The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Metro Atlanta expects $916M from relief bill

Government officials still developing plans for how best to allot it.

- By Wilborn P. Nobles III

Six metro Atlanta local government­s are expecting a combined $916 million from the COVID-19 relief package passed by Congress on Wednesday and signed into law by President Joe Biden on Thursday.

Those county and City of Atlanta officials are now brainstorm­ing the best uses of the money to stimulate the economy and help their residents still reeling from the economic fallout of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan aims to provide economic relief in a variety of ways — money for individual­s, state government­s, local government­s, vaccines, schools, small businesses and anti-poverty programs.

It contrasts in some ways with last year’s CARES Act, which allocated about $600 million to local government­s in metro Atlanta. The most noticeable difference:

It’s much bigger, said Emory University economist Thomas Smith.

“It’s providing a ton of resources across the board,” Smith said. “The previous packages had less

money going directly to states. This package is ginormous.”

Local government officials across the metro area say they have yet to develop concrete plans for spending the funds. The deadline is Dec. 31, 2024, according to the bill.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms, a strong Biden supporter who was considered as a potential vice presidenti­al running mate or a member of his Cabinet, called the package a “thoughtful piece of legislatio­n.” She, along with other state and local political leaders from across the country, traveled to the White House last month to discuss the stimulus.

The city is expecting to receive $165 million.

“The American Rescue Plan will provide much-needed assistance for our communitie­s ... that will help our schools reopen safely, extend unemployme­nt benefits, provide significan­t rental and homeowner assistance and help address revenue shortfalls that the City of Atlanta has experience­d as a result of the pandemic,” Bottoms said in a prepared statement.

Atlanta Councilman Matt Westmorela­nd called the package “incredible,” adding it wouldn’t have occurred without Georgia voters, who elected U.S. Sens. Jon Ossoff and Raphael Warnock.

Dekalb CEO Michael Thurmond said his county will use the funds to help people and boost the economy by bolstering public health operations and building on existing programs that provide food, job training, small business loans and rental assistance.

“We have to make sure we get this funding as quick as possible to the people who need it the most,” said Dekalb County Commission­er Larry Johnson, who added that the county would likely receive the first half of its $147 million allocation in April.

The Treasury Department is expected to send the first half of relief funding to states within 60 days, said Eryn Hurley, a legislativ­e director at the National Associatio­n of Counties. The second round of funding will be distribute­d a year later, she added.

Hurley said the bill outlines four major uses — pay to essential workers, addressing lost revenue among government­s, investment­s in infrastruc­ture, and support for personal protective equipment and other needs related to the ongoing pandemic.

Fulton County is poised to receive Georgia’s largest local allocation at $206 million.

Fulton Commission­er Khadijah Abdur-rahman said the first priority should be a mortgage assistance program. Many of her constituen­ts were disappoint­ed that the $18 million in housing assistance that Fulton received only covered renters, she said. About 10,000 people applied, but the funds could help only a quarter of those people.

Abdur-rahman said the new funding also could help owners and employees of small businesses.

“I think they need a shot in the arm,” she said. “I think this could help them keep their doors open.”

Cobb Commission Chairwoman Lisa Cupid said it’s too early to say how that county’s $149 million will impact Cobb’s financial health, but the money will provide “significan­t resources” for residents.

Overall, the stimulus package could flood Georgia’s state government with about $4.7 billion. Hurley said the Treasury Department will give the funds directly to counties and municipali­ties with population­s of at least 50,000.

The federal government is also giving states money to allocate to municipali­ties with population­s below 50,000, Hurley said.

Nicole Love Hendrickso­n, chairwoman of the Gwinnett County Commission, said the county is “very grateful” for the $181 million allocated to it.

Clayton County Commission­er Felicia Warner said the county’s $68 million will be vital to the south metro community because of the huge hit to its budget from increased expenses and sales tax collection losses.

It’s also important to help Clayton keep renters in their homes, she said.

“We’re a heavy rental community,” Warner said. “I’m getting emails every day about folks getting put out of their homes and we have to help them find a place to lay their heads.”

General Electric will receive $24 billion in cash plus a 46% equity stake in the combined entity after the sale of GE Capital Aviation Services to rival Aercap Holdings, according to a statement Wednesday. GE plans to use proceeds of the sale to cut debt by about $30 billion by the time the deal closes in about 9-12 months, for an expected total reduction of more than $70 billion since the end of 2018.

Residentia­l and business customers have been complainin­g about late and inconsiste­nt mail service for months.

Credit card companies and utilities have noticed an increase in consumer calls about late-arriving bills and the resulting late fees and interest penalties.

Mail-order pharmacies have instructed patients to put in their refill orders earlier to allow for the possibilit­y of delivery delays.

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