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 didnโt reach an agreement on billions in global COVID-19 assistance.ย
โWhile 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. โIt 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 hasnโt yet been spent.ย
โImportantly, 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 didnโt rule out continuing to talk with Democrats on international vaccine aid, saying he is โwilling 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 โpromptlyโ pass the legislation.
The Biden administration, she said, would continue talking with lawmakers about ways โto fund our remaining domestic needsโ and โto 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 hadnโt 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 โnot enough money.โ
โThis is shameful,โ Pelosi said. โItโs not going to last us past, probably, June 1st.โย
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 Administrationโs Shuttered Venues Operators Grants program, $1.873 billion from the U.S. Treasury Departmentโs State Small Business Credit Initiative, $1.6 billion from the U.S. Agriculture Departmentโs unspent pandemic aid from two prior bills, $900 million in Small Business Administration Economic Injury Disaster Loans, $887 million from the U.S. Treasury Departmentโs Local Assistance and Tribal Consistency Fund and $500 million from the U.S. Education Departmentโs 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.
