Nearly 1,700 employees of a bankrupt coal mining company would get up to $17.3 million in back pay under a proposed class-action settlement, the Associated Press reported. Ned Pillersdorf, an attorney for the former employees of Milton, W. Va.-based Blackjewel, told KTWO Radio that workers could get checks early next year depending on the outcome of bankruptcy court hearings this fall. Blackjewel, which also has operations in Wyoming, all but completely shut down operations, including its vast Eagle Butte and Belle Ayr mines in northeastern Wyoming, after filing for bankruptcy in July 2019. The bankruptcy put about 600 employees in Wyoming and 1,100 in Appalachia out of work.
Senate Republicans were confident yesterday that most GOP colleagues would vote to support a narrower coronavirus aid package, a move aimed to highlight party unity as lawmakers grew increasingly pessimistic about any deal with Democrats before the election, the Wall Street Journal reported. The GOP’s $300 billion scaled-back version of their earlier $1 trillion stimulus plan includes jobless aid, liability protections for businesses and school funding, among other measures. But facing Democratic opposition, the “skinny” bill wasn’t expected to clear its first procedural hurdle in the Senate today or spur any immediate breakthrough in stalled negotiations with Democratic leaders and the White House. Senate GOP leaders hadn’t held a vote on their earlier proposal, which divided Republicans. The less-expensive bill, which lawmakers said should bolster vulnerable party senators during the final stretch of fall campaigning, is expected to get support from at least 51 GOP senators. Republicans currently have a 53-47 majority in the Senate, but control is seen as up for grabs in the November election. Democrats have said the earlier GOP plan came up short of the needs raised by the pandemic’s health and economic effects, and the new one even more so. The new bill includes about $650 billion in spending, offset by $350 billion in savings elsewhere for a total cost of around $300 billion, according to GOP aides. The new GOP bill includes $300 in weekly federal unemployment payments through Dec. 27, establishes legal protections for businesses and health-care facilities, provides $29 billion in health-care funding, $105 billion for schools and permits the U.S. Postal Service to not repay a $10 billion loan set up in a previous aid package. It also includes a second round of the popular Paycheck Protection Program for businesses that have demonstrated a revenue loss. The proposed bill aims to resume assistance to small businesses under the PPP, which expired on Aug. 8. Under the plan, businesses with 300 or fewer employees can apply for a second PPP loan if they can demonstrate a reduction of at least 35% in their quarterly revenue from the same quarter in 2019. Such loans will be equal to 2.5 times the company’s average monthly payroll cost, with a maximum loan value of $2 million. As under the previous rule, at least 60 percent of the funds must be used on payroll. Read more. (Subscription required.)
With the Senate poised to vote today on a slender GOP coronavirus relief bill that’s certain to fail, chances for a bipartisan deal on new economic stimulus look more remote than ever. This impasse has prompted top White House officials to consider a new round of executive actions that they hope could direct funding to certain groups amid fears that the nascent economic recovery could fail to gain momentum, the Washington Post reported. White House officials have discussed efforts to unilaterally provide support for the flagging airline industry while also bolstering unemployment benefits, according to two people aware of the deliberations who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share internal policy discussions. The White House has also discussed moving without Congress to direct more money for school vouchers and changing President Trump’s recent payroll tax changes to make it more effective. Typically, such actions require congressional approval. In August, Trump signed four executive actions meant to provide more unemployment aid, eviction protections, student loan relief and to defer payroll tax payments. The moves have had mixed success and came as political talks faltered on Capitol Hill. Read more.
Senate Republicans are proposing to beef up a “skinny” coronavirus relief package by more than 100 pages, including an enhanced deduction for charitable giving, $20 billion for farmers and ranchers and money for child care and stockpiling medical supplies, Roll Call reported. A vote on the package, which isn’t expected to advance over Democratic opposition, could come on Thursday, according to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. The Kentucky Republican said yesterday before introducing the revised bill that it would be “targeted” to the “very most urgent” needs facing Americans dealing with the continued pandemic fallout. "Senators will not be voting on whether this targeted package satisfies every one of their legislative hopes and dreams," McConnell said in floor remarks later on Tuesday. "We vote on whether to make laws, whether to forge a compromise, whether to do a lot of good for the country and keep arguing over the remaining differences later." McConnell also yesterday filed a motion to end debate on the underlying legislative vehicle, a measure which has already become law separately. Using a "shell" that has already passed both chambers enables the Senate to skip a procedural step and vote on cloture Thursday. An official price tag wasn’t available, but the new measure appears to contain more than $500 billion in assistance, which while larger than an earlier draft circulated last month would still be substantially shy of the $1 trillion July rollout that landed with a thud among Senate Republicans. Read more.
In related news, a fresh U.S. Senate Republican coronavirus spending package introduced yesterday does not include new government assistance for U.S. airlines or airports, a text of the proposal showed, as the sector races to save jobs before October, Reuters reported. More than 35,000 workers at two of the largest U.S. carriers alone — American Airlines and United Airlines — are set to lose their jobs once an initial $25 billion in payroll support from the government expires this month. That has fueled a furious push by unions for a six-month extension of the aid, with flight attendants and other aviation workers planning to march outside the U.S. Capitol today. Last month a group of Senate Republicans backed extending $25 billion in payroll assistance for airlines, an idea Democrats also support. That proposal was excluded from the latest Senate measure, which was reviewed by Reuters and is expected to be voted on Thursday, but it is an opening salvo for talks that are expected to intensify once the U.S. House returns from recess next week. The Senate proposal also excludes $10 billion in assistance for airports that was part of an earlier Senate bill. Read more.
The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp. said on Friday that it has assumed responsibility for The McClatchy Company Retirement Plan, Pensions & Investments reported. In July, the Sacramento, Calif.-based company said that it expected the transfer as part of a court-supervised sale to Chatham Asset Management after it filed for chapter 11 protection in February. On Aug. 4, the bankruptcy court approved the sale of substantially all assets of McClatchy and its 23 subsidiaries, and the pension plan was terminated as of Aug. 31. The PBGC estimated that McClatchy's plan is 57 percent funded with about $1.3 billion in assets and $2.3 billion in benefit liabilities.
The Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis held a hybrid in-person/remote hearing with Treasury Secretary Steven T. Mnuchin on the Administration’s response to the country’s economic crisis. The hearing will examine the urgent need for additional economic relief for children, workers, and families and the Administration’s implementation of key stimulus programs passed by Congress earlier this year.
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) expressed doubts about whether Congress can get a deal on another pandemic relief package after lawmakers return to Washington, D.C., after a month-long recess, despite the Trump administration push for a quick, targeted stimulus, Bloomberg News reported. “I don’t know if there will be another package in the next few weeks or not,” McConnell said. He said that talks between top administration officials and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi haven’t been fruitful, and that any embrace of bipartisanship in the Capitol has “descended” as the fall elections near. His comments come a day after Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin testified to Congress that parts of the U.S. economy urgently need additional fiscal stimulus to fully rebound from the COVID-19 crisis. Mnuchin told a House panel the most important thing is “that we deliver some relief quickly to the American workers impacted by this.” Mnuchin later initiated a call with Pelosi, amid the stalemate in talks. In a statement Tuesday night, the speaker said she told the Treasury chief that Democrats have “serious questions” remaining in any negotiations. That includes, she said, the view of the administration that a smaller package can be pursued now and a larger one later. There have been no negotiations since the last round broke up almost a month ago. Democrats have offered to lower their demand for a $3.5 trillion package to about $2.2 trillion. Senate Republicans originally put forth a $1 trillion plan, but are now discussing with the administration a smaller $500 billion package they say will be more focused on areas of the economy most affected by the pandemic. Mnuchin singled out the travel industry and small businesses as needing more aid.