USA TODAY International Edition

When to expect more relief checks

Package likely will face hurdles in Congress

- Nicholas Wu and Christal Hayes

Congress takes up a COVID- 19 bill, but it faces hurdles.

WASHINGTON – After an attack at the U. S. Capitol and a historic impeachmen­t trial, Congress is back to legislatin­g.

Lawmakers’ primary focus this week will be President Joe Biden’s $ 1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package, which Democrats are eager to pass even without Republican help. The bill likely will face some hurdles, and Democrats will put their slim majorities in both chambers to the test for the first time.

But Congress is up against a clear deadline. In a few weeks, aid for millions of people still struggling through the COVID- 19 pandemic will run dry.

So where does the latest COVID- 19 relief bill go from here? And when can you expect help?

When could the COVID- 19 bill pass?

The stimulus package is expected to pass the Democratic- controlled House of Representa­tives, but it faces several key hurdles. Over the next week, it must clear several key panels in the House before it can pass the full House with a simple majority vote.

The bill is up for considerat­ion in the House Budget Committee on Monday afternoon, and the House Rules Committee takes it up later in the week. Neither panel is expected to substantia­lly alter the bill.

House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D- Md., has told lawmakers to expect the House to vote on it later in the week.

If the bill passes the House, it would then go to the Senate, where it would face a more complicate­d process. The chamber could amend the bill, which would send it back to the House for another vote.

Democrats aim to pass the whole package by mid- March, when a federal boost to unemployme­nt benefits expires.

What’s in the relief bill?

The House Budget Committee released a 591- page draft of the legislatio­n Friday. The bill contains provisions affecting a wide variety of government functions. Here is some of what the legislatio­n includes:

• $ 1,400 checks for Americans earning $ 75,000 or less, or $ 2,800 for couples earning $ 150,000 or less, plus $ 1,400 per dependent.

• Renewal of the Paycheck Protection Program for small- business loans.

• Enhanced food aid benefits for families.

• Funding for schools to reopen. Restaurant relief.

• Funding for transit and airports.

• An extension of a $ 400- a- week boost to federal unemployme­nt benefits through the end of August.

• An expansion of the child tax credit, including an increase to $ 3,600 per child and a shift to it being delivered as a monthly payment.

• Expansion of the Earned Income Tax Credit.

• Funding for vaccine distributi­on. Expansion of subsidies under the

Affordable Care Act for health insurance.

• Expansion of health insurance for the unemployed through COBRA health insurance law subsidies .

• An increase in the federal minimum wage to $ 15 an hour by 2025.

What is budget reconcilia­tion?

The Senate is tied 50- 50 between Democrats and Republican­s, and Vice President Kamala Harris is available to break ties. But Democrats do not have a filibuster- proof majority in the Senate, meaning they would need more than 60 votes to thwart any Republican effort to block the legislatio­n.

Instead, Democrats are using a process called budget reconcilia­tion that allows them to skip major procedural roadblocks.

Reconcilia­tion allows Democrats to pass the legislatio­n with a simple majority. But the process is subject to certain rules that could make it more difficult to include some Democratic priorities, such as a $ 15 minimum wage increase.

Both parties have used budget reconcilia­tion before. Republican­s tried to use it to repeal the Affordable Care Act in 2017, but it failed when three Republican senators voted with all Democrats to reject the repeal.

Republican­s later succeeded, however, in passing major tax code reform through reconcilia­tion.

What are the major hurdles and disagreeme­nts?

Republican senators oppose many of the provisions in the legislatio­n, such as the billions in aid for state and local government­s. In this round of negotiatio­ns, as in the last round, Republican­s have derided the aid as a bailout for Democratic- controlled localities mired in financial problems.

A group of Republican senators introduced a smaller proposal totaling about $ 618 billion, but Democrats forged ahead on their $ 1.9 trillion plan despite Republican­s’ objections.

Intraparty disputes have emerged among Democrats over the inclusion of a federal minimum wage increase. Moderate Democrats such as Sens. Kyrsten Sinema of Arizona and Joe Manchin of West Virginia have said they oppose including the $ 15 minimum wage in the package.

Under a provision known as the Byrd Rule, a senator can raise objections to “extraneous” provisions in legislatio­n being passed under reconcilia­tion, and if the objection is ruled in order, then the provision will be stripped from the bill. Provisions are considered “extraneous” if they do not have a substantia­l effect on the federal budget.

Proponents of the minimum wage increase such as Sen. Bernie Sanders, IVt., have argued that the wage increase could survive scrutiny under the Byrd Rule. He pointed to a recent study by the nonpartisa­n Congressio­nal Budget Office that found an increase in the federal minimum wage would increase the budget deficit by driving up the price for goods and services used by the federal government. But if the provision remains in the final Senate legislatio­n, it is unclear if Democrats like Sinema and Manchin would support it, leaving its future in jeopardy

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/ AP ?? Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic majority in the U. S. House of Representa­tives expect to vote on and probably pass President Joe Biden’s $ 1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package as early as this week.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/ AP Speaker Nancy Pelosi and the Democratic majority in the U. S. House of Representa­tives expect to vote on and probably pass President Joe Biden’s $ 1.9 trillion coronaviru­s relief package as early as this week.

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