Coronavirus Relief Fund Continued
1.25 billion received from our federal government
Greetings! Since writing last about the 1.25 billion
received from our federal government, here is where we are now:
* 1.25 billion (that is 1,250,000,000) received.
*Spent 200 million on cities and counties, 100 million on state’s unemployment fund and other coronavirus-related expenses.
* That leaves over 900 million yet to be dispersed.
So, where are we? Well, where I serve, in the House of Representatives, 45 of us signed a letter asking the governor for a special legislative session. Our concerns are the rules as they are now and the money remaining (900 million has to be spent no later than Dec. 31, 2020).
The Senate and the governor appear to not want a special session. Their reasoning is that if the expenditure deadline gets extended past the Dec. 31st, we could handle this in a much more organized effort. I agree with that also.
Having a special session in the fall is tough on our farmers, ranchers, and generally all of the agriculture-related legislative members because of harvest. It appears paying for the special session could be done with coronavirus funds.
Another option would be for the Joint Appropriations Committee, made up of 18 members of both chambers, to meet and decide the dispersal of these funds.
To call a special session, the House would need 2/3rds to vote in favor, or 47 of the 70 members; and the Senate would also need 2/3rds or 24 of the 35 senators.
Another element to mention is the Nov. 3rd General Election. Several members of both the House and the Senate are going to be replaced due to term limits, not running again, or switching chambers. What I’m not doing a very good job trying to explain is that members of both chambers will be drastically changed on January 12, 2021 when the next session starts versus any time before then. Make sense?
Also, the governor can declare a special session if she deems it necessary. In the meantime, until we get this straightened out, be thinking of ways to expend these funds. To reiterate what I’ve said before, if we don’t spend this money here in South Dakota, it will just go to another state to be spent. We can’t spend a portion of it and send the rest back to the federal government to draw down our out-of-control national debt. So, until we get this figured out…
To the citizens of South Dakota and to the men and women in uniform, in honor of all who served, in respectful memory of all who fell, and in great appreciation to those who serve today, Thank You, for giving me the opportunity to represent you.
Tim R. Goodwin, District 30 Representative

