Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Optimism Grows For COVID-Relief Bill
A bipartisan group of lawmakers on Monday unveiled its $908 billion coronavirus relief package as Congress faces a time crunch to pass more aid.聽The proposal is split into two parts: One $748 billion聽piece includes another round of Paycheck Protection Program assistance for small businesses, an unemployment benefit, and more money for schools, vaccine distribution and other widely agreed-upon items.聽The second $160 billion piece ties together the two most controversial elements of the coronavirus negotiations: more money for state and local governments and protections for businesses from coronavirus-related lawsuits.聽(Carney, 12/14)
A bipartisan group of lawmakers on Monday released two bills they said would provide the nation with emergency economic relief as senior congressional officials sounded more hopeful about the odds of approving new relief than they have in weeks. The bipartisan group unveiled one $748 billion package that includes new unemployment benefits, small business aid and other programs that received broad bipartisan support. The second bill includes the two provisions most divisive among lawmakers 鈥 liability protections for firms and roughly $160 billion in aid for state and local governments 鈥 with the expectation that both could be excluded from a final deal to secure passage of the most popular provisions. This second bill could end up falling out of the final deal if lawmakers don鈥檛 rally around it amid broad opposition among Democrats to approving the liability shield. (Stein, DeBonis and Min Kim, 12/14)
In related news on COVID's economic toll 鈥
When jobless workers get their last unemployment check, the effect on spending is sharp and swift. Unemployed workers鈥 spending on food, clothes and other so-called nondurable goods immediately drops 12 percent, about twice as much as when they lost their job and went on unemployment insurance, University of Chicago researchers have found. Spending at drugstores falls 15 percent. Co-payments for visits to the doctor fall 14 percent. Spending on groceries falls 16 percent, or $46.30 a month, on average. Millions of Americans are less than two weeks from cutbacks like those. (Porter, 12/14)
Nine months into the pandemic, and lines outside food pantries are still a common sight around the country: families waiting in row after row of cars, snaking as far as the eye can see. Last year, more than 35 million people experienced food insecurity. But because of the pandemic, that number could be as high as 50 million for this year, according to the hunger relief organization Feeding America. And with multiple federal aid programs set to run out soon, many pantries fear they will run out of food, too. (Mehta and Chang, 12/14)
Also 鈥
Rep.-elect Bob Good took the stage at Freedom Plaza on Saturday afternoon and looked out at a sea of masklessness. Thousands had come to march for President Trump 鈥 some carrying signs declaring the novel coronavirus a hoax.They were just the kind of group, Good told the crowd, who 鈥済ets that this is a phony pandemic.鈥 鈥淚t鈥檚 a serious virus, but it鈥檚 a virus. It鈥檚 not a pandemic,鈥 said Good (R), who will become Virginia鈥檚 newest congressman in the 5th Congressional District on Jan. 3. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see your faces. You get it. You stand up against tyranny.鈥 (Flynn and Vozella, 12/14)
Wouldn鈥檛 more people stay safely ensconced in their own homes over the holidays if they had access to free Hulu, HBO Max and Netflix? That鈥檚 the argument being put forward by Sen. Angus King (I-Maine), who on Monday urged six major streaming services to consider making shows and movies available to nonsubscribers as a 鈥減ublic service.鈥 (Noori Farzan, 12/15)