Nevada lawmakers approve use of 2020 federal relief package

Over $630M will be allocated
The Nevada Assembly works on passing bills on the last day of the 2019 regular session in Carson City on Monday June 3, 2019 Nevada Legislature
The Nevada Legislature Photo credit © Andy Barron/RGJ

CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) — Nevada lawmakers on Monday unanimously approved spending plans for $633 million-worth of coronavirus relief funds passed in 2020 and sent to states by the federal government, funneling money to renters, schools and small businesses adversely affected by the pandemic.

The Legislature’s Interim Finance Committee voted to approve $125 million for its emergency rental assistance program, under which funds can be used to pay for rent, utilities or other housing-related costs. The program directs funds directly to applicants’ landlords, not renters themselves.

Lawmakers also approved $477 million for K-12 schools, which scrambled to provide additional services and remote learning capability while seeing their budgets reduced by the state.

The appropriations, which apply to the budget year ending in June 2021, were all ceremonial approvals of already-passed federal funding and will not draw from the general fund that state lawmakers oversee and use to finance state services and projects. Lawmakers traditionally use their four-month legislative session to budget for the upcoming two fiscal years, but had yet to address the federal funds passed late last year.

Lawmakers on the Assembly Ways and Means Committee also introduced a proposal to funnel $50 million in leftover federal relief to a state fund for small businesses that have been adversely affected by the pandemic. The proposal originated in Gov. Steve Sisolak’s draft budget in late January. The allocation roughly doubles the original size of the fund, which received nearly 14,000 applicants and has distributed grants to more than 4,300 small businesses.

Featured Image Photo Credit: © Andy Barron/RGJ