Alabama governor calls special session on COVID relief funds

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey waves as she arrives to deliver her State of the State address at the State Capitol Building in Montgomery, Ala., on Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022. (Mickey Welsh/The Montgomery Advertiser via AP)
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey waves as she arrives to deliver her State of the State address at the State Capitol Building in Montgomery, Ala., on Tuesday, Jan. 11, 2022. (Mickey Welsh/The Montgomery Advertiser via AP)

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) - Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey on Tuesday announced a midweek launch of a special session on how to use $771 million in pandemic relief funds, with lawmakers set to consider a plan to steer large sums to water and sewer projects, broadband expansion and healthcare costs.

The already anticipated special session will start Wednesday.

Legislative committees will hold a public hearing Wednesday on a proposal that would designate the money for spending categories such as broadband and the water and sewer projects. The bill specifies funding for previously identified high-need water and sewer projects, but largely puts state agencies in charge of deciding how to disperse the funds.

Alabama has $580 million remaining from the state's first $1.1 billion installment from the American Rescue Plan. The state also has $191 million allocated through the America Rescue Plan's Capital Projects Fund.

Ivey urged lawmakers to "direct these funds to meet some of Alabama's biggest challenges like statewide broadband connectivity, water and sewer infrastructure, as well as investing funds in our hospitals, nursing homes and other health care providers."

"We must be smart with these one-time, federal dollars by wisely investing -– not just casually spending them. This is not free money," Ivey said. The Republican governor, while calling a special session to spend the federal dollars, also criticized the Biden administration and the Congress that approved the funds for, "wanting our country to spend more and more federal dollars."

Under the draft legislation, the state would use the $580 million to allocate: $225 million to water and sewer projects; $85 million for broadband expansion; $79 million to shore up the Unemployment Compensation Trust Fund; and about $170 million for various healthcare costs, including $80 million to reimburse hospitals and nursing homes for pandemic-related expenses and $30 million to assist rural hospitals.

The administration would get $7.8 million to reimburse the costs of reporting and auditing the use of the funds and $11 million would be used to reimburse county jails for housing state inmates during the pandemic.

A little more than half of the water and sewer funding would be used for previously identified high-need projects that will be prioritized under a ranking system created by the Alabama Department of Environmental Management.

House Ways and Means General Fund Chairman Steve Clouse, a Republican from Ozark, said the plan addresses some of the state's largest needs, ranging from healthcare costs to sewer infrastructure.

"We are taking care of a lot of issues, here," Clouse said.

Clouse said an idea floated last week to use money for state parks was abandoned in favor of using more money for broadband expansion.

The state also has $191 million from the America Rescue Plan's Capital Projects Fund. The proposed legislation would put the Finance Department in charge of using the money for the delivery of broadband and technology infrastructure.

Dr. Don Williamson, the president of the Alabama Hospital Association, said state hospitals took a $200 million hit during the pandemic because of expenses such as hiring traveling nurses to address staff shortages. Williamson said he was pleased to see efforts to allocate some money toward healthcare providers, but said they will need additional funds when the state gets additional installments.

"We view this as a journey," Williamson said.

A.J. McCampbell, a Democrat from Demopolis, said the priority for him was seeing funding for healthcare because of the financial strain that the pandemic has put on hospitals.

Rep. Chris England, a Democrat from Tuscaloosa, said he was pleased the proposal steers money to broadband expansion and water and sewer infrastructure, saying the money the potential to do some "real good" for the state. But he criticized Alabama's previous use of the pandemic funds to build prisons.

Alabama came under criticism last year for using $400 million - nearly 20% of the state's total $2.1 billion allocation from the American Rescue Plan - for prison construction.

"It is just a real negative reflection on proprieties that we still haven't matched up to the $400 million that we spent on prisons," England said.

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