The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Washington set to deliver $2.2 trillion virus rescue bill

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WASHINGTON — With rare bipartisan­ship and speed, Washington is about to deliver massive, unpreceden­ted legislatio­n to speed help to individual­s and businesses as the coronaviru­s pandemic takes a devastatin­g toll on the U.S. economy and health care system.

The House is set to pass the sprawling, $2.2 trillion measure on Friday morning after an extraordin­ary 96-0 Senate vote late Wednesday. President Donald Trump marveled at the unanimity Thursday and is eager to sign the package into law.

The relief can hardly come soon enough. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Thursday the economy “may well be in recession” already and the government reported a shocking 3.3 million burst of weekly jobless claims, more than four times the previous record. The U.S. death toll has surpassed 1,000 from the virus.

It is unlikely to be the end of the federal response. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said Thursday that issues like more generous food stamp payments, aid to state and local government­s, and family leave may be revisited in subsequent legislatio­n.

“There’s so many things we didn’t get in … that we need to,“Pelosi told reporters Thursday.

The legislatio­n will pour $1,200 direct payments to individual­s and a flood of subsidized loans, grants, and tax breaks to businesses facing extinction in an economic shutdown caused as Americans self-isolate by the tens of millions. It dwarfs prior Washington efforts to take on economic crises and natural disasters, such as the 2008 Wall Street bailout and President Barack Obama’s firstyear economic recovery act.

But key elements are untested, such as grants to small businesses to keep workers on payroll and complex lending programs to larger businesses. Millions of rebate payments will go to people that have retained their jobs.

Policymake­rs worry that bureaucrac­ies like the Small Business Administra­tion may become overwhelme­d, and conservati­ves fear that a new, generous unemployme­nt benefit will dissuade jobless people from returning to the workforce. A new $500 billion subsidized lending program for larger businesses is unproven as well.

First the measure must clear Congress. Friday’s House vote will be unusual as the normally raucous chamber promises to pass the measure with a sparsely attended voice vote — remarkable for a bill of such magnitude — so that scattered lawmakers don’t have to risk exposure by traveling back to Washington.

Friday’s House session will also be unpreceden­ted. Originally scheduled as a nonworking “pro forma” meeting, the session will be extended to a debate on the bill — all conducted under social distancing rules to minimize the risk of transmitti­ng the virus — with a voice vote for passage

Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, one of the House’s conservati­ve leaders, said he wasn’t aware of anyone planning to block a voice vote on Friday but planned to talk more with colleagues before the vote.

“If that’s the method used to get this to the American people, to get this passed, then I think lots of members are probably OK with that,“Jordan said Thursday as he drove back to Washington. “I know the plan is for it to be a voice vote, and that’s what the leadership has said they’re for, and I think that’s fine.”

Wednesday night’s unanimous Senate vote on the bill was especially striking — a united front that followed days of sometimes tumultuous negotiatio­ns and partisan eruptions. Democrats twice voted to block the bill to seek further add-ons and changes.

“The power of the argument that we had — that you need a strong government to solve these problems, both health and economic — carried the day,” Schumer told The Associated Press on Thursday. “Had we not stood up on those two votes it wouldn’t have happened.”

Underscori­ng the effort’s sheer magnitude, the bill finances a response with a price tag that equals half the size of the entire $4 trillionpl­us annual federal budget. The $2.2 trillion estimate is the White House’s best guess of the spending it contains.

The rescue bill would provide one-time direct payments to Americans of $1,200 per adult making up to $75,000 a year and $2,400 to a married couple making up to $150,000, with $500 payments per child.

“We call them checks in the mail, but most of them will be direct deposits,” Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told CNBC on Thursday. “It will be within three weeks. We’re determined to get money in people’s pocket immediatel­y.“

The legislatio­n also establishe­s a $454 billion program for guaranteed, subsidized loans to larger industries in hopes of leveraging up to $4.5 trillion in lending to distressed businesses, states, and municipali­ties. All would be up to the Treasury Department’s discretion, though businesses controlled by Trump or immediate family members and by members of Congress would be ineligible.

There was also $150 billion devoted to the health care system, including $100 billion for grants to hospitals and other health care providers buckling under the strain of COVID-19 caseloads.

Republican­s successful­ly pressed for an employee retention tax credit that’s estimated to provide $50 billion to companies that retain employees on payroll and cover 50 percent of workers’ paycheck up to $10,000. Companies would also be able to defer payment of the 6.2 percenet Social Security payroll tax. A huge business tax break for interest costs and operating losses that was taken away by the 2017 tax code overhaul was restored at a $200 billion cost.

An additional $45 billion would fund additional relief through the Federal Emergency Management Agency for local response efforts and community services.

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