Site icon ASA Newsletter

State and Federal Legislative Update: March 24, 2020

Legislative Updates

Federal Legislative Update

Update on COVID-19 package proposals in the U.S. House and Senate

Congressional leaders in the Senate and House are negotiating a large stimulus package referred to as Phase Three legislative response to the COVID-19 emergency. The first phase was approved March 6 and appropriated $8.3 billion emergency spending for authorities fighting the spread of COVID-19. The second phase, the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, was enacted into law on March 18. Negotiations are ongoing, and provisions in the bill are fluid. The details in both the Senate and House bill summarized below are from the Association of Community College Trustees (ACCT) Government Affairs office.  

The Senate bill, known as the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act (CARES Act), was introduced by Senate Republicans. House Democrats opposed the bill in its current form. Two procedural votes to move the bill to the floor have failed. Negotiations on this bill are ongoing. The bill includes the following provisions:

Other proposed provisions in the bill include:

After the CARES Act failed to move forward Sunday, March 22, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced House Democrats would move forward with drafting their own phase three legislation. This bill was introduced late yesterday and includes the following:

Other proposed provisions in the bill include:

Other higher education provisions proposed in both bills:

State Legislative Update

Walz announces revised supplemental budget

Governor Tim Walz announced a revised supplemental budget earlier this week, allocating an additional $356 million toward the state’s COVID-19 response, to support and protect Minnesotans during this pandemic. Specifically, the funding would provide emergency grants to child care centers; support families struggling financially through the Minnesota Family Investment Program (MFIP); support veterans and their families facing financial burdens; increase funding for food shelves; offer small business loans; and increase resources for Minnesotans struggling with homelessness.

The budget would also create a COVID-19 Minnesota Fund that would give the state government the resources necessary to deploy resources and respond to the needs of Minnesotans in real time. This revised budget proposal leaves $811 million on the bottom line.

The letter submitted to legislative leaders can be found HERE, and the details surrounding the budget can be found HERE.

Given the need to fund requests related to COVID-19, the Legislature may try to convene Thursday. The challenge will be how many legislators will be available. House Speaker Melissa Hortman, DFL-Brooklyn Park, said when the Legislature does reconvene, both parties will ask some members to stay home to keep the Capitol count down.

The Great Minnesota State Disciplinary Get Together

In partnership with faculty leaders, Minnesota State is coordinating an online event Wednesday, March 25, 2020: Keep Teaching through COVID-19, The Great Minnesota State Disciplinary Get Together. This virtual “get together” will consist of a discussion with Minnesota State colleagues regarding the changes coming up, give advice, share resources, and ask questions. The day will consist of sharing online teaching tips and ideas with other colleagues from the same discipline; hearing student voices during a special student panel session over the lunch hour; and the afternoon features several breakout sessions that offer an opportunity to dive deeper into educational technologies, policy and procedures, or equity, mindfulness, and culturally responsive pedagogy. For more information you may view the video at https://minnstate.edu/coronavirus/.

Exit mobile version