NACo sends letter to House and Senate leadership urging direct funding for counties and CRF deadline extension in next COVID-19 package

Image of Capitol-closeup_3.jpg

Key Takeaways

On December 2, NACo sent a letter to Congressional leadership urging bipartisan agreement on a new round of direct, flexible funding to local governments of all sizes in the next COVID-19 response package. The letter also highlighted the need for Congress to immediately pass legislation that would extend the Coronavirus Relief Fund (CRF) deadline. The letter can be viewed at this link.

The letter highlights the devastating fiscal impact of the pandemic on America’s counties, which could total a combined $202 billion through fiscal year 2021. These costs are compounded by the continued job loss in the local government sector. In October 2020, local governments experienced the largest decrease in employment – with non-education jobs ranging from law enforcement officers to health care practitioners, social workers, maintenance crews, construction works and administrative support, remaining 354,000 below its February 2020 level. In total, local governments have lost 1.2 million jobs since the outset of the pandemic.

Over the past several months, Members in both chambers of Congress have introduced several proposals that would address the immediate needs of local governments, including counites, in our pandemic response activities. The HEROES Act (H.R. 6800), as passed by the U.S. House, would allocate $187.5 billion in direct, flexible relief to counties of all sizes based on population. HEROES Act funding could be used both for tremendous public health expenditures and the catastrophic losses in county revenue, both of which are key county priorities in the next round of COVID-19 relief. NACo’s full analysis of the HEROES Act legislation can be viewed at this link.

Most recently, on Dec. 1, a bipartisan, bicameral group of legislators unveiled its $908 coronavirus aid proposal, aiming to help break the gridlock on the latest COVID-19 negotiations. This framework contains broad objectives for a future relief bill but not any legislative text.

The “COVID-19 Emergency Relief Framework” framework contains many county priorities including increased food assistance and emergency funding for child care, re-upping the Paycheck Protection Program, reviving unemployment benefits and providing $160 billion in aid to state and local governments. The framework also includes an extension of the Coronavirus Relief Fund (CRF) Dec. 30, 2020 deadline, and new funding for vaccine development, distribution, testing and tracing and the U.S. Postal Service. For more information on the bipartisan framework, click here.

As Congress considers next steps on these proposals, NACo urges county leaders to call your U.S. Senators and U.S. Representatives today to support direct and flexible funding for counties of all sizes. To facilitate this process, NACo has multiple, customizable advocacy resources available at http://www.naco.org/covid19.

Tagged In:

Related News

US Capitol
Advocacy

U.S. Congress passes reconciliation bill: What it means for counties

On July 3, the U.S. Congress passed sweeping budget reconciliation legislation. 

Image of Capitol-panorama_2.jpg
Advocacy

U.S. Senate passes amended reconciliation bill text: What it means for counties

On July 1, the U.S. Senate narrowly passed their version of sweeping budget reconciliation legislation.

US Capitol Building close-up
Press Release

County Leaders Visit Washington to Share Local Perspective on Budget Reconciliation

Elected officials from five states sound alarm about administrative and funding changes to SNAP and Medicaid.