A box of at-home COVID-19 tests.
A box of at-home COVID-19 tests. Credit: Staff photo by Ben Conant

The U.S. Senate reached a bipartisan deal on pandemic aid funding Monday, settling on $10 billion for added testing, treatment, and vaccines.

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, a New York Democrat, and Utah GOP Sen. Mitt Romney released separate statements Monday afternoon announcing the compromise, though Schumer was disappointed negotiators didnโ€™t reach an agreement on billions in global COVID-19 assistance.ย 

โ€œWhile we were unable to reach an agreement on international aid in this new agreement, many Democrats and Republicans are committed to pursuing a second supplemental later this spring,โ€ Schumer said in his statement. โ€œIt is my intention for the Senate to consider a bipartisan International appropriations package that could include additional aid for Ukraine as well as funding to address COVID-19 and food insecurity globally.โ€

Romney urged his fellow Republicans to back the agreement, saying that the new bill will be paid for by reprogramming funding from prior COVID-19 relief legislation that hasnโ€™t yet been spent.ย 

โ€œImportantly, this bill is comprised of dollar-for-dollar offsets and will not cost the American people a single additional dollar,โ€ he said in a statement.ย 

Romney didnโ€™t rule out continuing to talk with Democrats on international vaccine aid, saying he is โ€œwilling to explore a fiscally-responsible solution to support global efforts in the weeks ahead.โ€

White House press secretary Jen Psaki released a statement shortly after the deal calling on Congress to โ€œpromptlyโ€ pass the legislation.

The Biden administration, she said, would continue talking with lawmakers about ways โ€œto fund our remaining domestic needsโ€ and โ€œto build bipartisan support for a package to fund our global COVID-19 response.โ€

Less than half of Biden request

The $10 billion funding total announced Monday is less than half of the $22.5 billion the Biden administrationย askedย Congress for at the beginning of March.ย 

This agreement would provide $9.25 billion to the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority within the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

At least $5 billion of that funding would go toward researching, producing, and purchasing therapeutics, with at least $750 million for COVID-19 vaccine research and manufacturing to address new variants of the virus.ย 

The remaining money would go toward purchasing and distributing tests and vaccines.ย ย 

The announcement comes nearly four weeks after Speaker Nancy Pelosi had toย pullย a $15.6 billion bipartisan agreement from a much larger government funding bill over objections from numerous lawmakers.

That proposal was scrapped because some of the new spending was paid for by pulling back previously approved COVID-19 money for state governments that hadnโ€™t yet moved from federal accounts to certain states.ย ย 

Pelosi has not yet released a statement supporting the Senate agreement.ย 

Pelosi, a California Democrat, said during a Thursday press conference that the lower $10 billion price tag that left out billions for global vaccine efforts was โ€œnot enough money.โ€

โ€œThis is shameful,โ€ Pelosi said. โ€œItโ€™s not going to last us past, probably, June 1st.โ€ย 

The legislation pays for all the new spending by reprogramming previously approved COVID-19 funding, including $2.31 billion from the Transportation Aviation Manufacturing Jobs Protection Program, $1.93 billion from the Small Business Administrationโ€™s Shuttered Venues Operators Grants program, $1.873 billion from the U.S. Treasury Departmentโ€™s State Small Business Credit Initiative, $1.6 billion from the U.S. Agriculture Departmentโ€™s unspent pandemic aid from two prior bills, $900 million in Small Business Administration Economic Injury Disaster Loans, $887 million from the U.S. Treasury Departmentโ€™s Local Assistance and Tribal Consistency Fund and $500 million from the U.S. Education Departmentโ€™s Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund.

Neither the Senate or the House has locked in a time to vote on the bipartisanย agreement. Both chambers are set to leave Washington, D.C,ย  for a two-week spring recess at the end of the week.