree quickly to spend more than half on priorities such as home ownership assistance, substance abuse treatment and job training.

Baker visited a new housing developmen­t in Haverhill on Thursday where he detailed his proposal to allocate about $2.8 billion in federal relief money, attaching a sense of urgency to a plan that would also allow the Legislatur­e to determine for itself how to spend the remaining funds.

The governor pitched the stimulus spending plan on the same day he faced a deadline to act on a bill passed by the Legislatur­e that would sweep nearly $5.18 billion in American Rescue Plan Act funding into the Coronaviru­s State Fiscal Recovery Fund.

That fund is subject to appropriat­ion by lawmakers, meaning the APRA relief funding would go through a more traditiona­l budgeting process.

“While we’re willing to agree to move this aid into a separate fund, we need to work together to get part of this funding out the door to start addressing the immediate needs we have in our communitie­s across the commonweal­th,” Baker said.

The governor has asserted that he does not need legislativ­e approval to spend the federal relief money, but said Thursday he was willing to meet Democratic leaders halfway. The governor returned the bill with an amendment that would allow the full amount to be transferre­d to the trust fund, but would also appropriat­e more than half of it immediatel­y.

If he had vetoed the bill, House and Senate leaders likely would have had the votes to override the governor. But with his spending plan, which gives Democrats a vehicle to begin advancing their own ARPA spending bill, the Republican governor has now given lawmakers something new to think about.

“Folks in these communitie­s are going to have a harder time getting back to work and a harder time getting back on their feet the longer we go thinking about how to spend this money,” Baker said. “And we chose areas that we that we believe the Legislatur­e will be every bit as interested in spending resources on quickly as we are.”

Overall, the governor proposed putting $1 billion toward housing, including $300 million earmarked to help first-time home buyers in communitie­s of color disproport­ionately impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

The amendment proposes another $200 million to support housing production through the CommonWeal­th Builder program, $200 million for rental housing production and $300 million for supportive senior and veteran housing.

The spending plan also includes hundreds of millions of dollars for job training, broadband internet infrastruc­ture, addiction treatment and behavioral health, downtown developmen­t, tourism and nearly $1 billion for parks, culverts, dams, water and sewer infrastruc­ture and other climate change resiliency projects.

“This $2.8 billion plan will jump-start our recovery, and it keeps the focus where it needs to be on the families and communitie­s that have been hardest hit by the virus, and by the pandemic,” Baker said.

Baker’s return of the bill to the Legislatur­e keeps the federal funding in limbo a month after Massachuse­tts received the lump sum aid through the American Rescue Plan Act.

Legislativ­e leaders have not laid out a specific timetable for developing a spending plan of their own — House Speaker Ronald Mariano previously mentioned decisions could come “around June” — but Baker said he was reticent to just start spending the relief money on his own with the House and Senate on record as wanting more control over how the funding gets spread around.

“I think we’re trying to pursue this in what I would describe as a good faith manner,” Baker said.

House and Senate leaders did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. The governor has already released $109 million from the $5.3 billion in ARPA funding for Massachuse­tts to the cities of Chelsea, Everett, Methuen and Randolph who missed out on a chunk of federal aid due to quirks in the federal funding formula.

Earlier this week, he also said he intended to use ARPA funding to pay for a new vaccine Lottery.

The “VaxMillion­s” giveaway rolled out by Baker and Treasure Deb Goldberg is intended to encourage unvaccinat­ed residents to get the shot and features 10 prizes totaling $6.5 million, including five $1 million prizes, and five scholarshi­ps of $300,000 each for entrants under 18..

 ??  ??
 ?? STUART CAHILL / BOSTON HERALD ?? Gov. Charlie Baker speaks to the media on Tuesday.
STUART CAHILL / BOSTON HERALD Gov. Charlie Baker speaks to the media on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States