Baltimore Sun

Aid bill keeps speedy track

Senators OK $1.5B package known as the RELIEF Act

- By Pamela Wood

A pandemic financial aid package of stimulus payments, grants and tax breaks won approval Friday in the Maryland Senate, fast-tracked to provide quick relief for struggling residents and businesses.

Senators voted 47-0 to approve the $1.5 billion package known as the RELIEF Act. The measure now awaits action in the House of Delegates, where leaders are working to get the bill passed within about a week.

The bill is sailing through the legislatur­e with unusual speed, driven by lawmakers from both parties who see an urgent need to provide financial help amid the pandemic-caused recession.

The last time lawmakers worked this quickly was in 2019, when they passed a bill in response to a self-dealing scandal at the University of Maryland Medical System that ultimately landed former Baltimore mayor Catherine Pugh in federal prison.

As an emergency bill, the RELIEF Act would take effect as soon as it’s passed and signed into law. The state comptrolle­r’s staff is already working out how to send out stimulus checks and account for all the tax breaks in the bill.

The RELIEF Act was proposed by Republican Gov. Larry Hogan and then expanded by senators.

“Between the governor’s proposal and our proposal, we have a very good package here that will help people immediatel­y,” said Sen. James Rosapepe, a Democrat representi­ng Prince George’s and Anne Arundel counties.

Some of the RELIEF Act’s key provisions include:

Making direct payments to low- and moderate-income Marylander­s who receive the earned income tax credit on their taxes. Two rounds of payments would total up to $450 per individual or $750 per family.

Eliminatin­g local and state income taxes on unemployme­nt benefits.

Making one-time $1,000 payments to individual­s stuck in

limbo in the unemployme­nt system, and hiring more staff for the Department of Labor.

Wiping out utility and rental debt for a few thousand families.

Granting a credit against sales taxes collected by small businesses for three months, up to a total of $12,000.

The RELIEF Act also would plow more money into food banks, volunteer fire department­s, nonprofit organizati­ons, artists, restaurant­s and hotels. Some of that money would flow through existing programs set up by the governor.

Businesses that already received state pandemic grants would not have to pay any taxes on that money under the bill. And companies that laid people off due to the pandemic would not face higher unemployme­nt taxes moving forward.

Hogan’s proposal came with a price tag of about $1 billion. The Senate’s “Recovery

Now” changes tacked on another estimated $520 million in spending. Senators said the cost of their plan would be paid for with a combinatio­n of part of the state’s rainy day fund and temporary budget maneuvers.

“This is about the next four moths. This is immediate relief for individual­s who in particular have suffered the most due to COVID,” said Sen. Guy Guzzone, a Howard County Democrat who chairs the Senate Budget and Taxation Committee.

Senators emphasized that they worked quickly and in a bipartisan manner to revise and pass the bill. “This is the way government should work,” said Sen. Bryan Simonaire, an Anne Arundel County Republican who is the Senate minority leader.

Hogan issued a news release with the words “bipartisan­ship alert” in purple, capital letters to praise the Senate’s vote.

“Let’s once again show the rest of the nation how to put aside partisan politics and work together by delivering this vital relief at an urgent and historic pace,” Hogan said in the statement.

The effort now moves to the House.

Officially, only the governor’s original bill is pending in the House, but anticipati­ng Friday’s vote, Guzzone briefed a House committee on Thursday on the revised version of the bill. “This is a way to speed up the process,” Del. Anne Kaiser, chair of the House Ways and Means Committee, told committee members during their meeting. Kaiser is a Democrat representi­ng Montgomery County.

She said the goal is for the House to review the legislatio­n, and possibly make changes, with final passage of the bill by Feb. 14.

“We need this bill to pass pretty much by Feb. 14 to accommodat­e state tax filings and things that the comptrolle­r’s office does,” Kaiser said. “And of course we are interested in any relief from this bill getting into the hands of Marylander­s as quickly as possible.”

Concerns have been raised that the financial aid package leaves out people who entered the U.S. illegally but who work here and pay taxes.

Comptrolle­r Peter Franchot has been pushing for $2,000 stimulus payments for a broader group of low-income taxpayers that also includes undocument­ed workers who pay taxes using an Individual Taxpayer Identifica­tion Number instead of a Social Security Number.

Franchot said 86,000 people used ITINs to pay taxes in Maryland last year, and nearly half would qualify for checks under his plan.

“Not one of these hardworkin­g neighbors would receive a penny under the governor’s proposal,” Franchot, a Democrat who is running for governor in 2022, said in a statement.

“Many of these immigrant families also belong to communitie­s that have disproport­ionately been unemployed, become ill, or died from COVID,” he said. “It’s immoral to leave them out of the state’s response.”

Pablo Blank, of the immigrant advocacy group CASA, told delegates Thursday that undocument­ed workers should be added into the bill. He said it was “deeply concerning” that they were left out.

“The COVID virus does not discrimina­te,” he said. “It affects all Marylander­s, reargless of whether they pay taxes with an ITIN or with a Social Security Number.”

 ??  ?? proposed the RELIEF Act, which was expanded by senators.
proposed the RELIEF Act, which was expanded by senators.

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