American Rescue Plan Act of 2021: Summary

American Rescue Plan Act of 2021: Summary
The U.S. House of Representatives on March 10, 2021, passed the Senate-amended H.R. 1319, the
American Rescue Plan (ARP). The ARP provides $1.9 trillion in additional relief to respond to the novel
coronavirus (COVID-19). This follows the enactment of nearly $4 trillion in COVID relief in 2020. President
Joe Biden called for Congress to enact the ARP to provide relief for individuals and business struggling due
to COVID-19, as well as to achieve other priorities of the Biden Administration and Congress. ARP includes
provisions on aid to state and local governments, hard-hit industries and communities, tax changes affecting
individuals and business, and other provisions.
The latest COVID relief legislation was enacted as part of Congress’ fiscal year (FY) 2021 budget, and
includes provisions impacting a wide variety of stakeholders. The following chart highlights some noteworthy
provisions.
Key Provisions of American Rescue Plan
Agriculture
Food supply chain and agriculture pandemic response
 Provides $4 billion for the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA)
Secretary to:
o Purchase food and agricultural commodities
o Purchase and distribute agricultural commodities (including fresh
produce, dairy, seafood, eggs and meat) to individuals in need
o Make grants and loans for small or midsized food processors or
distributors, producers or other organizations to respond to COVID
o Make loans and grants to maintain and improve food and
agricultural supply chain resiliency
 Provides $300 million to monitor and survey susceptible animals for
incidents of COVID
 Provides $100 million to reduce the amount of overtime inspection costs of
federally inspected small establishments and very small establishments
engaged in meat processing
Emergency rural development grants for rural healthcare
 Provides $500 million to establish an emergency pilot program within 150
days after the enactment of ARP to increase capacity for vaccine
distribution, purchase medical supplies, reimburse lost revenue, increase
telehealth capabilities, construct temporary or permanent structures to
provide healthcare services, support staffing needs for vaccine
administration and testing, and engage in other efforts to support rural
healthcare facilities in addressing COVID
Pandemic program administration funds
 Provides $47.5 million for necessary expenditures associated with carrying
out the agriculture subtitle
Funding for the USDA Office of Inspector General for oversight of COVID-related
programs
 Provides $2.5 million for audits, investigations and other oversight
activities carried out with funds made available to the USDA related to the
COVID pandemic
Farm loan assistance for socially disadvantaged farmers and ranchers
 Provides that the USDA Secretary shall provide a payment up to 120
percent of the outstanding indebtedness of each socially disadvantaged
farmer or rancher as of Jan. 1, 2021, to pay off the loan directly or to the socially disadvantaged farmer or rancher for a direct farm loan or farm
loan guaranteed by the Secretary
USDA assistance and support for socially disadvantaged farmers, ranchers, forest
land owners and operators, and groups
 Provides $1.01 billion to provide assistance for socially disadvantaged
farmers, ranches, forest land owners, operators and groups, including:
o not less than 5 percent to provide outreach, mediation, financial
training, capacity building training, cooperative development
training and support, and other technical assistance
o not less than 5 percent to provide grants and loans to improve
land access for socially disadvantaged farmers, ranchers or forest
landowners
o not less than 0.5 percent to support the activities of equity
commissions
o not less than 5 percent to support research, education and
extension, including scholarships and internships that provide
pathways to federal employment
o not less than 5 percent to provide assistance to socially
disadvantaged farmers, ranchers, or forest landowners who have
suffered adverse actions, past discrimination or bias
Use of the Commodity Credit Corporation (CCC) for commodities and associated
expenses
 Provides $800 million for the CCC to acquire and make available
commodities under Section 406(b) of the Food for Peace Act
Nutrition Assistance
Supplemental nutrition assistance program (SNAP)
 Extends the 15 percent increase in SNAP benefits through Sept. 30, 2021,
to address the hunger crisis.
 Provides $1.15 billion for SNAP. Of these funds:
o $15 million for the management and oversight of the program
o $1.135 billion to make grants to each state agency for fiscal years
2021-2023:
 75 percent of funds will be distributed based on the share
of each state’s households that participated in the
program for the most recent 12-month period
 25 percent of funds will be distributed based on the
increased number of households that participated in the
program for the most recent 12-month period
Additional assistance for SNAP online purchasing and technology improvements
 Provides $25 million to make technological improvements to improve
online purchasing, modernize electronic benefit transfer technology,
support mobile technologies demonstration projects and provide technical
assistance to educate retailers on the online acceptance of SNAP benefits
Additional funding for nutrition assistance programs
 Provides $1 billion in nutrition assistance for the Commonwealth of
Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico and American Samoa
Commodity supplemental food program
 Provides $37 million for the commodity distribution program to maintain
the traditional levels of assistance for food assistance programs, including
but not limited to, distribution to institutions (including hospitals and
facilities caring for needy infants and children), supplemental feeding
programs serving women, infants and children (WIC) or elderly persons,
disaster areas, summer camps for children, the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands and tribal organization requests for the distribution of
federally donated foods pursuant to Section 4(b) of the Food and Nutrition
Act of 2008
Improvements to WIC benefits
 Provides $490 million to increase cash vouchers for any state agency that
notifies the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture of the intent to use
the increased amounts. The authority of a state agency to increase the
amount of a cash-value voucher will terminate on Sept. 30, 2021
WIC program modernization
 Provides $390 million to carry out outreach, innovation and program
modernization efforts, including appropriate waivers and flexibility, to
increase participate in and redemption of benefits under programs
established under Section 17 of the Child Nutrition Act of 1966
Meals and supplements reimbursements for individuals who have not attained the
age of 25
 Permits the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture to reimburse
emergency shelter institutions for meals and supplements serving
individuals who are under the age of 25 and are receiving assistance,
including non-residential assistance, from the emergency shelter
Pandemic Electronic Benefit Transfer (P-EBT) program
 Amends Section 1101 of the Families First Coronavirus Response Act to
permit a state agency to extend a state agency plan for 90 days for the
purpose of operating a program during a covered summer period when the
school lunch program under the Richard B. Russell National School Lunch
Act or the school breakfast program under Section 4 of the Child Nutrition
Act of 1966 (42 U.S.C. 1773) and covered child care facilities are closed
Education
K-12 Education
 Nearly $122 billion for the K-12 General Stabilization Fund
 $2.6 billion for State Special Education Grants under the Individuals with
Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), to be used in FY 2021.
 $800 million to help children experiencing homelessness
 Stipulations for use:
o States are required to sub-grant at least 90 percent of the
Elementary and Secondary School Emergency Relief Fund
(ESSERF) to school districts according to Title I of the Every
Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) – this includes charter schools that
are considered Local Educational Agencies (LEAs)
o Of these funds, State Educational Agencies (SEAs) need to
reserve at least 5 percent and LEAs must reserve at least 20
percent to “address learning loss through the implementation of
evidence-based interventions, such as summer learning or
summer enrichment, extended day, comprehensive afterschool
programs, or extended school year programs, and ensure that
such interventions respond to students’ academic, social, and
emotional needs”
o States need to disseminate the funding within 60 days of receipt;
within 30 days of getting the new relief funding, school districts
have to publish “a plan for the safe return to in-person instruction”
if they have not already done soHigher Education
 $40 billion to colleges and universities through the Higher Education
Emergency Relief Fund (HEERF), which will remain available through
Sept. 30, 2023, including:
o $36 billion for public and nonprofit institutions of higher education
 institutions are required to direct 50 percent of their
funding to students in the form of emergency grants
o $3 billion for Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs),
Tribal Colleges and Universities (TCUs) and other Minority Serving
Institutions (MSIs)
o $198 million for institutions with the greatest pandemic-related
needs
Child Care
Child Care
 $40 billion for child care agencies and aid to providers affected by the
pandemic:
o $15 billion of these funds will go to the Child Care and
Development Block Grant (CCDBG) to subsidize child care for
875,000 children during the next year
o $24 billion is for child care stabilization funds to save and sustain
nearly 449,000 child care programs, impacting 7.3 million children
o $1 billion for Head Start to ensure that programs can continue to
provide vital services to children and families
Water and Utility
Assistance
Funding for LIHEAP
 Provides $4.5 billion for utility assistance through the Low Income Home
Energy Assistance Program (LIHEAP)
Funding for water assistance program
 $500 million for water assistance grants to states “to assist low-income
households, particularly those with the lowest incomes, that pay a high
proportion of household income for drinking water and wastewater
services”; the states will provide the funds to” owners or operators of
public water systems or treatment works to reduce arrearages of and rates
charged to such households for such services”
Healthcare
Public Health
Funding for COVID-19 vaccine activities at the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC)
 Provides $7.5 billion to the CDC for activities to plan, distribute and track
COVID-19 vaccines; these funds may also go to state, local, tribal and
territorial public health departments for wraparound support for vaccine
distribution and administration, and will be available until expended and
will be distributed through existing CDC vehicles/cooperative agreements
to the public health departments/officials in the 64 CDC jurisdictions
 This section also provides additional supplemental funding to states,
localities and territories within 21 days of enactment above and beyond
similar funding provided in the FY 2021 regular appropriations bill based
upon the difference between FY 2021 funding and the FY 2020 Public
Health Emergency Preparedness grant formula funding
Funding for Vaccine Confidence Activities
 Provides $1 billion to the CDC to strengthen public understanding and
confidence in COVID-19 vaccines to ultimately improve U.S. vaccination
rates; the funds will be available until expended and will be distributed
through existing CDC vehicles/cooperative agreements to the public health
departments/officials in the 64 CDC jurisdictions Funding for Supply Chain for COVID-19 Vaccines, Therapeutics and Medical
Supplies
 Provides $6.05 billion for research, development, manufacturing,
production and purchase of vaccines, therapeutics and ancillary medical
products and supplies to respond to COVID; funding may apply not only to
COVID-19 but also to any pandemic-capable disease, and will be available
until expended and will likely be available through U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) contract vehicles/Broad Agency
Announcements
Funding for COVID-19 Vaccine, Therapeutic and Device Activities at the FDA
 Provides $500 million to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to
evaluate the continued effectiveness of FDA-regulated products approved
to address COVID-19; funding also applies to expand continuous
manufacturing abilities to ensure a robust supply chain of COVID-related
products, and also may also be used to expand FDA facility inspections to
accelerate the review of products delayed due to COVID
Reduced Cost-Sharing
 Ensures that individuals who received unemployment compensation in
2021 receive cost-sharing subsidies as those whose family income is no
greater than 133 percent of the federal poverty line
Testing
Funding for COVID-19 Testing, Contact Tracing and Mitigation Activities
 Provides HHS with $47.8 billion to fund activities to respond to and
mitigate the spread of COVID-19, and that may be used to:
o implement a national COVID-19 testing strategy
o provide technical assistance to state, local and territorial public
health departments to detect, diagnose and trace COVID-19
o support expanded COVID-19 testing and development, including
through the acquisition of non-federally owned facilities to increase
testing capacity
o enhance IT resources for public health data sharing.
 The funds will be available until expended and will be distributed through
existing CDC vehicles/cooperative agreements, including and especially
the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity (ELC) Cooperative Agreement
to the public health departments/officials in the 64 CDC jurisdictions
Funding for SARS-COV-2 Genomic Sequencing and Surveillance
 Provides HHS/CDC with $1.75 billion to expand and improve activities
around the sequencing of COVID-19 and its variants; funding may also
apply to local, state and territorial health departments to develop COVID
variant mitigation strategies
Funding for Global Health
 Provides $750 million to HHS/CDC to combat COVID-19 and emerging
infectious diseases globally
Funding for Data Modernization and Forecasting Center
 Provides $500 million to HHS/CDC for public health data surveillance and
analytics infrastructure modernizationPublic Health Workforce
Funding for Public Health Workforce
 Provides $7.66 billion to HHS to maintain and expand the U.S. public
health workforce, including through grant support to public health
departments to recruit and hire new public health workers and related
administrative support as well as providing PPE and other supplies to new
workers
Funding for Medical Reserve Corps
 Provides $100 million for the Medical Reserve Corps
Public Health Investments
Funding for community health centers and community care
 Provides $7.6 billion to HHS to be awarded for grants and cooperative
agreements to community health centers and qualified Hawaiian entities
for COVID-19 vaccine distribution, testing, contract tracing, equipment,
staff, infrastructure, and community education and outreach
Funding for National Health Service Corps
 Provides $800 million to HHS for state loan repayment programs
Funding for Nurse Corps
 Provides $200 million to HHS for loan repayment programs
Funding for teaching health centers that operate graduate medical education
 Provides $330 million through FY 2023 to HHS for new graduate medical
residency training programs, maintaining existing staff and expanding
existing programs, establishing new or expanding existing primary care
residency programs, funding a per resident increase of $10,000 and
boosting the federal response to public health emergencies
Funding for family planning
 Provides $50 million to HHS for federal grants to assist in the
establishment and operation of family planning and preventive health
projects and services not including abortion services
Mental Health and Substance Use Disorder
Funding for block grants for community mental health services
 Provides $1.5 billion to HHS through FY 2025 for grants to states for
providing community mental health services
Funding for block grants for prevention and treatment of substance abuse
 Provides $1.5 billion to HHS through FY 2025 for substance abuse
prevention and treatment
Funding for mental health and substance use disorder training for healthcare
professionals, paraprofessionals, and public safety officers
 Provides $80 million to HHS and the Health Resources and Services
Administration (HRSA) for grants or contracts with qualifying entities in
rural and underserved communities to train health professionals in
evidence-informed strategies for reducing and addressing suicide,
burnout, mental health conditions and substance use disorders among
healthcare professionalsFunding for education and awareness campaign encouraging healthy work
conditions and use of mental health and substance use disorder services by
healthcare professionals
 Provides $20 million to HHS/CDC to carry out a national evidence-based
education and awareness campaign directed at healthcare professionals
and first responders by encouraging them to identify risk factors and seek
support and treatment for their own mental health and substance use
concerns
Funding for grants for healthcare providers to promote mental health among their
health professional workforce
 Provides $40 million to HHS/HRSA for grants or contracts with healthcare
entities, including provider trade associations and Federally Qualified
Health Centers (FQHCs), to establish or expand protocols to promote
mental health among healthcare providers, particularly in rural and
underserved communities
Funding for community-based funding for local substance use disorder services
 Provides $30 million to HHS to support community-based overdose
prevention programs, syringe services programs and other harm reduction
services
Funding for community-based funding for local behavioral health needs
 Provides $50 million to HHS for grants to address increased community
behavioral health needs worsened by the COVID-19 public health
emergency to be used for care coordination, workforce training, surge
capacity, integrating evidence-based care models, providing mental and
behavioral health services via telehealth, and preventive and crisis
intervention services
Funding for the National Child Traumatic Stress Network
 Provides $10 million to HHS in funding for the national child traumatic
stress network
Funding for Project AWARE
 Provides $30 million to HHS for Project AWARE for advancing wellness
and resiliency in education
Funding for youth suicide prevention
 Provides $20 million to HHS for grants for youth suicide and early
prevention programs
Funding for behavioral health workforce education and training
 Provides $100 million to HHS for grants for mental and behavioral health
education and training programs
Funding for pediatric mental health care access
 Provides $80 million to HHS for grants to promote behavioral health
integration in pediatric primary care by supporting the development of new
or improvement of existing statewide or regional pediatric mental health
care telehealth access programs
Funding for expansion grants for certified community behavioral health clinics
 Provides $420 million to HHS for grants to Certified Community Behavioral
Health ClinicsExchange Grant Program
Establishing a grant program for ACA Exchange modernization
 Provides $20 million through FY 2022 to HHS to award grants to
Affordable Care Act (ACA) Exchanges to modernize or update systems,
programs or other technology
Medicaid
Mandatory coverage of COVID–19 vaccines and administration and treatment
under Medicaid
 The bill builds on provisions in the Families First Coronavirus Response
legislation that required Medicaid and Children’s Health Insurance
Program (CHIP) coverage of COVID-19 testing without cost-sharing to
explicitly require Medicaid and CHIP coverage of COVID-19 vaccines,
treatment including prescription drugs and treatment of conditions that
complicate COVID-19 treatment, without the imposition of cost-sharing
charges
Modifications to certain coverage under Medicaid for pregnant and postpartum
women
 Full benefits would be available to women during pregnancy and
throughout the 12-month postpartum period, or up to a year after the last
day of her pregnancy, extending their coverage well beyond the current
cutoff of 60 days; if a state selects this option for its Medicaid program, it
must provide it under its CHIP program
State option to provide qualifying community-based mobile crisis intervention
services
 The bill allows states to offer community-based mobile crisis intervention
services for five years, with an 85 percent Federal Medical Assistance
Percentage (FMAP)
Temporary increase in FMAP for medical assistance under state Medicaid plans
that begin to expend amounts for certain mandatory individuals
 States that newly expand Medicaid would receive an additional 5
percentage point increase in their regular FMAP for two years, no matter
when they newly expand – this increase would be in addition to the
temporary 6.2 percentage point FMAP increases enacted as part of the
Families First Coronavirus legislation available through the duration of the
COVID-19 public health emergency; the 5-percentage point increase
would not apply to other Medicaid spending that is not subject to the
regular FMAP, such as administrative costs and Disproportionate Share
Hospital (DSH) spending
Extension of 100 percent federal medical assistance percentage to Urban Indian
Health Organizations and Native Hawaiian Health Care Systems
 For two years, the bill would temporarily apply the 100 percent FMAP
available to Indian Health Service (IHS) providers furnishing care to
Medicaid beneficiaries to include Urban Indian Health Programs and
Native Hawaiian Health Care Systems services; such providers are
grantees of the IHS and serve IHS-eligible patients on Medicaid, but they
are not formally part of the IHS and, as a result, do not receive the 100
percent FMAP like other IHS providersSunset of limit on maximum rebate amount for single-source drugs and innovator
multiple source drugs
 The bill delayed by one year, until 2024, the removal of the cap on
Medicaid inflation rebates; Medicaid requires a minimum 23 percent rebate
on brand drugs, and companies pay an additional inflation rebate when
they raise prices faster than inflation – that inflationary rebate is currently
capped at 100 percent of the Average Manufacturer Price (AMP) to avoid
making drug companies pay rebates that are greater than the price of
drugs
Additional support for Medicaid home and community-based services during the
COVID–19 emergency
 States would have the option of receiving a 7.35 percentage point increase
in their Medicaid matching rate for home and community-based services
(subject to a 95 percent limit) for one year starting April 1, 2021; as a
condition of the increase, states would be required to use this additional
funding to expand and enhance home and community-based services in
one or more enumerated ways, including increasing home and communitybased reimbursement rates and providing payments to financially stressed
providers
Funding for state strike teams for resident and employee safety in nursing facilities
 The bill appropriates $250 million to support state-based “strike” teams to
help respond to COVID-19 in nursing homes
Medicare
Floor on the Medicare area wage index for hospitals in all-urban states
 The bill restores an area wage index floor for hospitals in all-urban states
starting Oct. 1, 2021, and directs the HHS Secretary to create a Medicare
area wage index for hospitals in all-urban states to address a 2019 rule
that imposed across-the-board cuts to increase pay for low-wage hospitals
Secretarial authority to temporarily waive or modify application of certain Medicare
requirements with respect to ambulance services furnished during certain
emergency periods
 The bill provides for Medicare reimbursement to ambulance providers
even if the patients aren’t transported to a healthcare facility; the authority
would last the duration of the public health emergency
Funding for Office of Inspector General
 The bill provides $5 million to the HHS Office of Inspector General (OIG)
for oversight activities with respect to the Provider Relief Fund
Defense Production
Act
 Provides $10 billion to carry out the Defense Production Act for medical
supplies and equipment such as testing, personal protective equipment
(PPE) and vaccines.
Housing,
Homelessness and
Rental Assistance
Emergency rental assistance
 Of the $27.4 billion provided for rental assistance, $21.55 billion will be
funded through the Coronavirus Relief Fund (CRF) and administered by
the U.S. Department of the Treasury:
o $305 million is set aside for territories
o $152 million is set aside for states
o $2.5 billion will be distributed to high-need communities and will be
distributed based on the number of very low-income renter
households paying more than 50 percent of income on rent or living in substandard or overcrowded conditions, rental market
costs and employment trends.
o See State Estimates for Emergency Rental Assistance
 Allocations: The first 40 percent of funds must be paid to grantees within
60 days of enactment; when a grantee has obligated not less than 75
percent of funds already dispersed, the Treasury Secretary may provide
additional disbursements of the grantee’s allocation
 Eligibility: Under the bill, households are eligible for emergency rental
assistance funds if one or more individuals: 1) has qualified for
unemployment benefits or experienced a reduction in household income,
incurred significant costs, or experienced other financial hardship during or
due, directly or indirectly, to the pandemic; 2) can demonstrate a risk of
experiencing homelessness or housing instability; and 3) has a household
income below 80 percent of the Area Median Income (AMI)
o States and localities must prioritize households below 50 percent
of AMI or those who are unemployed and have been unemployed
for 90 days; states and localities can provide additional
prioritization of funds
 Use of Funds: The funds must be used to provide financial assistance,
including back and forward rent and utility payments, and other housing
expenses, and assistance can be provided for 18 months; not more than
10 percent of funds may be used to provide case management and other
services intended to help keep households stably housed, and not more
than 15 percent of funds paid to a state or local government can be used
for administrative costs
 Deadlines: After March 31, 2022, the Treasury Secretary may recapture
excess funds not obligated by a state or locality and reallocate and repay
these dollars to eligible grantees who, at the time of such reallocation,
have obligated at least 50 percent of the amount originally allocated and
have met other criteria; funds not obligated may be used to provide
affordable housing to very low-income households, so long as the grantee
has obligated at least 75 percent of its total allocation, and funds provided
under this bill are available until Sept. 30, 2025
o The bill extends the deadline to spend the initial $25 billion tranche
of funding provided by Congress in December 2020 from Dec. 31,
2021 to Sept. 30, 2022.
Emergency housing vouchers
 Provides $5 billion for housing vouchers with funds available through Sept.
30, 2030.
 Use of Funds: These funds must be used to provide and renew
emergency vouchers, to cover administrative costs and to make
adjustments for public housing agencies that would otherwise be required
to terminate rental assistance due to a significant increase in voucher perunit costs due to extraordinary circumstances
 Eligibility: Under the bill, households are eligible for emergency vouchers
if they 1) are or are at risk of experiencing homelessness, 2) are fleeing or
attempting to flee domestic violence, dating violence, stalking, sexual
assault or human trafficking, or 3) are recently homeless and rental
assistance will prevent the family’s homelessness or having a high risk of
housing instability
 Allocations: Public housing agencies will be notified of the number of
vouchers allocated to them within 60 days, with vouchers to be distributed
by a formula that includes capacity and ensures geographic diversity, and
the Secretary may revoke and redistribute any unleased vouchers after a
reasonable time; a public housing agency may not reissue any vouchers
after Sept. 30, 2023, when assistance for the family assisted ends Emergency assistance for rural housing
 Provides $100 million in rental assistance to assist rural households living
in USDA-financed properties; funds are available until Sept. 30, 2022, and
they may be used to cover back rent and ongoing rental assistance
Housing counseling
 $100 million for housing counseling through NeighborWorks America. Of
the funds provided, not less than 40 percent must be provided to housing
counseling organizations that 1) target minority and low-income
homeowners, renters and individuals experiencing homelessness or 2)
provide services in neighborhoods with high concentrations of minority and
low-income homeowners, renters and individuals experiencing
homelessness.
Homelessness assistance and supportive services program
 Provides $5 billion to provide rental assistance and supportive services, to
develop affordable rental housing, to help acquire non-congregate shelter
to be converted into permanent affordable housing or used as emergency
shelter
 Eligibility: These funds must primarily benefit 1) individuals or households
that are or are at risk of experiencing homelessness, 2) people who are
fleeing or attempting to flee domestic violence, dating violence, stalking,
sexual assault or human trafficking, 3) populations for whom supportive
services would prevent the family’s homelessness or having a high risk of
housing instability, or 4) households with a veteran family member that
meets one of these criteria
 Allocations: Funds will be allocated within 30 days of enactment using the
HOME Investment Partnerships program formula; the bill waives statutory
requirements, including a commitment deadline, matching requirements
and set-aside for Community Housing Development Organizations
(CHDOs).
o See National Low Income Housing Coalition Estimated Allocations
of Homeless Assistance Grants
 Administrative Costs: Up to 15 percent of the funds may be used to
cover administrative costs; a grantee may receive up to an additional 5
percent of its allocation for operating costs for certain CHDOs and
nonprofit organizations if the funds are used to build capacity
Homeowner Assistance Fund
 Provides $9.961 billion in funding to be distributed to states through the
U.S. Department of the Treasury
 States can apply for the fund 45 days after enactment – reducing the
likelihood that there will be implementing regulations; instead, Treasury will
dictate terms through the contracts with the states
 Impacts existing pipeline of delinquencies – tolling date is Jan 21, 2020;
expenses related to delinquencies prior to January 2020 are not eligible,
but there is no requirement that the loan be performing as of January 2020
in order to avail themselves of support
 Eligible uses of the funds include: mortgage payments; principal reduction;
interest rate reductions; funds to reinstate a mortgage after forbearance,
delinquency or default; payment assistance for utilities, internet, property
taxes, homeowners insurance, mortgage insurance, flood insurance,
condo fees and homeowner association fees; and a catch-all for “any other
assistance to promote housing stability”
 Unlike the Hardest Hit Fund, the money is not directly earmarked to state
housing finance agencies (HFAs), but it is likely that states will rely on
state HFAs to do principal write-downs and interest rate reduction
refinance loans (IRRLs) States can also use the money to reimburse themselves for their own
programs that pre-date disbursement from the Treasury Department
 States have to spend 60 percent of the funds on borrowers at or below the
AMI
 The maximum amount of support is the government-sponsored enterprise
(GSE) conforming loan limit
Relief measures for Section 502 and 504 direct loan borrowers
 Provides $39 million to assist rural homeowners through USDA’s Section
502 and Section 504 direct loan programs
Fair Housing Initiatives Program
 $20 million increase to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development’s (HUD) Fair Housing Initiatives Program (FHIP) to help
identify government agencies that handle complaints of housing
discrimination
 Eligible grantees include state or local governments, qualified fair housing
enforcement organizations with at least two years of experience, and other
public or private nonprofit organizations representing individuals who have
been victims of housing discrimination
Public Transportation
Federal Transit Administration Grants
 $30.5 billion for transit
o $26.086 billion for Federal Transit Administration (FTA) Urbanized
Area Formula Grants (Section 5307)
 This amount, combined with CARES Act and Coronavirus
Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act
(CRRSAA) grants, allows urbanized areas to receive 132
percent of their 2018 operating costs; for urbanized areas
that received grants totaling 130 to 132 percent of
operating costs from the CARES Act and CRRSAA, they
receive an additional 10 percent of their 2018 operating
costs
o $317 million for FTA Rural Area Formula Grants (Section 5311)
o $50 million for FTA Enhanced Mobility for Seniors and Individuals
with Disabilities Grants (Section 5310)
o $100 million for non-urbanized intercity bus program recipients
o $25 million for Section 5307 planning grants to restore service
 $2.21 billion for operating assistance grants to eligible recipients that
require additional support for operations, personnel, cleaning, sanitization
and debt payments costs incurred to maintain operations and avoid layoffs
and furloughs due to COVID-19, with grants to be evaluated by the FTA
based on the level of financial need demonstrated; the FTA is required to
issue a Notice of Funding Opportunity (NOFO) for these grants within 180
days after the bill is signed into law
 $1.675 billion for Capital Investment Grants (CIG)
o $1.425 billion for New Start and Core Capacity projects:
 $1.25 billion for CIG project sponsors that have an existing
Full Funding Grant Agreement (FFGA) and have received
a FY 2019 or FY 2020 CIG allocation.
 $175 million to CIG projects with an existing FFGA that
received a CIG allocation prior to FY 2019
o $250 million for Small Start projects that are a recipient of a CIG
allocation or an applicant in the project development phaseDisaster Relief
Emergency Federal Employee Leave Fund
 Provides $570 million to establish a fund, the Emergency Federal
Employee Leave Fund, to be administered by the Office of Personnel
Management (OPM) to remain available through Sept. 30, 2022; funds
may be used for reimbursement to an agency or for paid leave by any
employee who is unable to work due to quarantine or isolation related to
COVID-19, including caring for family members or dependents, and paid
leave may not exceed 600 hours for each full-time employee
Pandemic Response Accountability Committee funding availability
 Provides $40 million to support oversight of the coronavirus response via
the Pandemic Response Accountability Committee
Funding for the White House
 Provides $12.8 million for the White House to prevent, prepare for and
respond to the coronavirus
Federal Emergency Management Agency appropriation
 Provides $50 billion for the Federal Emergency Management Agency
(FEMA) for the purposes of the Disaster Relief Fund (DRF) for cost
associated with major disaster declarations
Emergency food and shelter program funding
 Provides $400 million for the emergency food and shelter program
Humanitarian relief
 Provides $110 million for the emergency food and shelter program for the
purposes of providing humanitarian relief to families and individuals
encountered by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS)
AFG and SAFER program funding
 Provides $100 million for Assistance to Firefighter Grants (AFG) and $200
million for Staffing for Adequate Fire and Emergency Response Grants
(SAFER)
Emergency management performance grant funding
 Provides $100 million for emergency management performance grant
funding
Cybersecurity and
Technology
Modernization
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
 Provides $650 million for the DHS Cybersecurity and Infrastructure
Security Agency (CISA) to mitigate cybersecurity risks
Appropriation for the U.S. Digital Service
 Provides $200 million for the U.S. Digital Service, a White House unit that
provides IT support to federal agencies
Appropriation for the Technology Modernization Fund
 Provides $1 billion for the General Services Administration Technology
Modernization Fund, which was established to upgrade federal agency IT
systems
Paycheck Protection
Program (PPP)
 Appropriates an additional $7.25 billion to the U.S. Small Business
Administration (SBA) for the PPP program
 Expands PPP eligibility to include:o Additional tax-exempt nonprofits, such as 501(c)(5) labor and
agricultural organizations and community locations of larger
nonprofits, whose lobbying activities do not comprise more than 15
percent of its activities
o Internet publishing organizations assigned a North American
Industry Classification System (NAICS) Code of 519130 and
engaged in the collection and distribution of local or regional and
national news and information
 Adds COBRA premium assistance as an allowable payroll cost under the
PPP program
 Program expires March 31, 2021
Economic Injury
Disaster Loans (EIDL)
 Appropriates $15 billion to the SBA to provide EIDL $10,000 grants to
small businesses eligible under Section 331 of the Economic Aid to HardHit Small Businesses, Nonprofits, and Venues Act or Section 1110(e) of
the CARES Act
Restaurants
 Appropriates $28.6 billion for the SBA to administer a grant program to
restaurants through a new Restaurant Revitalization Fund
 The new grant program follows the enactment of a similar grant program
for shuttered live venues enacted in Section 324 of the Economic Aid to
Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits, and Venues Act enacted in
December 2020
 Eligible restaurants must certify that the uncertainty of current economic
conditions makes necessary the grant request to support the ongoing
operations of the restaurant
 The bill prohibits eligibility of a restaurant that:
o is a state or local government operated business
o owns or operates more than 20 locations as of March 13, 2020
o has a pending application for or has received a grant under SBA
shuttered live venues grant program, or
o is a publicly traded company
 The maximum grant amount is:
o $10 million per eligible entity and any affiliated businesses, and
o $5 million per physical location of the eligible entity
Shuttered Venue
Operators
 This bill provides $1.25 billion in additional funds for the Shuttered Venue
Operators Grant Program enacted in Section 324 of the Economic Aid to
Hard-Hit Small Businesses, Nonprofits, and Venues Act enacted in
December 2020
 The bill also allows eligible applicants to access both the Shuttered Venue
Operators Grant (SVOG) and PPP to address SVOG’s delayed start
Aviation/Airlines
Air Transportation Payroll Support Program Extension
 Provides $14 billion to extend Payroll Support Program funding for eligible
air carriers and contractors, with the new round of funding extending
restrictions on involuntary furloughs and reductions in pay rates or benefits
through Sept. 30, 2021, or the date on which funds are expended; it also
extends the restrictions on stock buybacks, dividends and capital
distributions through Sept. 30, 2022, and restrictions on executive
compensation to April 1, 2023.
 The Secretary of the Treasury is required to issue streamlined procedures
within five days of enactment and make initial payments under the
program within 10 days of enactment
Relief for Airports
 $8 billion for airports
o $6.492 billion for primary airports and certain cargo airports to use
for “costs related to operations, personnel, cleaning, sanitization,
janitorial services, combating the spread of pathogens at the
airport, and debt service payments”; the federal share is 100
percent $800 million “to provide relief from rents and minimum annual guarantees
to airport concessions”
 $608 million to pay the federal share of 100 percent for Airport
Improvement Program (AIP) grants awarded in FY 2021 or FY 2020
Emergency TSA Employee Leave Fund
 The legislation also adds an $13 billion emergency paid leave fund for
TSA employees that is similar to a leave program for FAA employees
included in the bill; the fund expires in September 2022.
Broadband
Funding for E-Rate support for emergency educational connections and devices
 Nearly $7.2 billion to create an Emergency Connectivity Fund to reimburse
schools and libraries for internet access and connected devices for
students and teachers learning remotely due to the pandemic; requires the
FCC to issue rules within 60 days of enactment to provide funding to
eligible schools and libraries to enable them to provide eligible connected
devices, internet service and equipment necessary to support internet
service to students and teachers, regardless of technology, for internet use
in locations other than a school or library, among other things
 $10 billion for states, territories and tribal governments to carry out critical
capital projects directly enabling work, education and health monitoring,
including remote options, in response to the public health emergency with
respect to COVID-19; this funding is intended to be focused on broadband
investment
Unemployment
Provisions
Unemployment Insurance extension
 Extends enhanced unemployment insurance until Sept. 6. 2021, including
the extra $300 Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation
 Extends Pandemic Unemployment Assistance to the self-employed, gig
workers, freelancers and others who would otherwise not regularly qualify
for unemployment insurance
 Extends Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation for those
who exhaust state benefits to 53 weeks, from 24 weeks
Unemployment Insurance tax relief
 Creates a $10,200 tax exclusion for unemployment compensation in tax
year 2020 for those with incomes under $150,000
Tax
Stimulus payments
 Provides an additional $1,400 per qualifying individual in direct stimulus
payments; in addition to the $600 in supplemental payments enacted in
the December 2020 relief bill, this would fulfill Democratic demands for
$2,000 in payments
Child Tax Credit
 Temporary, fully refundable enhancement of the value of the Child Tax
Credit to $3,000 for children older than 6 and to $3,600 for children
younger than 6 – an increase in the current credit of $2,000, of which only
$1,400 is refundable; envisions that the tax credit can be claimed on a
monthly basis, rather than annually
Earned Income Tax Credit
 Temporarily and significantly increases the value of the Earned Income
Tax Credit, along with loosening eligibility requirements on incomeDependent Care Assistance
 Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit: Temporary, fully refundable
enhancement of the Child and Dependent Care Credit from the current
limitation of $1,050 per child or dependent up to $4,000
Credits for Paid Sick and Family Leave
 Extends the availability of paid sick and paid family leave tax credits, as
established in the Families First Coronavirus Response Act through Sept.
30, 2021
 Also expands eligibility to state and local governments that provide this
benefit
Employee Retention Credit
 Increases the availability and value of credit to those employers who
“severely financially distressed” (i.e., those who experienced a severe
decline in gross receipts) by allowing such employers to take all wages
into account, not just those that are paid for employees not providing
services
 Expands credit availability to employers who qualify as a “recovery startup
business” (i.e., those employers who began a trade or business after Feb.
15, 2020, and whose gross receipts average less than $1 million)
 Expands availability of the credit from the current deadline of June 30,
2021, to those wages paid in 2021
Premium Tax Credit
 Expands the Affordable Care Act’s premium tax credits for health
insurance that is purchased through an exchange
Miscellaneous Provisions
Repeal of election to allocate on worldwide basis
 Revokes an election that came into effect in 2021 to allow multinational
companies to allocate their interest expenses on a worldwide basis
Extension of Excess Business Loss Limitation
 Extends the limitation on excess business losses of non-corporate
taxpayers for one year, through 2026
Pensions
Expansion of limitation on excessive employee remuneration
 Expands the denial of deductibility currently found in IRC Section 162(m)
to an additional five highest compensated individuals
Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC) fund
 Creates a fund for the PBGC to assist certain struggling multiemployer
plans to cover benefits due through plan years ending in 2051
State and Local
Assistance
Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal Recovery Funds
 Of the approximately $350 billion for fiscal relief, 57 percent is allocated to
states and 35 percent to local governments
 The distribution formula is as follows:
o States and District of Columbia: $195.3 billion
 $25.5 billion is equally divided with state minimum of $500
million $169 billion based on the state share of unemployed
workers over a three-month period from October to
December 2020
o Local Governments: $130.2 billion divided evenly between noncounty municipalities and counties
 Counties: $65.1 billion in direct federal aid to all counties
based on the county share of the U.S. population based
on the most recent data available from the Census Bureau
 Non-County Municipalities: $65.1 billion to cities and
other non-county municipalities:
 $45.57 billion in direct federal aid for
municipalities with populations of at least
50,000, using a modified Community
Development Block Grant formula
 $19.53 billion for municipalities with
populations of less than 50,000 based on each
jurisdiction’s percentage of the state’s population;
aid is distributed through the states, with the
ability for states to request an extension if they are
unable to distribute within 30 days
 See State and Local Allocation Estimates
o U.S. Territories: $4.5 billion
o $20 billion to federally recognized tribal governments
 Allowable Uses of Funds: Funds may be used to:

  1. respond to the public health emergency with respect to COVID-19 or
    its negative economic impacts, including assistance to households,
    small businesses and nonprofits, or aid to impacted industries such as
    tourism, travel and hospitality
  2. for the provision of government services to the extent of the reduction
    in revenue (i.e. online, property or income tax) due to the public health
    emergency
  3. make necessary investments in water, sewer or broadband
    infrastructure, or
  4. include premium pay for eligible workers performing essential work (as
    determined by each state or tribal government) during the pandemic
    o Other key provisions:
     states are not allowed to use the funds to either directly or
    indirectly offset a reduction in the net tax revenue that
    results from a change in law, regulation or administrative
    interpretation during the covered period that reduces any
    tax
     No funds shall be deposited into any pension fund
     State and local governments are allowed to transfer to a
    private nonprofit organization, a public benefit corporation
    involved in the transportation of passengers or cargo, or a
    special-purpose unit of state or local government
     Reporting Requirements, Certification and Recoupment: Requires
    state and local governments to fulfill reporting requirements, such as:
    o states are required to report how funds are used and how their tax
    revenue was modified during the time that funds were spent during
    the covered period (covered period begins on March 3, 2021, and
    ends on the last day of the fiscal year a state or local government
    has expended or returned all funds to the U.S. Treasury).
    o local governments would be required to provide “periodic reports”
    providing a detailed accounting of the use of funds
    o if a state, county or municipality does not comply with any
    provision of this bill, they will be required to repay the U.S.
    Treasury an equal amount to the funds used in violation Administration of Recovery Funds: Funds will administered as follows:
    o funds would be distributed by the U.S. Department of the Treasury
    o the deadline to spend funds would be Dec. 31, 2024
    o payments will be divided into two equal tranches – within 60 days
    after enactment, the U.S. Treasury is required to release the first
    tranche allocated to a city, county or state; the second tranche
    cannot be released earlier than 12 months after the first payment
    o in order to receive a payment either under the first or second
    tranche, local governments must provide the U.S. Treasury with a
    certification signed by an authorized officer; the U.S. Treasury is
    required to pay the first tranche to counties not later than 60 days
    after enactment and the second payment no earlier than 12
    months after the first payment
    o The bill would provide $117 million for oversight and to promote
    transparency and accountability of all federal coronavirus relief
    funds, with $77 million for the Government Accountability Office
    and $40 million for the Pandemic Response and Accountability
    Committee
    State Small Business Credit Initiative
     $10 billion for the fund, administered by the Treasury Department
     The money is allocated to states to support programs of their own design
    and can include: loan participation programs, venture capital programs,
    collateral support programs, loan guarantee programs and capital access
    programs
    Funding for providers relating to COVID-19
     The bill provides an additional $8.5 billion in relief funding for rural entities
    – far short of the $35 billion sought by stakeholders
    Tribal Provisions
    COVID State Fiscal Recovery Fund
     Provides $20 billion (of $219.8 billion allocated to the COVID State Fiscal
    Recovery Fund) for tribal governments to mitigate the fiscal effects
    stemming from the COVID pandemic
    o $1 billion will be allocated equally among all tribal governments
    o $19 billion will be allocated among all tribal governments in
    amounts determined by the Secretary
    o Payments will be made to each tribal government within 60 days
    of enactment
    o Tribal governments can use the funds by Dec. 31, 2024, to:
     respond to or mitigate the COVID public health emergency
    and its negative economic impacts, including assistance to
    households, small businesses and nonprofits or to
    impacted industries such as tourism, travel and hospitality
     respond to workers performing essential work during the
    COVID public health emergency by providing premium
    pay to eligible workers of tribal governments that are
    performing such essential work, or by providing grants to
    eligible employers that have eligible workers who perform
    essential work
     provide government services to the extent of the reduction
    in revenue due to the pandemic in the most recent full
    fiscal year
     make necessary investments in water, sewer or
    broadband infrastructure
    o A tribal government is defined as the governing body of any Indian
    or Alaska Native tribe, band, nation, pueblo, village, community,
    component band or component reservation individually identified in the annual list published pursuant to the Federally Recognized
    Indian Tribe List Act of 1994 (25 U.S.C. 5131)
    Indian Health Service
     Provides $6.094 for Indian health
     $5.484 billion is allocated to carry out the Transfer Act, the Indian SelfDetermination and Education Assistance Act, the Indian Health Care
    Improvement Act, and titles II and III of the Public Health Service Act.
    o $2 billion is for lost reimbursements in accordance with Section 207 of
    the Indian Health Care Improvement Act
    o $500 million is for Purchased/Referred Care
    o $140 million is for information, technology, telehealth infrastructure,
    and the Indian Health Service electronic health records system
    o $84 million is for maintaining operations of the Urban Indian health
    program
    o $600 million is for necessary expenses to plan, prepare for, promote,
    distribute, administer and track COVID vaccines
    o $1.5 billion is for necessary expenses to detect, diagnose, trace and
    monitor COVID infections; mitigate the spread of COVID; and
    purchase supplies necessary for these activities
    o $240 million is to establish, expand and sustain a public health
    workforce to prevent, prepare for and respond to COVID
    o $420 million is for necessary expenses related to mental and
    behavioral health prevention and treatment services
     $600 million is for lease, purchase, construction, alteration, renovation or
    equipping health facilities to respond to COVID
     $10 million is for expenses relating to potable water delivery
    Bureau of Indian Affairs
     Provides $900 million to the Bureau of Indian Affairs
    o $100 million for tribal housing improvement
    o $772.5 million for tribal government services, public safety and
    justice, social services, child welfare assistance and other related
    expenses
    o $7.5 million for federal administrative costs and oversight
    o $20 million to provide and deliver potable water
    Housing Assistance and Supportive Services Programs for Native Americans
     Provides $750 million to remain available until Sept. 30, 2025, for tribal
    housing, of which:
    o $450 million is allocated for the Native American Housing Block
    Grant program and $5 million for the Native Hawaiian Housing
    Block Grant program
     distributed according to the same funding formula used in
    FY 2021
     may be used to prevent, prepare for and respond to
    COVID, including maintaining normal operations and
    funding affordable housing activities
    o $280 million is allocated for Indian Community Development Block
    Grants
     may be used to address emergencies that constitute
    imminent threats to health and safety and are designed to
    prevent, prepare for and respond to COVID
    o $10 million is allocated for technical assistance
    o $5 million is allocated for administrative costsCOVID-19 Response Resources for the Preservation and Maintenance of Native
    American Languages
     Provides $20 million for grants to ensure the survival and continuing vitality
    of Native American languages during the COVID pandemic
    Bureau of Indian Education
     Provides $850 million to be allocated by the Director of the Bureau of
    Indian Education for programs and activities operated or funded by the
    Bureau of Indian Education, for Bureau-funded schools, and for tribal
    colleges and universities
    American Indian, Native Hawaiian and Alaska Native Education
     Provides $190 million to be allocated by the Secretary of the Department
    of Education, of which:
    o $20 million for tribal education agencies pursuant to Section
    612(c) of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
    o $85 million in grants pursuant to Section 6205(a)(1) of the
    Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
    o $85 million for grants pursuant to Section 6304(a)(1) of the
    Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
    For a complete list of tribal provisions, please email Kayla Gebeck Carroll at
    kayla.gebeck@hklaw.com.
    This summary was compiled by members of Holland & Knight’s Public Policy & Regulation Group. If
    you have questions or need further information, please contact the authors.
    DISCLAIMER: Please note that the situation surrounding COVID-19 is evolving and that the subject
    matter discussed in these publications may change on a daily basis. Please contact the your
    responsible Holland & Knight lawyer for timely advice