The Sentinel-Record

‘Now hiring’

County officials say relief funds make it harder to find workers

- DAVID SHOWERS The Sentinel-Record

Government largesse is disincenti­vizing work as local businesses struggle to satisfy pent-up demand for their goods and services, officials said Monday at the Garland County Quorum Court Finance Committee meeting.

County Judge Darryl Mahoney said the extension of Pandemic Unemployme­nt Assistance through early September, along with the $300 a week the unemployed receive in enhanced bene

fits, has hollowed out the local workforce.

“I talked to more people this past weekend who are looking for employees,” Mahoney told justices of the peace. “It’s adversely affecting their business. The money that’s being given out through unemployme­nt, and the extra incentives on top of that, are encouragin­g people to take the summer off.

“We’re coming into one of the biggest tourist seasons we’ve had here. People have been cooped up, and they’re looking for any reason to get out. The restaurant­s and hotels, people who are in that industry, are struggling to find employees. It’s frustratin­g.”

The Greater Hot Springs Chamber of Commerce and Hot Springs Metro Partnershi­p President/CEO Gary Troutman told the committee staffing limitation­s at a chain restaurant’s local franchise forced it to close for a day.

“It’s almost easier to stay home and do nothing and get paid,” Troutman told the committee after giving the report the county requires before releasing the monthly installmen­t of HSMP’s $75,000 annual contract for economic developmen­t services.

Finance Committee Chairman Matt McKee, R-District 9, said direct payments and enhanced unemployme­nt benefits discourage work. The $2.2 trillion Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act created the enhanced benefits. The $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan extended them through the summer.

The latter rescue package included a $1,400 stimulus check for people with adjusted gross incomes of up to $75,000. They qualified for an additional $1,400 for each dependent, regardless of the dependent’s age, and the increase in the child tax credit from $2,000 to $3,600 for children younger than 6 and $3,000 for older children. The credit is fully refundable, meaning a refund is paid even if the credit exceeds an individual’s tax liability.

“You’re seeing people walking around with more money in their pockets than they’ve ever had their entire lives,” McKee told the committee. “Some of them got $10,000 stimulus checks, depending on how many kids they have.”

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ preliminar­y report for January showed the Hot Springs Metropolit­an Statistica­l Area’s labor force was larger than it was in January of 2019 and 2018. A workforce of 41,156 was reported in January, compared to 40,647 in January 2019 and 40,025 in January 2018.

The labor force comprises people 16 and older who are working or actively looking for work, according to the agency’s definition.

County government has also benefited from federal relief, receiving $2.35 million from the state’s $1.25 billion CARES Act allocation. The quorum court appropriat­ed more than $600,000 of the funding in December to pay $1,200 hazard bonuses to almost 400 full-time county employees and $600 bonuses to more than 20 part-time employees.

Elected officials, poll workers, the county board of equalizati­on and law library employees were excluded from the payments.

The Finance Committee advanced an ordinance Monday night that appropriat­ed $55,389 from the funding for employee health, dental and life insurance benefits the county paid in December and January.

The state Department of Finance and Administra­tion told the steering committee the governor appointed to recommend CARES Act funding requests that, per U.S. Department of the Treasury guidance, documentat­ion such as payroll records and duty rosters could be used to substantia­te local government­s’ pandemic-related labor costs.

“That will be the extent of the documentat­ion that’s necessary,” DFA Deputy Director and State Comptrolle­r Paul Louthian told the steering committee in September. “My opinion is they’ve opened this up to say if you have public health and safety employees, and you’re paying them during this time period to work with the public, we’re going to pay you for this expense.”

The county received the help despite setting a record for sales tax collection­s in 2020. The

$10.72 million captured by the countywide 0.50% sales tax supporting the county general and solid waste funds topped the previous year by 7.91%, or more than $785,000, according to the report sent to the quorum court in February. The $852,691 the tax collected in January was 15.17%, or $112,333, more than January

2020.

The county finance department said the Coronaviru­s Relief Fund had a $1.64 million cash balance at the end of last week.

 ?? The Sentinel-Record/Richard Rasmussen ?? ■ A “now hiring” sign is posted in a storefront window in the 4000 block of Central Avenue Tuesday.
The Sentinel-Record/Richard Rasmussen ■ A “now hiring” sign is posted in a storefront window in the 4000 block of Central Avenue Tuesday.

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