Lawmakers
had secured commitment from Commonwealth to swiftly distribute federal dollars
to hardest hit communities
Boston
(June 2, 2021) – Today, Senators Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) and
Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), and Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley (MA-07)
issued the following statement on the approximately $5.3 billion in
federal funding provided under the American Rescue Plan for Massachusetts:
“Chelsea, Everett, Methuen, and Randolph have
borne a disproportionate burden of the coronavirus pandemic and
deserve financial support now,” the lawmakers said in a joint statement. “The flexible
federal relief funding in the American Rescue Plan we helped secure is
currently in the state’s coffers. While state leaders determine allocation of
the rest of the $5.3 billion in funding, we should immediately distribute to
Chelsea, Everett, Methuen, and Randolph the $100 million dollars committed
to them. We must keep this promise now.”
In
March, Senators Markey and Warren and Rep. Pressley
secured
a commitment from the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to distribute $100
million in federally-provided American Rescue Plan (ARP) dollars to hard-hit
communities, specifically Chelsea, Everett, Randolph, and Methuen.
The commitment came after Markey, Warren, and Pressley and other members of the
Massachusetts Congressional delegation
urged Governor
Charlie Baker to use the discretion provided by Congress and President Joe
Biden in the ARP to immediately target the $4.5 billion in the Commonwealth's
direct federal aid to disproportionately impacted communities and secured a
public commitment of $100 million. Given the limitations of the CDBG funding
formula, the delegation specifically secured this commitment to disburse funds
to communities that experience disparities under this formula. In a Banking,
Housing, and Urban Affairs Committee hearing, Treasury Secretary Janet
Yellen
confirmed that
under the law, states have the authority to allocate ARP funds to communities
hard hit by COVID-19.
Pressley
and Warren also
led
a letter with seven other senators and 26 other members of the House
of Representatives, requesting Secretary Yellen use discretion in issuing
guidance for ARP funding to support non-entitlement cities that have been hard
hit by the COVID-19 pandemic. The lawmakers also asked that the Treasury work
with the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) and the U.S. Census
Bureau to ensure that population and other relevant community data are accurate
and up to date.
Last
month, the lawmakers led their colleagues in the Massachusetts Congressional
delegation reiterating
their
request for the Commonwealth of Massachusetts to provide relief funds
to disproportionately impacted communities that are in desperate need of relief
to help them recover from the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and economic
crisis.