RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) - The General Assembly on Saturday finalized a relief package to address the new coronavirus pandemic in North Carolina, agreeing to send money to schools, hospitals, local governments and researchers.
A pair of bipartisan measures approved unanimously by the House and Senate direct how nearly $1.6 billion in federal COVID-19 funds are distributed and how scores of government activities during the outbreak are deferred or delayed.
The bills, negotiated during the annual session’s first week, were portrayed as the first of many actions to help commerce, health care and government struggling under business restrictions, short supplies and dwindling revenues. North Carolina had reported more than 11,500 positive cases and at least 420 COVID-19-related deaths as of Saturday, according to the Department of Health and Human Services.
“Everyone can leave Raleigh today knowing this legislation that we passed today is going to mean a lot. It’s going to help a lot of people,” House Speaker Tim Moore, a Cleveland County Republican, said at the close of a rare weekend meeting. “It’s going to save lives. It’s going to save businesses.”
The measures now head to Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper, who is expected to sign them into law. “They are the product of a consensus approach that I hope can continue,” he said in news release. Cooper and GOP legislators have had a tumultuous relationship, marked by a 2019 budget impasse that was never resolved.
Saturday’s product represents a compromise between what the Senate and House approved separately earlier this week, with input from the governor and legislative Democrats seeking items in Cooper’s own $1.4 billion request. The $1.6 billion is less than half of North Carolina’s share received from the $2 trillion coronavirus relief law that Congress approved last month.
“That’s what a crisis does. It gets folks to think about common ground,” said Senate leader Phil Berger, a Rockingham County Republican. The total dollar amount omits $1.2 billion in other federal funds already heading to state agencies.
The approved measures locate $125 million to expand a low-cost small-business loan fund run by the Golden LEAF Foundation.
There is $85 million for five universities for COVID-19 research and treatment; $95 million to help rural and teaching hospitals; $50 million to purchase personal protective equipment; and $25 million to expand virus testing and tracing. DHHS can’t access the $25 million, however, unless it releases additional data about COVID-19 testing and health conditions of patients.
The package allocates $35 million to purchase computers for students and staff in K-12 public schools, shuttered since March; $75 million to sustain school nutrition programs; and $44 million in part for online summer school for the University of North Carolina system and to sanitize its campuses.
The state Department of Transportation also would get $300 million, but only if the federal government allow spending for that purpose. Another $150 million would be distributed immediately to local governments.
The compromise limits civil liability immunity for hospitals and health care providers during the emergency, as well as for any “essential business” if a customer or employee is injured or dies from COVID-19 while working or conducting business there.
Car inspections and license renewals are delayed until August, interest accrued on income tax bills after April 15 is eliminated and marriage licenses and notarizations can be carried out remotely for awhile. And the K-12 schools will reopen a week earlier this August.
Deleted was a Senate provision to raise the maximum weekly state unemployment benefit from $350 to $400 once federal benefits are exhausted and a House provision to let still-shuttered restaurants sell take-out mixed drinks.
The Senate also blocked a House provision that would have expanded Medicaid coverage temporarily for COVID-19 testing and treatment to more people. Lawmakers say other federal funds will cover such treatment.
The legislature now won’t return to Raleigh for session business until at least May 18. The Legislative Building was closed to the public while the General Assembly worked this week. Many legislators wore surgical masks, and more than one-third of the House members absent from the floor Saturday voted by proxy.
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