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A Year Later, Minnesota Still Has Billions in Federal Pandemic Relief Dollars to Spend

American Rescue Plan money has already gone to everything from police to sewers.

In the year since the federal government allocated $1.9 trillion to a pandemic stimulus package, Minnesota has used some of the cash on everything from the expected — supporting hospitals and students — to boosting participation in the Girl Scouts and providing financial aid to crime victims.

And there’s more to spend.

State government has yet to decide how to use more than a third of its $2.8 billion. Cities, towns and counties have until the end of 2026 to spend their $2.1 billion.

“It wasn’t perfect, but I’m glad it got passed. Has it kicked off our economy? You bet it has,” said Luverne Mayor Pat Baustian, who said a freezer warehouse company and hog processing facility have since moved to his city in the southwest corner of the state. “We have industry growing in our community that might have stayed stagnant if our economy would have been on the status quo.”

It will take years to see the full economic, health and social impacts of the American Rescue Plan. But some city officials and legislators say the financial boost is already clear.

Democrats are trying to capitalize on that message as they enter a challenging midterm election season and attempt to maintain control in Washington and Minnesota. Democratic U.S. Rep. Angie Craig, who faces a heated battle for her district, recently emphasized the legislation’s impact on health care insurance premiums during a news conference, saying, “The bottom line is this: The American Rescue Plan was critical to providing health care for thousand of families in Minnesota.”

Congressional Republicans have derided the bill, arguing that the $1.9 trillion package helped spur inflation, and state legislators are calling for audits of the massive spending.

Republican U.S. Rep. Pete Stauber charged that “it was one of a couple of major bills that overheated our economy.” Fellow Republican U.S. Rep. Tom Emmer, who has advocated for oversight of the package, called the legislation “a huge mistake.”

“I think a city in New York is spending it on a baseball stadium,” Emmer said. “I think there are other projects that that’s not what it was for, that wasn’t what it was intended for, it was supposed to be for COVID. Should be returned to the people, quite frankly.”

Nevertheless, many Republican counties in Minnesota are relying on the money as they wait for more spending decisions to come.

In Crow Wing County, money from the relief package is being used for broadband internet expansion projects and daycare access, county administrator Tim Houle said. Dollars are also being used to increase staffing in hopes of alleviating a court backlog.

“We’re trying to spend it on things that are going to last that are related to our economic recovery,” Houle said. “We don’t always get that luxury.”

How to use $1 billion?

At the State Capitol, lawmakers have a looming deadline to decide how to use the state’s remaining money. If they cannot reach a deal by June 15, Democratic Gov. Tim Walz gets to decide how to spend it.

GOP lawmakers have been calling for the dollars to go toward repaying the federal government for covering a crush of unemployment benefit requests during the pandemic, and rebuilding an unemployment insurance trust fund.

House Ways and Means Chair Rena Moran, DFL-St. Paul, said she anticipates the money will be used on a combination of unemployment insurance and payments to frontline workers.

It would have been “disastrous” if Congress didn’t pass the American Rescue Plan, Moran said. It has helped feed the hungry, spread the word about COVID vaccinations and support small businesses, she said, as well as assisting homeowners and the homeless, students and people in nursing homes.

Rep. Pat Garofalo, R-Farmington, suggested using the remaining money for unemployment insurance, schools and hospitals. He stressed that legislators must reach a deal to avoid giving Walz discretion over the spending. Garofalo is one of many legislators also calling for the state to scrutinize spending by nonprofits and other non-government entities that got federal dollars for housing and social services.

“At the federal level, they have literally thrown trillions of dollars at the U.S. economy. And while that helped us avoid a significant recession, that money in a short amount of time has given people the opportunity to engage in fraud,” he said.

The FBI is investigating Minnesota nonprofit Feeding Our Future, alleging that it was part of a scheme to misuse federal dollars intended for children’s meals. GOP legislators said the potential misuse of those U.S. Agriculture Department funds raises broader concerns. A group of Minnesota senators asked state budget officials earlier this year for details on available federal funds they could use to audit pandemic spending.

Mix of spending

Minnesota will receive a total of roughly $8.5 billion through the American Rescue Plan, according to state budget officials. About half of the money went to federal programs. State and local governments are deciding what to do with the rest.

The bulk of the plan’s direct federal financial aid has ended, including stimulus checks, child tax credits and expanded unemployment benefits. However, many state and local entities are still waiting to receive a second round of cash. Minnesota’s state government has received only $1.4 billion from the American Rescue Plan so far. Minnesota Management and Budget officials expect the U.S. Treasury will send the second half in May.

The federal legislation was broadly aimed at fighting the virus, providing an economic jumpstart and helping communities recover. But across the country, the dollars have occasionally landed in unexpected spots.

Minnesota gave $11.5 million to the Minnesota Zoo and another $3.8 million to the Science Museum. The attractions struggled with low visitor numbers over recent years. It also dedicated $1 million to help 3,000 girls in low-income communities become Girl Scouts.

In Wisconsin, American Rescue Plan money went to summer camps, minor league sports and other event venues. Colorado devoted millions to HIV and AIDS prevention. Texas spent some cash improving a state historic site.

Local allocations also have been all over the map. Minneapolis is using the money on everything from speed bumps to a guaranteed basic income pilot program — which drew backlash from Minnesota’s Republican members of Congress, who proposed the “Stop Disincentivizing Work Act” in an attempt to block it.

Baustian, the Luverne mayor who is also president of the Coalition of Greater Minnesota Cities, nonetheless estimated that 90% of local projects that get American Rescue Plan dollars will be tied to the pandemic.

His city is getting almost $480,000 and using it all to improve sewer pipes. Luverne lost money by giving restaurants and stores a break on sewer and other utility bills when businesses had to shut down, Baustian said, and the federal money supports budgets like theirs that took a hit during the pandemic.

“Whether it’s going out and buying a new fire truck, whether it’s putting in a water main system somewhere, whether it’s replacing lead pipes,” he said. “These are dollars … that we don’t have to go out and add on to our citizens’ tax levy.”

(Star Tribune)

Bird Flu Outbreak Reported in Two More Minnesota Counties

The Minnesota Board of Animal Health says Kandiyohi and Lac Qui Parle Counties are the latest to report flocks with highly pathogenic avian influenza infections.

Those two counties join Meeker, Mower and Stearns Counties with flocks showing signs of H5N1. There are now more than 370,000 birds in Minnesota that are affected. Minnesota joins Colorado, North Dakota and Pennsylvania with the HPAI strain. The infections in those states were all detected in waterfowl rather than commercial birds.

So far, 18 states have reported H5N1 poultry outbreaks this year.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s emergency response team is being deployed in the state Wednesday and will remain for at least three weeks. The team will work alongside animal health officials and producers to respond to the incident, including quarantining the infected flocks, supporting infected-site response activities, engaging in disease surveillance, and coordinating state and federal logistics and finances.

Minnesota is ranked number one in turkey production in the nation. Minnesota has more than 660 turkey farms that raise about 40 million birds annually, more than any other state. Turkey production generates $774 million in cash receipts annually, and in 2020, Minnesota exported about 15% of its production, worth approximately $114 million.

Updates regarding reported bird flu outbreaks in Minnesota can be found here.

 

(KNSI)

MNDOLI Introduction to Apprenticeship

Join MNDOLI virtually at 10 a.m. on Wednesday, March 30, 2022, to learn about registered apprenticeship and the benefits of growing and sustaining an innovative workforce. This month’s event will highlight community-based organizations.

To meet the need for talent in this growing high-tech industry, employers are turning to registered apprenticeship — a time-tested model to recruit, train and retain their highly skilled and diverse workforce of tomorrow. There is no cost to attend.

Registration

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Governor Tim Walz Returns to Minnesota Capitol for Annual Address April 24th

The State of the State will be delivered April 24 from the House chamber.

Gov. Tim Walz will deliver his fourth State of the State address on April 24 at 6 p.m. in front of a joint session of the divided Minnesota House and Senate.

The annual address from the governor, announced by his office on Monday, has been broadcast remotely the past two years amid concerns about the spread of COVID-19. The first-term Democratic governor will return to the Minnesota House chamber for the speech, where he gave his first State of the State address in 2019.

Walz delivered his 2020 State of the State address from quarantine in the governor’s residence, after an exposure to COVID-19. His third address was recorded in his old classroom in Mankato West High School.

The State of the State comes during his fourth tumultuous year as governor, as he has managed a once-in-a-century pandemic and in the midst of a racial reckoning sparked by George Floyd’s killing by a former Minneapolis police officer.

Walz is expected to outline his priorities for the ongoing legislative session and his plan for spending a nearly $9.3 billion budget surplus, which includes direct tax rebate checks for Minnesotans, $300 million for public safety efforts and more spending on classrooms and programs such as paid family and medical leave.

The governor is seeking a second term this fall. More than a half-dozen Republican candidates are running to be the party’s nominee to challenge Walz in November.