Smith strongly supports passage of bipartisan COVID relief bill
Smith strongly supports passage of bipartisan COVID relief bill
Unemployment assistance, small business aid, rental assistance included
WASHINGTON, DC – The House and Senate voted tonight on a COVID relief and omnibus legislative package that provides critical COVID relief for unemployed Americans, their families and small businesses struggling under the weight of the impact of COVID, while also funding the government through the end of the fiscal year in September 2021. Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) supported the final COVID relief bill to provide approximately $900 billion in federal assistance to continue to respond to the COVID pandemic and its impact on the economy.
“This long-overdue legislation has additional funding for COVID vaccine accessibility and distribution, money for schools so they can safely reopen, and another round of $600 direct payments for Americans who have been hit the hardest during this pandemic,” said Smith, member of the bipartisan Problem Solvers Caucus which helped spark dialogue for negotiations and push through a final bill. “This relief bill also will extend the successful Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) that has kept many small businesses afloat with desperately-needed relief, and will add deductibility for PPP expenses.”
Once signed into law, the act:
- provides direct payments up to $600 per eligible adult and per qualifying child.
- extends two key CARES Act programs about to sunset—the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program to help the self-employed and so-called “gig” economy workers, and the Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation benefit extension program—which were both extended for 11 weeks, avoiding a financial crunch for millions of Americans. The new timeline will prevent another deadline that would have stopped the programs in March.
- will add $300 to all weekly unemployment benefits.
- allows workers who rely on multiple jobs and have lost income to be eligible for a weekly $100 boost.
- helps schools by providing additional funding so they can safely reopen. Provisions provide elementary, secondary and higher education $82 billion of funds to reopen classrooms and prevent virus transmission.
- has additional funding for vaccine accessibility and distribution.
- continues the eviction moratorium set to expire at year’s end through the end of January.
- includes $25 billion for rental assistance for families facing eviction. Eligible renters would be able to receive assistance with their rent and utilities.
- provides $45 billion for the hard-hit transportation sector, including $16 billion to help keep airlines solvent and support their employees and contractors; $14 billion for transit systems; $10 billion for highways, $2 billion for intercity buses, $2 billion for airports and $1 billion for Amtrak.
Today’s bill is the sixth major COVID package Smith has supported in 2020. The final vote was 359-53. The CARES Act was the third and the largest phase of the federal response enacted into law. Smith supported Phase I, the Coronavirus Preparedness and Response Supplemental Appropriations Act, 2020—which provided $8.3 billion for treatment and prevention measures in NJ. Phase II, the Families First Coronavirus Response Act—provided paid sick leave, family medical leave, free testing, and expanded unemployment benefits among other provisions to help working Americans.