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Who’s a hero? Some states, cities still debating pandemic hazard pay

A protesting healthcare worker holds a sign reading, "Don't call me a hero - treat me like a human."
Long-term care workers with the New England Health Care Employees Union demonstrate in July 2020 demanding protection for essential employees. The state is still debating how to distribute funds for “hero pay.”
(Jessica Hill / Associated Press)
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When the U.S. government allowed so-called hero pay for front-line workers as a possible use of pandemic relief money, it suggested occupations that could be eligible, from farmworkers and child-care staffers to janitors and truck drivers.

State and local governments have struggled to determine whom among the many workers who braved the raging COVID-19 pandemic before vaccines became available should qualify: Only government workers, or private employees, too? Should it go to a small pool of essential workers such as nurses or be spread around to others, including grocery store workers?

“It’s a bad position for us to be in because you have your local government trying to pick winners and losers, if you would, or recipients and nonrecipients. And hence by default, you’re saying important versus not important,” said Jason Levesque, the Republican mayor of Auburn, Maine, where officials have not yet decided who will receive hazard pay from American Rescue Plan funds.

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A year and a half into the pandemic, such decisions have taken on political implications for some leaders as unions lobby for expanded eligibility, with workers who end up left out feeling embittered.

“It sounds like it’s about the money, but this is a token of appreciation,” said Ginny Ligi, a correctional officer who contracted COVID-19 last year in Connecticut, where the bonus checks have yet to be cut amid negotiations with unions. “It’s so hard to put into words the actual feeling of what it was like to walk into that place every day — day in, day out. It scarred us. It really did.”

Assembly Bill 650 by Assemblyman Al Muratsuchi (D-Rolling Hills Estates) would have required hospitals, clinics and skilled nursing facilities to pay medical professionals $10,000 bonuses. The bill died Thursday when lawmakers declined to vote on the measure.

Interim federal rules published six months ago allow state and local COVID-19 recovery funds to be spent on premium pay for essential workers of up to $13 per hour, in addition to their regular wages. The amount cannot exceed $25,000 per employee.

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The rules also allow grants to be provided to third-party employers with eligible workers, who are defined as those who have had “regular in-person interactions or regular physical handling of items that were also handled by others” or have a heightened risk of exposure to COVID-19.

The rules encourage state and local governments to “prioritize providing retrospective premium pay where possible, recognizing that many essential workers have not yet received additional compensation for work conducted over the course of many months,” while also prioritizing lower-income eligible workers.

As of July, about a third of U.S. states had used federal COVID-19 relief aid to reward workers considered essential with bonuses, although who qualified and how much they received varied widely, according to an Associated Press review.

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A list of hazard and premium pay state allocations as of Nov. 18, provided by the National Conference of State Legislatures, shows funds have typically been set aside for government workers, such as state troopers and correctional officers.

In Minnesota, lawmakers still have $250 million in aid set aside for hero pay, but they’ve been been struggling with how to distribute it. A special committee was unable to come up with a compromise plan, instead sending two competing recommendations to the full Legislature for consideration.

“I think every time we take another week, we’re just delaying the whole process, and I think the fastest way is to get them over to the Legislature,” said Republican state Sen. Mary Kiffmeyer, a member of the committee, during a meeting last month.

Minnesota Senate Republicans want to offer a tax-free bonus of $1,200 to about 200,000 workers who they say took on the greatest risk, such as nurses, long-term care workers, prison staff and first responders.

House Democrats want to spread the money more widely, providing roughly $375 to about 670,000 essential workers, including low-wage food service and grocery store employees, security guards, janitors and others.

Earlier this week, after it appeared that a political impasse was easing over another issue, Democratic House Speaker Melissa Hortman told Minnesota Public Radio that she believed an agreement could be reached on front-line worker pay, noting there’s a “pretty natural middle ground” between the dueling proposals.

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Connecticut has yet to pay out any of the $20 million in federal pandemic money set aside by state lawmakers in June for essential state employees and members of the Connecticut National Guard.

As negotiations continue with union leaders, the Connecticut AFL-CIO labor organization has stepped up pressure on Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont, who is up for reelection in 2022, to provide $1 an hour in hazard pay to all public- and private-sector essential workers who worked during the pandemic before vaccinations became available.

“The governor needs to reevaluate his priorities and show that these workers who put themselves and their lives at risk are a top priority,” said Ed Hawthorne, president of the Connecticut AFL-CIO.

Max Reiss, Lamont’s spokesperson, said the figures cited by organized labor are “just not feasible.”

In the meantime, he said, the administration is negotiating with state employee unions, classifying the work state employees did during the pandemic and determining whether they may have shifted to other responsibilities that were more or less risky, which could also affect whether they receive more or less money.

“We want to recognize the workers who kept going into work every day because they had to and there was not a choice,” he said. “The next piece is that you have to come up with the determination as to who all those people were. And there’s a verification process to that.”

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In some states like California, cities are in the process of determining how to fairly distribute some of their federal funds to help essential private-sector workers who may not have received extra pay from their employers.

Rachel Torres, deputy of the political and civil rights department at United Food and Commercial Workers Union, Local 770, said her union is urging cities to follow the lead of Oxnard and Calabasas, which voted this year to provide grocery and drugstore workers with payments of as much as $1,000.

“It really should not be a competition among essential workforces. There should be monies available for many workers,” Torres said.

David Dobbs and his fellow firefighters in Bridgeport, Conn., are upset their city has yet to provide them with a share of the $110 million it received in federal pandemic funds.

Mayor Joe Ganim, a Democrat, said in a statement that he supports the concept of premium pay but that the matter is being reviewed to ensure payments comply with federal rules.

“I think we feel a little betrayed by the city right now, when they’re not dealing with us, when they came into this windfall,” said Dobbs, president of the Bridgeport Firefighters Assn., which gave up pay raises in the past when the city’s budget was tight.

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“Imagine loaning your friends a decent amount of money and then hitting the Powerball and not making things right.”

Associated Press writer Steve Karnowski in Minneapolis contributed to this report.

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