Congress reaches deal on $480 Bn package to help small businesses and hospitals, expand testing

Congress battles $310 billion for small businesses

(CNN) – Congressional negotiators have reached a deal on a roughly $480 billion relief package that includes hundreds of billions of dollars in new funding for small businesses hurt by the coronavirus outbreak along with other priorities like money for hospitals and expanded Covid-19 testing.

Lawmakers will try to pass it in the Senate at 4 p.m. ET when the chamber convenes for a pro forma session, which will give lawmakers an opportunity to approve the deal either by unanimous consent or voice vote, meaning most senators would not need to return to Washington, DC, during the pandemic.

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The total price tag of the bill is approximately $484 billion.

The full legislative text has not been formally released, but CNN obtained a copy of the bill, which runs 25 pages long. A section-by-section analysis obtained by CNN shows the deal will authorize the Paycheck Protection Program to spend an additional $310 billion.

The program was set up to deliver aid to small businesses struggling from the economic deep freeze triggered by the pandemic. Funding for the program ran dry earlier this month, prompting concern and outcry from the small business community.

The deal will also provide $75 billion for hospitals and health care providers stretched thin by the pandemic to address coronavirus expenses and lost revenue and an additional $25 billion to facilitate and expand Covid-19 testing.

The analysis says that the $25 billion amount will go toward "necessary expenses to research, develop, validate, manufacture, purchase, administer and expand capacity for COVID-19 tests."

Of the total amount dedicated to testing, there will be $11 billion given to states and localities "to develop, purchase, administer, process and analyze COVID-19 tests." The rest of the money will be given to other entities, including federal agencies, to invest in promising new technologies and to distribute to labs.

According to the analysis, the bill "requires (a) strategic plan to related to providing assistance to states for testing and increasing testing capacity" and it requires a plan for states and localities on how the money will be used for testing. This language had been a big sticking point in negotiations over a deal as President Donald Trump has pushed for states to be responsible for expanding testing capacity while as Democrats had pushed for the federal government to take on a larger role in it.

A dispute over how to handle Covid-19 testing had earlier held up an agreement. One major issue that had not been resolved earlier in the day had been whether to create a national testing strategy.

Democrats had been pushing for additional language to bolster the federal role in overseeing and coordinating testing and to create a specific national strategy, with Republicans pushing back amid the President's emphasis that the states need to take the lead.

The President, however, signaled his approval of the deal on Twitter, saying, "I urge the Senate and House to pass the Paycheck Protection Program and Health Care Enhancement Act with additional funding for PPP, Hospitals, and Testing."

The President indicated that negotiators will deal with additional funding for state and local governments -- which Democrats had wanted to see included in the funding being approved in the Senate on Tuesday -- in the next legislative package for coronavirus relief.

"After I sign this Bill, we will begin discussions on the next Legislative Initiative with fiscal relief ... to State/Local Governments for lost revenues from COVID 19, much needed Infrastructure Investments for Bridges, Tunnels, Broadband, Tax Incentives for Restaurants, Entertainment, Sports, and Payroll Tax Cuts to increase Economic Growth," Trump tweeted.

More details of what's in the deal

Of the $310 billion authorized for the Paycheck Protection Program, $60 billion will be set aside for smaller lending facilities, including "community financial institutions, small insured depository institutions and credit unions with assets less than $10 billion."

There will also be $10 billion for grants under the Emergency Economic Injury Disaster Loan program, $50 billion for disaster recovery loans and $2.1 billion for additional salaries and expenses for the Small Business Administration.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said earlier Tuesday that he believes the relief package could be passed in the Senate as soon as Tuesday afternoon.

"I believe we'll pass it today," he told CNN's John Berman.

Schumer told CNN that he, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and Treasury Secretary Steve Mnuchin negotiated over the phone "well past midnight" Monday and "came to an agreement on just about every issue."

But what won't be in the bill, he acknowledged, is more money for states and localities, which Democrats pushed hard for.

"But we did get a commitment from the White House that they would be able to use those funds for lost revenues," Schumer told CNN.

Schumer said Democrats will fight for more state and localities funding in a separate relief package in the future.

The Trump administration and lawmakers have been under pressure to replenish the Paycheck Protection Program after it ran out of funds last week. The SBA said it had approved over 1.66 million loans for more than $342 billion.

But a main gripe with the program has been that banks prioritized their existing customers and large restaurants, which received millions in loans from the PPP, leaving many small businesses without access to the funds intended to keep their operations afloat.

This story has been updated Tuesday to include additional information about the final price tag of the package and what is in the legislation.


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