U.S. COVID local aid emerges as key social policy tool as Biden spending
plans stall
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[March 11, 2022]
By David Lawder
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Philadelphia is
plugging a massive budget hole opened by COVID-19, avoiding layoffs and
the closing of swimming pools. St. Louis is handing out $500 checks to
10,000 needy families. Denver has set aside $28 million for affordable
housing units amid spiraling rental costs.
With revenues still crimped by COVID-19, these U.S. cities can fund
those initiatives thanks to a $350 billion bucket of coronavirus aid
money for state and local governments enacted a year ago Friday.
As President Joe Biden's ambitious social and climate spending plans
languish amid congressional resistance and Washington's shifting focus
to the war in Ukraine, the American Rescue Plan's State and Local Fiscal
Recovery Fund is emerging as his administration's top poverty-fighting
tool.
Allocated based on population, income and unemployment levels, some 70%
of that money is already sitting in municipal treasuries. But many state
and local governments are just now starting to spend it.
"It's going to allow us to not have layoffs," Philadelphia Chief Grants
Officer Ashley Del Bianco said. "It will also allow us to continue
offering some really key city services. Parks, libraries, recreation
centers in large part had major funding cuts."
Philadelphia is devoting its entire $1.4 billion allocation to make up
for lost revenue when suburban residents stopped paying the city's 3.45%
wage tax during the pandemic while they worked from home instead of
commuting to city offices, Del Bianco said.
The funds will add over $250 million a year to the city's $5.3 billion
annual budget over five years. Should revenues recover more quickly, the
city will consider other uses, she added.
GENERATIONAL WINDFALL
Many mayors and county executives have never seen this kind of cash
windfall.
"This is a sort of once-in-a-generation level of investment in state and
local governments," said Alan Berube, senior fellow with Brookings
Metro, an urban policy think tank in Washington.
Final rules issued by the Treasury in January expanded allowable uses,
including premium pay for public sector workers, childcare, preschool
programs and affordable housing projects in pandemic-hit communities.
Such needs were meant to be funded in Biden's $2 trillion "Build Back
Better" spending package, which had proposed funding for childcare
subsidies, education, job training and tax credits for green energy
technologies.
Although the plan stalled after objections from Democratic Senator Joe
Manchin, the Biden administration is still pushing for key elements, now
marketed as "Building a Better America." But that, too, faces
uncertainty as mid-term congressional elections loom and Russia's
invasion of Ukraine diverts attention.
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A pedestrian crosses a street in the Northampton County city of
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, U.S., October 1, 2020. REUTERS/Brian
Snyder/File Photo
MONEY IN HAND
In the absence of long-term national social funding programs, "the
American Rescue Plan becomes an even more important vehicle for
poverty alleviation," Berube said.
Some cities late last year began to use ARP funds to set up cash
payment programs for low-income residents, but without longer-term
funding, it is unclear how these can be sustained.
Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said he views the money as a
complement to Biden's social investment agenda, not a substitute.
"They're both trying to address a similar set of challenges - a
classic underinvestment in our human capital and the infrastructure
that makes our communities run," Adeyemo told Reuters in an
interview.
The ARP funding bridges a gap during COVID-19, but the
administration will "try to make longer-term investments that would
deal with this challenge over time," he said.
NEW RULES, NEW SPENDING
Many local governments, particularly in smaller communities, had
held off on committing funds due to lack of clarity on allowable
spending and to see what they might get from Biden's $1.2 trillion
infrastructure package and the social spending bill, said Vicki
Vogel Hellenbrand, public sector practice leader at consulting group
Baker Tilly.
"Based on our client base, unless they were going to spend the money
on a pretty clear water project, people were waiting a little bit to
see the final rules," Hellenbrand said.
She said the new rules ease documentation burdens on smaller towns
by granting them an automatic "allowance" of up to $10 million -
often more than their entire allocation - that can be used for
revenue replacement.
In Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, small businesses from barbershops to
childcare providers are receiving ARP-funded grants from Northampton
County.
Michelle Thorpe, owner of Above and Beyond Learning Center, said she
put her $10,000 grant towards buying a van for trips to parks and
libraries. She plans to start looking for a larger space later this
year.
"I want to grow because there's only 19 kids here. I have plans and
I have dreams," she said.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Dan Burns and Andrea Ricci)
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