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Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Pandemic Relief and the Georgia Elections by Ben Jealous | NewBlackMan (in Exile)

Pandemic Relief and the Georgia Elections by Ben Jealous | NewBlackMan (in Exile)
Pandemic Relief and the Georgia Elections by Ben Jealous




by Ben Jealous | @BenJealous | special to NewBlackMan (in Exile)


Fair warning: this isn’t a traditional Christmas-week column.


If we think of clarity as a kind of gift, though, we can be grateful that the effort to pass a much-needed COVID-19 relief bill in the waning days of this Congress makes one thing crystal clear: hurting families and small businesses will be abandoned if Republicans keep control of the U.S. Senate by winning Georgia’s January 5 runoff elections.


There is some good news. The $900 billion package includes emergency relief for renters, families, small businesses, and more. That relief, that, includes direct help to individuals, is urgently needed. It will extend some protections against evictions for another month. It will give small business owners a little more breathing space to try to survive the pandemic.


About 12 million unemployed people who were going to be cut off at the end of the year will receive $300 weekly in federal support and an extension of the unemployment assistance program until mid-March.


All this is necessary. But it is a temporary fix that falls far short of addressing the pain people are experiencing and truly setting us on the road to recovery.


Almost 12 million renters will be behind on their rent by an average of almost $6,000 at the end of this month, according to one study. The Census Bureau says that about 29 percent of Black families are behind on rent. Much of the back rent has piled up since unemployment benefits under the CARES Act—the first relief bill—expired during the summer. According to some estimates, as many as 20 million tenants—about the population of Florida—are at risk of eviction.


With a problem that huge, David Dworkin, CEO of the National Housing Conference, told MarketWatch that the bill’s $25 billion in rental assistance is just a band-aid, “a practical start for staving off the immediate threat of mass evictions across the country.”


Because the bill falls short of what is needed, some people are blaming “Congress” generally.


Let’s get real. If congressional Republicans had CONTINUE READING: Pandemic Relief and the Georgia Elections by Ben Jealous | NewBlackMan (in Exile)