Governor Baker Signs $4 Billion Federal COVID-19 Relief Funding Spending Bill
BOSTON — Governor Charlie Baker today signed a $4
billion spending plan to support continued recovery across key priority areas,
making substantial investments in housing and homeownership, healthcare,
workforce development, premium pay for essential workers and infrastructure.
The funding, first proposed by the Baker-Polito Administration in June of 2021,
will put to work a portion of the Commonwealth’s direct federal aid from the
American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA).
“The pandemic has had a
significant impact on Massachusetts workers, families, communities, and
businesses for nearly two years, and today’s signing directs billions of
dollars in relief toward those hardest hit across the Commonwealth,” said
Governor Charlie Baker. “While this package falls far short of the
investment I called for to address the housing shortage, the important
investments included in this bill will help to accelerate Massachusetts’
economic recovery and provide long-lasting benefits to infrastructure,
healthcare, education systems, and small businesses.”
“The funding
allocated in this bill addresses critical areas of need across the
Commonwealth,
from addiction services to housing availability to environmental
infrastructure,” said Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito. “This relief will play a crucial role in
the ongoing recovery of our residents and communities, especially those
disproportionately impacted by COVID-19, and we are eager to put it to work.”
The bill authorizes up to
$2.55 billion in spending from the $5.286 billion ARPA Coronavirus State Fiscal
Recovery Funds provided to Massachusetts in May 2021.
This direct federal aid is intended to support urgent COVID-19 response
efforts, replace lost revenue, support immediate economic stabilization for
households and businesses, and address unequal public health and economic
challenges in Massachusetts cities and towns. After accounting for spending in
this bill and previously announced commitments, approximately $2.3 billion of
the Coronavirus State Fiscal Recovery Funds will remain to be further
appropriated.
“The Commonwealth has
worked diligently over the past two years to deploy billions worth of federal
support to strengthen our economic recovery, support those in
disproportionately impacted communities, and get people back to work,” said
Secretary of Administration and Finance Michael J. Heffernan. “We
appreciate the collaboration of our colleagues in the Legislature on this bill
to invest in healthcare, housing, and the Massachusetts workforce and look
forward to even more critical investments in 2022 with the remaining ARPA
funds.”
Coupled with the authorized
ARPA dollars, $1.45 billion in spending is appropriated from the Transitional
Escrow Fund, made up of state fiscal year 2021 surplus funds. The bill assigns
the Secretary of Administration and Finance the responsibility of matching
expenditures to the most appropriate funding source, which provides important
flexibility in recognition of the significant federal rules and regulations
associated with federal funds.
Highlights
of the plan include:
Housing
- $150
million to finance the statewide production of housing for various
populations, including seniors and veterans;
- $150
million for public housing maintenance;
- $115
million for rental housing production and to provide increased housing
options to residents of disproportionately impacted communities;
- $115
million to support housing production in disproportionately impacted
communities through MassHousing’s CommonWealth Builder Program and similar
efforts;
- $65
million to support expanded homeownership opportunities, focused on
first-time homebuyers who are residents of disproportionately impacted
communities.
Health
Care
- $400
million for addiction treatment and related behavioral health services,
workforce, and infrastructure;
- $260
million for fiscally stressed hospitals in disproportionately impacted
municipalities;
- $200
million for local and regional public health, including local boards of
health staffing, technology, and training;
- $50
million for workforce retention and capital improvements at nursing
facilities and $30 million to support loan repayment, retention, and
recruitment programs for human service workers;
- $37.5 million for grants to reduce juvenile delinquency,
youth homelessness, and summer jobs.
Workforce Development
- $500
million to support the Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund;
- $500 million for premium pay for low-income essential
workers;
- $107.5
million for workforce and career technical skills training;
- $24.5
million for workforce development and capital grants to YMCAs and Boys
& Girls clubs.
Economic
Development
- $135
million to support cultural facilities and tourism assets throughout
Massachusetts;
- $75
million for grants to small businesses, $50 million of which will go to businesses reaching underserved markets and minority,
women, and veteran owned businesses. $25 million will be reserved for
small businesses that did not qualify for prior programs.
Infrastructure
Investment
- $100
million to fund grants for water and sewer infrastructure improvements;
- $100
million to improve culverts, dams, and other environmental infrastructure;
- $90
million for marine port development;
- $50
million to close the digital divide and increase broadband internet
access;
- $44.8
million for food security;
- $25
million for greening gateway cities.
Education
- $105
million for a variety of education supports, including recovery grants to
state universities and community colleges, workforce support for special
education schools, and support for recruiting educators of color;
- $100
million for public school district HVAC grants;
- $100 million for capital grants to vocational high schools
and career technical education programs.
The Governor
vetoed language in seven line items containing requirements that would cause
delays in putting funds to use.
Of 88 outside
sections included in the bill, the Governor signed 86, including one that
excludes federal Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans, Economic Injury
Disaster Loan (EIDL) advances, Shuttered Venue Operators grants, Restaurant
Revitalization Fund grants, and SBA loans from taxable income for individual
taxpayers for all applicable tax years, creating parity with corporate taxpayers.
Governor
Baker returned one outside section to the Legislature with proposed amendments and
vetoed one outside section. Notably, while signing outside sections that
establish and fund a $500 million COVID-19 Essential Employee Premium Pay Fund
for one-time payments to frontline workers, the Governor vetoed a section
setting up administrative obstacles that would interfere with the efficient
distribution of payments, including the requirement to consult with an
extensive 28-member advisory panel on program design. Vetoing this
section will allow the administration to immediately get to work on the process
to distribute these funds.
To
read the Governor’s signing letter, click here.
To
read the Governor’s signed amendment letter, click here.
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