ΤΟ ΙΣΤΟΛΟΓΙΟ ΜΑΣ ΞΕΠΕΡΑΣΕ ΜΕΧΡΙ ΣΗΜΕΡΑ ΤΙΣ 3.720.000 ΕΠΙΣΚΕΨΕΙΣ.

Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Los Angeles Times
Essential California
December 22, 2020

Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California newsletter. It’s Tuesday, Dec. 22, and I’m writing from Los Angeles.

Another COVID relief package is nearly on its way, eight wrenching months after Americans received their onetime stimulus checks.

A sprawling $900-billion pandemic relief bill was passed by both houses of Congress on Monday night. It now awaits President Trump’s signature.

[Read the story: “Congress includes historic measures in government funding, pandemic relief bills” in the Los Angeles Times]

As my D.C. colleague Jennifer Haberkorn reports, congressional leaders in both parties were under mounting pressure to approve legislation to respond to the pandemic in the face of expiring programs and a dramatic surge in coronavirus cases around the country, prompting restrictions on movement and business closures.

The 5,593-page, $2.3-trillion bill — which Jennifer describes as “a massive piece of legislation stuffed with a buffet of unrelated provisions” — is thought to be the largest single piece of legislation in congressional history. It includes a $1.4-trillion catchall spending bill along with the $900-billion pandemic relief package.

Here’s a look at some of the broad strokes:

  • The bill includes a new round of $600 stimulus checks for American adults earning up to $75,000. That’s half the amount given in the first stimulus package, and would cover roughly one to two weeks of rent for most L.A. apartments. Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin said Monday that some of the payments to individuals could go out as early as next week.
  • Supplemental federal unemployment benefits of $300 per week would go into effect for another 11 weeks, halving the $600 weekly benefits given in the first round.
  • Benefits for freelance and gig workers: Workers in the gig economy and the entertainment industry who earned most, but not all, of their income from 1099 independent contracting qualified for very little in unemployment benefits — and thus, none of the $600 additional unemployment payments — Congress issued in March. The new bill attempts to repair that glitch if states opt in, with a provision that would provide an additional $100 weekly supplement to people who earn more than $5,000 in 1099 income if they do not qualify for the enhanced unemployment benefit. As Jennifer reports, the provision was authored by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank), who said he expected California to opt in to the program.
  • Aid for small businesses and the arts: The bill would provide funding for another round of Paycheck Protection Program grants and deliver $15 billion in grants to independent venues, such as live music stages and movie theaters, to help them meet their bills for six months.
  • The bill would provide $25 billion in emergency rental assistance. Speaking Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom said the rental assistance provisions were not “as big and bold” as he had hoped but still “significant.” Offering an initial estimate, the governor speculated that $2 billion of that $25 billion could go to the state. State eviction protections are set to expire on Feb. 1, potentially leaving tens of thousands of Californians at risk of losing their homes. State legislation introduced earlier this month could extend the protections for 11 months, until Dec. 31 of next year. Newsom said Monday that he was working with the Legislature to try to extend the Feb. 1 moratorium.
  • The bill doesn’t include funding for struggling state and local governments — a decision that drew the ire of many L.A. elected officials.
  • The bill also includes ... money for education providers and childcare assistance, food stamps, coronavirus testing and tracing, vaccine purchasing and distribution, strengthening broadband access and state transportation programs.

Again, those are just the broad strokes — see Jennifer’s full story for a more in-depth look at the bill. More details are also likely to emerge in the days to come, as reporters and the public parse the tome.

The bill’s 11th-hour release drew frustration from both sides of the aisle, with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) tweeting that members of Congress had not yet read the thousands of pages they were expected to vote on, and Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) asking, “Who in their right mind thinks that this [is] a responsible way of governing?”

Los Angeles Times
Essential California
December 22, 2020

Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California newsletter. It’s Tuesday, Dec. 22, and I’m writing from Los Angeles.

Another COVID relief package is nearly on its way, eight wrenching months after Americans received their onetime stimulus checks.

A sprawling $900-billion pandemic relief bill was passed by both houses of Congress on Monday night. It now awaits President Trump’s signature.

[Read the story: “Congress includes historic measures in government funding, pandemic relief bills” in the Los Angeles Times]

As my D.C. colleague Jennifer Haberkorn reports, congressional leaders in both parties were under mounting pressure to approve legislation to respond to the pandemic in the face of expiring programs and a dramatic surge in coronavirus cases around the country, prompting restrictions on movement and business closures.

The 5,593-page, $2.3-trillion bill — which Jennifer describes as “a massive piece of legislation stuffed with a buffet of unrelated provisions” — is thought to be the largest single piece of legislation in congressional history. It includes a $1.4-trillion catchall spending bill along with the $900-billion pandemic relief package.

Here’s a look at some of the broad strokes:

  • The bill includes a new round of $600 stimulus checks for American adults earning up to $75,000. That’s half the amount given in the first stimulus package, and would cover roughly one to two weeks of rent for most L.A. apartments. Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin said Monday that some of the payments to individuals could go out as early as next week.
  • Supplemental federal unemployment benefits of $300 per week would go into effect for another 11 weeks, halving the $600 weekly benefits given in the first round.
  • Benefits for freelance and gig workers: Workers in the gig economy and the entertainment industry who earned most, but not all, of their income from 1099 independent contracting qualified for very little in unemployment benefits — and thus, none of the $600 additional unemployment payments — Congress issued in March. The new bill attempts to repair that glitch if states opt in, with a provision that would provide an additional $100 weekly supplement to people who earn more than $5,000 in 1099 income if they do not qualify for the enhanced unemployment benefit. As Jennifer reports, the provision was authored by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank), who said he expected California to opt in to the program.
  • Aid for small businesses and the arts: The bill would provide funding for another round of Paycheck Protection Program grants and deliver $15 billion in grants to independent venues, such as live music stages and movie theaters, to help them meet their bills for six months.
  • The bill would provide $25 billion in emergency rental assistance. Speaking Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom said the rental assistance provisions were not “as big and bold” as he had hoped but still “significant.” Offering an initial estimate, the governor speculated that $2 billion of that $25 billion could go to the state. State eviction protections are set to expire on Feb. 1, potentially leaving tens of thousands of Californians at risk of losing their homes. State legislation introduced earlier this month could extend the protections for 11 months, until Dec. 31 of next year. Newsom said Monday that he was working with the Legislature to try to extend the Feb. 1 moratorium.
  • The bill doesn’t include funding for struggling state and local governments — a decision that drew the ire of many L.A. elected officials.
  • The bill also includes ... money for education providers and childcare assistance, food stamps, coronavirus testing and tracing, vaccine purchasing and distribution, strengthening broadband access and state transportation programs.

Again, those are just the broad strokes — see Jennifer’s full story for a more in-depth look at the bill. More details are also likely to emerge in the days to come, as reporters and the public parse the tome.

The bill’s 11th-hour release drew frustration from both sides of the aisle, with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) tweeting that members of Congress had not yet read the thousands of pages they were expected to vote on, and Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) asking, “Who in their right mind thinks that this [is] a responsible way of governing?”

Los Angeles Times
Essential California
December 22, 2020

Good morning, and welcome to the Essential California newsletter. It’s Tuesday, Dec. 22, and I’m writing from Los Angeles.

Another COVID relief package is nearly on its way, eight wrenching months after Americans received their onetime stimulus checks.

A sprawling $900-billion pandemic relief bill was passed by both houses of Congress on Monday night. It now awaits President Trump’s signature.

[Read the story: “Congress includes historic measures in government funding, pandemic relief bills” in the Los Angeles Times]

As my D.C. colleague Jennifer Haberkorn reports, congressional leaders in both parties were under mounting pressure to approve legislation to respond to the pandemic in the face of expiring programs and a dramatic surge in coronavirus cases around the country, prompting restrictions on movement and business closures.

The 5,593-page, $2.3-trillion bill — which Jennifer describes as “a massive piece of legislation stuffed with a buffet of unrelated provisions” — is thought to be the largest single piece of legislation in congressional history. It includes a $1.4-trillion catchall spending bill along with the $900-billion pandemic relief package.

Here’s a look at some of the broad strokes:

  • The bill includes a new round of $600 stimulus checks for American adults earning up to $75,000. That’s half the amount given in the first stimulus package, and would cover roughly one to two weeks of rent for most L.A. apartments. Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin said Monday that some of the payments to individuals could go out as early as next week.
  • Supplemental federal unemployment benefits of $300 per week would go into effect for another 11 weeks, halving the $600 weekly benefits given in the first round.
  • Benefits for freelance and gig workers: Workers in the gig economy and the entertainment industry who earned most, but not all, of their income from 1099 independent contracting qualified for very little in unemployment benefits — and thus, none of the $600 additional unemployment payments — Congress issued in March. The new bill attempts to repair that glitch if states opt in, with a provision that would provide an additional $100 weekly supplement to people who earn more than $5,000 in 1099 income if they do not qualify for the enhanced unemployment benefit. As Jennifer reports, the provision was authored by Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Burbank), who said he expected California to opt in to the program.
  • Aid for small businesses and the arts: The bill would provide funding for another round of Paycheck Protection Program grants and deliver $15 billion in grants to independent venues, such as live music stages and movie theaters, to help them meet their bills for six months.
  • The bill would provide $25 billion in emergency rental assistance. Speaking Monday, Gov. Gavin Newsom said the rental assistance provisions were not “as big and bold” as he had hoped but still “significant.” Offering an initial estimate, the governor speculated that $2 billion of that $25 billion could go to the state. State eviction protections are set to expire on Feb. 1, potentially leaving tens of thousands of Californians at risk of losing their homes. State legislation introduced earlier this month could extend the protections for 11 months, until Dec. 31 of next year. Newsom said Monday that he was working with the Legislature to try to extend the Feb. 1 moratorium.
  • The bill doesn’t include funding for struggling state and local governments — a decision that drew the ire of many L.A. elected officials.
  • The bill also includes ... money for education providers and childcare assistance, food stamps, coronavirus testing and tracing, vaccine purchasing and distribution, strengthening broadband access and state transportation programs.

Again, those are just the broad strokes — see Jennifer’s full story for a more in-depth look at the bill. More details are also likely to emerge in the days to come, as reporters and the public parse the tome.

The bill’s 11th-hour release drew frustration from both sides of the aisle, with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) tweeting that members of Congress had not yet read the thousands of pages they were expected to vote on, and Sen. Rick Scott (R-Fla.) asking, “Who in their right mind thinks that this [is] a responsible way of governing?”

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