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World News

Russia-Ukraine Warfare: U.S. Will Give $2 Billion Extra Assist, Blinken Says

Recognition…Doug Mills/The New York Times

Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, during a visit to Kyiv, the Ukrainian capital, on Thursday said he would inform Congress that the United States intends to send an additional $2 billion in long-term military assistance to Ukraine and 18 other countries. who are at risk of a Russian invasion.

Separately, President Biden has approved an additional $675 million in military assistance to Ukraine, Secretary of Defense Lloyd J. Austin III said.

The combined aid totals $13.5 billion in Biden administration aid to Ukraine since the Russian invasion in February.

Mr. Blinken’s visit to Ukraine’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs was his second since the start of the Russian invasion. The State Department has not publicly announced his trip in advance for security reasons.

His visit comes as Mr. Austin meets with allied defense ministers at a monthly meeting of the Ukraine Contact Group, which aims to coordinate the flow of military aid to Ukraine. The arrival of Western equipment, particularly longer-range HIMARS missile systems, has enabled Ukrainian forces to attack Russian military infrastructure behind front lines and aided a counteroffensive in the south — although some military experts argue aid to date is insufficient to avert this War decided in favor of Ukraine.

“Ukrainian forces have begun their counter-offensive in the south of their country and they are integrating the capabilities that we have all deployed to help themselves fight and retake their sovereign territory,” Mr Austin said at the start of the meeting at Ramstein Air Force Base in Germany.

“This contact group must position itself to provide long-term support to the brave defenders of Ukraine,” he said. “That now means the continuous and determined flow of skills.”

Russian forces are struggling to seize new territory but show no signs of retreating from the invasion, which US estimates have left tens of thousands of casualties on both sides and left vast areas of eastern and southern Ukraine in ruins. On Wednesday, President Vladimir V Putin delivered a defiant address, whitewashing the enormous toll of the war and the faltering performance of his army, and proclaimed at an economic conference in Russia’s Far East: “We have lost nothing and will lose nothing.”

In Germany, Mr Austin said the new weapons package included air-launched HARM missiles designed to seek out and destroy Russian air defense radar; guided multiple launch rocket systems, known as GMLRS; howitzers and other artillery; armored ambulances; and small arms.

The State Department said the $2 billion package, which will be drawn from pools of funds already approved by Congress but whose specific allocation requires Congress approval, would be split roughly half between Ukraine and 18 other nations. These are Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Estonia, Georgia, Greece, Kosovo, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova, Montenegro, North Macedonia, Poland, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia.

The money will be used to “build the current and future capabilities” of the armed forces of Ukraine and other countries, including by strengthening their cyber and hybrid warfare capabilities, particularly to counter Russian aggression, the State Department said.

The money will also help integrate non-NATO members into the alliances’ armed forces.

On Thursday afternoon, Mr Blinken met with Ukraine’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dmytro Kuleba. He previously visited the US embassy and a children’s hospital that treats children injured in Russian attacks.

Mr Blinken was also introduced to Patron at the hospital, a Jack Russell terrier who Ukrainian forces have credited with helping excavate hundreds of Russian landmines. Mr. Blinken declared the dog “world famous”.

Michael Croley and

Categories
Politics

Eviction Moratorium Set to Lapse as Biden Assist Effort Falters

The elimination of the federal ban will be offset by other pro-tenant initiatives that still exist. Many states and towns, including New York and California, have extended their own moratoriums, which should mitigate some of the effects. In some places, judges aware of the potential for a wave of mass displacement have said they will handle cases more slowly and make greater use of eviction diversion programs.

On Friday, several government agencies, including the Federal Housing Finance Agency, as well as the Agriculture, Housing and Urban Development and Veterans Affairs departments, announced that they would extend their eviction moratoriums to September 30.

Nonetheless, there is potential for an onslaught of eviction requests starting next week – in addition to the 450,000+ eviction cases that have been filed in courts in major cities and states since the pandemic began in March 2020.

An estimated 11 million adult renters are considered seriously behind schedule, according to a survey by the Census Bureau, but no one knows how many tenants are at risk of eviction in the near future.

Bailey Bortolin, a tenant attorney who works for the Nevada Coalition of Legal Service Providers, said the absence of the moratorium would encourage many property owners to take their eviction backlog to court next week, which is what many renters receive eviction notice had caused them to simply vacate their apartments instead of arguing.

“I think what we will see on Monday is a drastic increase in eviction suits going out to the people and the vast majority will not go through the judicial process,” Ms. Bortolin said.

The moratorium was due to expire on June 30, but the White House and CDC, under pressure from tenant groups, extended the lockdown to July 31, hoping to use the time to accelerate the flow of rental assistance.

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Health

Ceremony Assist plummets; CEO Heyward Donigan cites Covid for cautious outlook

Rite Aid CEO Heyward Donigan told CNBC on Thursday she’s “cautiously optimistic” the U.S. would avoid another round of strict Covid restrictions despite the presence of the delta variant.

“We all hope that enough people get vaccinated that we don’t have the variant become so significant that our markets shut down again,” Donigan said on “Squawk Box.”

Even so, the chief executive said the drug store chain was being judicious with its financial projections due, in part, to how unpredictable the coronavirus pandemic’s impact on business has been.

Shares of Rite Aid sank roughly 14% on Thursday, sending the company’s stock market value under $1 billion, as Wall Street digested mixed first-quarter results and weaker earnings guidance.

Rite Aid’s forecast for adjusted EBITDA — earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization — came in at $440 million and $480 million in fiscal year 2022, below estimates of $524 million, according to FactSet.

“We’re being very cautious because we had a miss last quarter due to the complete meltdown, I’ll call it, of cough, cold, flu — both in the pharmacy and in the front end because there just was no cough, cold, flu,” Donigan said, alluding to the recent surprisingly calm flu season in the U.S. and its impact on Rite Aid.

“We just didn’t realize how far down, how evaporated that business would actually be. So as we look forward, we think we need to be very cautious and prudent in our guidance,” said Donigan, who has been CEO of Pennsylvania-based Rite Aid since August 2019.

“We are expecting some improvement. We’re not expecting full improvement,” Donigan added.

She also acknowledged, “It’s very hard, it remains very hard to predict, a full-year result in a retail pharmacy in the middle of a pandemic because we are … still in the throes of this to some degree.”

The company projected full-year revenue of between $25.1 billion and $25.5 billion, which exceeded Wall Street’s expectations of $24.66 billion, according to FactSet.

Rite Aid’s outlook is not factoring in potential Covid vaccine boosters or vaccinations for children under the age of 12, Donigan noted. Trials examining the vaccine in kids under age 12 are currently ongoing.

The Food and Drug Administration cleared Pfizer’s Covid vaccine for use in kids ages 12 to 15 a little more than a month ago. Moderna, which also makes a two-dose vaccine, has asked the FDA to expand its emergency use authorization to cover adolescents from 12 to 17.

Categories
Health

‘Dying Doulas’ Present Help on the Finish of Life

Since its inception in 2018, the National End-of-Life Doula Alliance, a professional organization of practitioners and trainers in the end of life, has grown to nearly 800 members; The number of members has almost doubled in the last year, said its President Angela Shook. There has been increased interest in training programs with the International End-of-Life Doula Association, Doulagivers, and the Doula Program to Accompany and Comfort, a nonprofit led by hospice social worker Amy L. Levine.

Much of the growing interest in these programs has come from artists, actors, youth and restaurant workers who were unemployed during the pandemic and realized they could still be of use.

“People of different ages, younger than we would normally see, because they realized that people in their age group were dying, which they usually don’t,” said Diane Button, 62, of San Francisco, a Doula Facilitator at UVM and a member the Bay Area End-of-Life Doula Alliance, a collective of death workers. “It made them more aware of their own mortality and really got them to plan and get their documents and living wills in order.”

Rebecca Ryskalczyk, 32, singer in Vergennes, Vt., Had always felt “pretty good” in death. When she was 12, she lost two cousins ​​in a plane crash and four years later a friend to suicide. When Covid paused her performance schedule, she enrolled with UVM. Its aim is to convey to people that they do not have to be afraid of death; you don’t have to do it alone either. “To be able to stand up for someone and share the last moments of their life with them and help them stick to their plan when they may not be able to express it is an honor,” she said.

Kate Primeau, 35, was also in the music industry before the pandemic. Last June, after her grandfather died of Covid-19, she began researching how to host a Zoom memorial and came across the concept of a death doula. “I felt a huge gap between the amount of grief everyone felt and the resources available,” she said. She was certified as an end-of-life doula by Alua Arthur’s company Going with Grace and is also volunteering in a hospice program. “I can’t believe how much I laugh at all this death education.”

Of course, during the pandemic, doulas had to change the way they work. That was one of the biggest challenges: you couldn’t interact in person. So, like the rest of the world, they used Zoom calls and FaceTime. Families often sought their own healing.

Categories
Politics

U.S. Help to Central America Hasn’t Slowed Migration. Can Kamala Harris?

SAN ANTONIO HUISTA, Guatemala — An American contractor went to a small town in the Guatemalan mountains with an ambitious goal: to ignite the local economy, and hopefully even persuade people not to migrate north to the United States.

Half an hour into his meeting with coffee growers, the contractor excitedly revealed the tool he had brought to change their lives: a pamphlet inviting the farmers to download an app to check coffee prices and “be a part of modern agriculture.”

Pedro Aguilar, a coffee farmer who hadn’t asked for the training and didn’t see how it would keep anyone from heading for the border, looked confused. Eyeing the U.S. government logo on the pamphlet, he began waving it around, asking if anyone had a phone number to call the Americans “and tell them what our needs really are.”

“They’ve never helped me,” Mr. Aguilar said after the training a few weeks ago, referring to American aid programs intended to spur the economy and prevent migration. “Where does all the money go? Where’s the aid? Who knows?”

As vice president, Joseph R. Biden Jr. led an enormous push to deter people from crossing into the United States by devoting hundreds of millions of dollars to Central America, hoping to make the region more tolerable for the poor — so that fewer would abandon it.

Now, as President Biden, he is doubling down on that strategy once again and assigning his own vice president, Kamala Harris, the prickly challenge of carrying out his plan to commit $4 billion in a remarkably similar approach as she travels to the region Sunday.

“When I was vice president, I focused on providing the help needed to address these root causes of migration,” Mr. Biden said in a recent speech to Congress. “It helped keep people in their own countries instead of being forced to leave. Our plan worked.”

But the numbers tell a different story. After years of the United States flooding Central America with aid, migration from the region soared in 2019 and is on the upswing once more.

Here in Guatemala, which has received more than $1.6 billion in American aid over the last decade, poverty rates have risen, malnutrition has become a national crisis, corruption is unbridled and the country is sending more unaccompanied children to the United States than anywhere else in the world.

That is the stark reality facing Ms. Harris as she assumes responsibility for expanding the same kind of aid programs that have struggled to stem migration in the past. It is a challenge that initially frustrated her top political aides, some of whom viewed the assignment from Mr. Biden as one that would inevitably set her up for failure in the first months of her tenure.

Her allies worried that she would be expected to solve the entire immigration crisis, irked that the early reports of her new duties appeared to hold her responsible for juggling the recent surge of children crossing the border without adults.

Ms. Harris, who has little foreign policy experience and no history in the region, has already been criticized for not visiting the border. At a recent news conference, a group of Republicans displayed a milk carton that had been mocked up to show a picture of Ms. Harris with the headline “MISSING AT THE BORDER,” even as she held a news conference with reporters detailing her plans to visit the region.

The political risks are evident, including the obvious pitfalls of investing billions in a region where the president of Honduras has been linked to drug traffickers and accused of embezzling American aid money, the leader of El Salvador has been denounced for trampling democratic norms and the government of Guatemala has been criticized for persecuting officials fighting corruption.

Even so, Ms. Harris and her advisers have warmed to the task, according to several people familiar with her thinking in the White House. They say it will give her a chance to dive squarely into foreign policy and prove that she can pass the commander-in-chief test, negotiating with world leaders on a global stage to confront one of America’s most intractable issues.

That test begins Sunday, when Ms. Harris embarks on her first international trip, to Guatemala and Mexico, where she is expected to detail efforts to reduce migration to the United States by seeking to improve conditions in those countries.

“Injustice is a root cause of migration,” Ms. Harris said during a White House meeting on May 19 with four women who fought corruption in Guatemala. “It is causing the people of the region to leave their homes involuntarily — meaning they don’t want to leave but they are fleeing.”

While White House officials say their push to help Central America can do a tremendous amount of good, there is growing recognition inside the Biden administration that all the money spent in the region has not made enough of a difference to keep people from migrating, according to several administration officials and others with knowledge of the discussions.

“We’ve looked extensively at different programs that have been approached,” said Nancy McEldowney, a longtime diplomat who serves as Ms. Harris’s national security adviser. “She obviously has learned a lot from what then-Vice President Biden did. And so we are very mindful of the need to learn of both positive and negative, what has happened in the past.”

Foreign aid is often a difficult, and at times flawed, tool for achieving American interests abroad, but it’s unclear whether there are any simple alternatives for the Biden administration. President Donald J. Trump’s solution to migration centered on draconian policies that critics denounced as unlawful and inhumane. Moreover, members of the current administration contend that Mr. Trump’s decision to freeze a portion of the aid to the region in 2019 ended up blunting the impact of the work being done to improve conditions there.

But experts say the reasons that years of aid have not curbed migration run far deeper than that. In particular, they note that much of the money is handed over to American companies, which swallow a lot of it for salaries, expenses and profits, often before any services are delivered.

From 2016 to 2020, 80 percent of the American-financed development projects in Central America were entrusted to American contractors, according to data provided by the U.S. Agency for International Development. The upside is that these companies have big offices capable of meeting the strict oversight requirements involved in handling millions of taxpayer dollars. The downside, critics say, is that a lot of the money disappears into those bureaucracies instead of reaching the people they’re trying to help.

Half a dozen development experts who have worked with or for the contractors said the companies could easily take about 50 percent of the aid money they receive and direct it toward overhead — including generous salaries for executives — and company profits. When asked about that figure, U.S.A.I.D. did not contest it.

“It’s a business,” said Carlos Ponce, a professor of nonprofit management at Columbia University who has worked for several U.S.-funded programs in the region. “And the same implementers win the contracts again and again, despite having implemented badly in the past, not showing any level of impact and not changing anything.”

U.S.A.I.D. would not provide an estimate of how much taxpayer money spent on specific projects in Central America gets eaten up by administrative costs, noting that the agency is “legally restricted” from sharing its partners’ “proprietary information.”

“It’s an incredibly not-transparent situation,” said Eric Olson, an expert on foreign aid to Central America at the Seattle International Foundation. “It’s like this is a national secret.”

Updated 

June 4, 2021, 7:27 p.m. ET

Ms. Harris’s aides say she wants to make absolutely sure that as much assistance as possible heads directly to the communities it’s intended for.

“She is concerned to make sure that we’re getting maximum benefit for every single dollar that we spend,” Ms. McEldowney said. Asked whether that included scrutinizing the money flowing to U.S. contractors, she said, “We are looking at that issue.”

Even when aid money reached Guatemala in recent years, it often brought little change, according to interviews with dozens who worked with or received assistance from U.S.-financed projects in the country’s western highlands.

One, called the Rural Value Chains Project, spent part of its $20 million in American aid building outhouses for potato farmers — many of which were quickly abandoned or torn apart for scrap metal.

“This brings no value to people,” said Arturo Cabrera, a local government official, peeking into an unused outhouse. “It doesn’t generate income,” which is what people ultimately need, he added.

One achievement touted by Nexos Locales, a $31 million project administered by Development Alternatives Incorporated, a company based in Bethesda, Md., was creating an app to enable residents to see how their local government spent money. Aid workers said that many residents didn’t have smartphones, and that they couldn’t afford to pay for the data to use the app even if they did.

The company did not comment, directing questions to U.S.A.I.D. But several people who worked for or advised Nexos said they had grown frustrated at what they saw as wasted funding on dubious accomplishments. They described being pushed to count results like how many meetings they held and how many people attended, but had no idea whether those activities had any lasting impact.

“You felt impotent, knowing what young people or women needed, and we couldn’t do it,” said Alma López Mejía, a K’iche’ Maya Indigenous leader and a former manager at Nexos.

When aid workers started showing up one after another in the town of San Antonio Huista about six years ago, Elvia Monzón was relieved.

Then, it seemed that everyone Ms. Monzón knew had left the area, spread across a mountain range where coffee fields bask in a perfect mix of sun and rain. On clear days, you can see Mexico from the dirt road that snakes through town.

Ms. Monzón’s husband was already in the United States, and her son, then 14, begged her to take him there. When she wouldn’t, he left on his own and, his mother said, made it safely across the border.

For decades, migration to the United States followed a pattern: Aside from some spikes in migration from Central America after civil wars or natural disasters, it was mostly single Mexicans who headed north in search of better jobs and pay.

Then, in 2014, officials noticed the makings of a major shift: Record numbers of Central American children and families were crossing, fleeing gang violence and widespread hunger.

The Obama administration tackled the dicey politics of immigration in part by removing undocumented workers, earning the president the nickname “deporter in chief” from critics. But he also oversaw an infusion of new aid money that would, in theory, make countries like Guatemala more bearable for the poor. Mr. Biden was tapped to help disburse $750 million to the region.

Since then, at least three programs that won more than $100 million in U.S. funding in all have come to San Antonio Huista, hoping to make life better. Yet, in interviews, Ms. Monzón and more than a dozen other coffee farmers here could not point to many long-term benefits, despite the attention.

Aid workers kept coming to deliver lots of seminars on topics in which the farmers were already well versed, they said, such as planting new varieties of coffee beans, and then left.

“So many trainings, but at the end of the day where is the money?” asked Ms. Monzón. “The aid isn’t reaching the poor.”

U.S.A.I.D. said its programs in Central America “have had demonstrable success,” creating tens of thousands of jobs in the region in recent years, helping increase sales for small businesses and contributing to “declining migration intentions” from some Hondurans who received services.

The agency noted that American companies administering aid in the region subcontract part of their work to local groups, that no formal complaint had been filed against Nexos Locales, and that building outhouses or smartphone apps represented a small part of the efforts in Guatemala.

Some programs, like efforts to reduce violence in Honduras and El Salvador, have worked well, independent studies have found.

“All activities funded with U.S.A.I.D.’s foreign assistance benefit countries and people overseas, even if managed through agreements with U.S.-based organizations,” said Mileydi Guilarte, a deputy assistant administrator at U.S.A.I.D. working on Latin America funding.

But the government’s own assessments don’t always agree. After evaluating five years of aid spending in Central America, the Government Accountability Office rendered a blunt assessment in 2019: “Limited information is available about how U.S. assistance improved prosperity, governance, and security.”

One U.S.A.I.D. evaluation of programs intended to help Guatemalan farmers found that from 2006 to 2011, incomes rose less in the places that benefited from U.S. aid than in similar areas where there was no intervention.

Mexico has pushed for a more radical approach, urging the United States to give cash directly to Central Americans affected by two brutal hurricanes last year. But there’s also a clear possibility — that some may simply use the money to pay a smuggler for the trip across the border.

The farmers of San Antonio Huista say they know quite well what will keep their children from migrating. Right now, the vast majority of people here make their money by selling green, unprocessed coffee beans to a few giant Guatemalan companies. This is a fine way to put food on the table — assuming the weather cooperates — but it doesn’t offer much more than subsistence living.

Farmers here have long dreamed of escaping that cycle by roasting their own coffee and selling brown beans in bags to American businesses and consumers, which brings in more money.

“Instead of sending my brother, my father, my son to the United States, why not send my coffee there, and get paid in dollars?” said Esteban Lara, the leader of a local coffee cooperative.

But when they begged a U.S. government program for funding to help develop such a business, Ms. Monzón said, they were told “the money is not designed to be invested in projects like that.”

These days, groups of her neighbors are leaving for the United States every month or two. So many workers have abandoned this town that farmers are scrambling to find laborers to harvest their coffee.

One of Ms. Monzón’s oldest employees, Javier López Pérez, left with his 14-year-old son in 2019, during the last big wave of Central American migration to the United States. Mr. López said he was scaling the border wall with his son when he fell and broke his ankle.

“My son screamed, ‘Papi, no!’ and I said to him, ‘Keep going, my son,’” Mr. López said. He said his son made it to the United States, while he returned to San Antonio Huista alone.

His family was then kicked out of their home, which Mr. López had given as collateral to the person who smuggled him to the border. The house they moved into was destroyed by the two hurricanes that hit Guatemala late last year.

Ms. Monzón put Mr. López in one of her relatives’ houses, then got the community to cobble together money to pay for enough cinder blocks to build the family a place to live.

While mixing cement to bind the blocks together, one of Mr. López’s sons, Vidal, 19, confessed that he had been talking to a smuggler about making the same journey that felled his father, who was realistic at the prospect.

“I told him, ‘Son, we suffered hunger and thirst along the way, and then look at what happened to me, look at what I lost,’” Mr. López said, touching his still-mangled ankle. “But I can’t tell him what to do with his life — he’s a man now.”

Categories
Politics

Russia Seems to Carry Out Hack By way of System Utilized by U.S. Support Company

Hackers connected to Russia’s main intelligence agency secretly seized an email system used by the Foreign Ministry’s international aid agency to dig into the computer networks of human rights groups and other organizations that President Vladimir V. Microsoft Corporation announced on Thursday that they were critical of Putin.

The breach was only discovered three weeks before President Biden’s planned meeting with Putin in Geneva and at a moment of increasing tensions between the two nations – also due to a series of increasingly sophisticated cyberattacks from Russia.

The newly uncovered attack was also particularly bold: By breaching the systems of a supplier used by the federal government, the hackers only this week sent e-mails from more than 3,000 real-looking accounts addressed to more than 150 organizations that are receiving regularly Communications from the United States Agency for International Development.

The e-mail was implanted with code that gave the hackers unrestricted access to the recipient’s computer systems, from “stealing data to infecting other computers on a network,” wrote Tom Burt, a Microsoft vice president, on Thursday evening.

Last month, Mr Biden announced a series of new sanctions against Russia and the expulsion of diplomats for an elaborate hacking operation called SolarWinds that used novel methods to injure at least seven government agencies and hundreds of large American companies.

This attack went undetected by the US government for nine months until it was discovered by a cybersecurity company. In April, Mr Biden said he could have reacted much more strongly but chose “proportionate” because he did not want to “start a cycle of escalation and conflict with Russia”.

However, the Russian response appears to have been an escalation. The malicious activity had only started for the past week. This suggests that the sanctions and any additional covert measures the White House has put in place – part of a strategy to create “seen and invisible” costs for Moscow – have not stifled the Russian government’s appetite for disruption.

A spokesman for the agency for cybersecurity and infrastructure security in the Department of Homeland Security said late Thursday that the agency is “aware of the possible compromise” with the agency for international development and is working “with the FBI and USAID to better understand it. ” Level of compromise and support for potential victims. “

Microsoft identified the Russian group behind the attack as Nobelium and said it was the same group responsible for the SolarWinds hack. Last month, the US government explicitly stated that SolarWinds was the work of the SVR, one of the KGB’s most successful Soviet-era spin-offs

The same agency was involved in the National Democratic Committee hacking attacks in 2016 and previously in attacks on the Pentagon, White House email system, and State Department unclassified communications.

It’s gotten increasingly aggressive and creative, say federal officials and experts. The SolarWinds attack was never discovered by the US government and was carried out through code implanted in network management software that is widely used by the government and private companies. When customers updated SolarWinds software – much like an iPhone would do overnight – they were unwittingly letting in an intruder.

The victims last year included the ministries of homeland security and energy, as well as nuclear laboratories.

When Mr Biden took office, he ordered a study into the SolarWinds case, and officials have been working to prevent future supply chain attacks where adversaries infect software used by federal agencies. This is similar to this case when Microsoft’s security team caught the hackers using a widely used Constant Contact email service to send malicious emails that appeared to come from real-world addresses belonging to the International Development Agency.

Updated

May 26, 2021, 9:17 p.m. ET

But the content was barely subtle at times. In an email sent through the Constant Contact service on Tuesday, the hackers highlighted a message claiming that “Donald Trump had published new emails about election fraud.” The email contained a link that, if clicked, would place malicious files on recipients’ computers.

Microsoft noted that the attack was “significantly” different from the SolarWinds hack and used new tools and craftsmanship to avoid detection. It was said that the attack was still ongoing and that the hackers continued to send spearphishing emails with increasing speed and reach. Because of this, Microsoft took the unusual step of naming the agency whose email addresses were used and posting examples of the spoofed email.

Essentially, the Russians got into the Agency for International Development’s email system by circling the agency and going straight to their software suppliers. Constant Contact manages bulk emails and other communications on behalf of the aid organization.

“Nobelium launched this week’s attacks by gaining access to USAID’s Constant Contact account,” wrote Microsoft’s Burt. Constant contact could not be reached for comment.

Microsoft, like other large cybersecurity companies, maintains a large network of sensors to search for malicious activity on the Internet and is often a target itself. It was instrumental in uncovering the SolarWinds attack.

In this case, Microsoft reported, the hackers’ goal was not to track down the State Department or the aid agency, but rather to use their connections to get into groups that work on the ground – and in many cases, Putin’s most powerful ones Critic.

“At least a quarter of the target organizations were involved in international development, humanitarian and human rights work,” wrote Burt. Although he did not name them, many such groups have exposed Russian actions against dissidents or protested the poisoning, conviction and imprisonment of Russia’s most prominent opposition leader, Alexei A. Navalny.

The attack suggests that Russian intelligence agencies are stepping up their campaign, perhaps to demonstrate that the country would not step down in the face of sanctions, the eviction of diplomats and other pressures.

Mr Biden raised the SolarWinds attack on a phone call with Mr Putin last month, telling him that the sanctions and expulsions are evidence that his government would no longer tolerate an accelerated pace of cyber operations.

Mr Putin has denied Russia’s involvement, and some Russian news outlets have argued that the United States launched the attack against itself.

At the same time, the White House also imposed a number of new sanctions on Russian individuals and assets, including new restrictions on buying Russia’s national debt that will make it difficult for Russia to raise money and support its currency.

“This is the beginning of a new US campaign against malicious behavior by Russia,” Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said at the time.

Tensions over the housing of cybercriminals in Russia increased significantly this month after a ransomware group took corporate networks of the Colonial Pipeline hostage. The attack forced the company to shut down a pipeline that brings nearly half of its gasoline, diesel and jet fuel to the east coast, sparking a spike in gas prices and panic buying at the pump.

Mr Biden said two weeks ago: “We spoke in direct communication with Moscow about the need for the responsible countries to take decisive action against these ransomware networks. ”

Categories
Business

Republicans Push Biden to Divert Federal Help for Infrastructure

WASHINGTON — From California to Virginia, many states that faced devastating shortfalls in the depths of the pandemic recession now find themselves flush with tax revenues because of a rebounding economy and a soaring stock market. Lawmakers who worried about budget cuts are now proposing lucrative increases in school spending, tax cuts and direct payments to their residents.

That turnaround is partly the product of strong income tax receipts, particularly in states that heavily tax high earners and the wealthy, whose finances have fared well in the crisis. The unexpectedly rosy picture is raising pressure on President Biden to repurpose hundreds of billions of dollars of federal aid approved this year, in order to help fund a potential bipartisan infrastructure deal.

Last week, Senator Mitt Romney, Republican of Utah, suggested that Mr. Biden and Republican negotiators look to “some of the funding that’s been sent to states already under the last few bills” to help pay for that agreement. “They don’t know how to use it,” Mr. Romney said. “They could use that money to finance part of the infrastructure relating to roads and bridges and transit.”

Some economists and budget experts support that push, arguing that the money could be better spent elsewhere and that states’ spending plans could add to a risk of rapid inflation breaking out across the country. Other researchers and local budget officials say that the federal aid is rescuing harder-hit cities and states, like New York City and Hawaii, from a cascade of layoffs and spending cuts.

Biden administration officials say they continue to support distributing the full $350 billion in state, local and tribal aid that was contained in the $1.9 trillion economic assistance package that Mr. Biden signed in March. They say the aid will help ensure that the economic rebound does not repeat the years of state and local budget cutting that followed the 2008 financial crisis, which slowed the recovery from recession and contributed to millions of Americans waiting years to reap its benefits.

“We still feel strongly that the state and local plan is critical to ensuring we have a strong insurance policy for the type of strong growth we want, the type of equitable recovery the country deserves,” Gene Sperling, a senior adviser to Mr. Biden who oversees fulfillment of the March assistance package, said in an interview, “and to coming back from the 1.3 million jobs lost at the state and local level.”

Even if the administration wanted to recoup or divert the funds, it is unlikely that it could repurpose the money or make significant changes to how it is used without congressional action.

The debate over the state and local funding comes as Mr. Biden navigates a critical week of negotiations with Republicans over infrastructure in search of a deal, and as he prepares to travel to Cleveland on Thursday to speak about the economy. How to pay for any new spending is a primary hurdle in the talks, with Mr. Biden pushing to raise taxes on corporations and Republicans preferring increased user fees like the gas tax.

Repurposing unspent funds could help advance an agreement, particularly given Republican opposition to bankrolling state aid in previous rescue packages. Democrats pushed hard to include lucrative financial assistance for states, cities and tribes in Mr. Biden’s rescue bill. Republicans fought those efforts, warning they would serve as a “bailout” to high-tax, high-spend liberal states. They also cited a series of projections from Wall Street firms and other analysts suggesting that many states’ revenues were faring better than officials had feared in the early months of the pandemic.

It increasingly looks like many liberal states are not being “bailed out” — but also that some of them do not need more federal money. That is particularly true in states that do not rely primarily on the tourism or hospitality industries for tax revenues. Those with progressive tax systems that have caught surging revenues from investment income enjoyed by wealthy residents — like Silicon Valley moguls — are also faring well.

California officials expect a $15 billion surplus this fiscal year, after fearing a $54 billion shortfall. Virginia has seen nearly $2 billion in unanticipated revenues. As has Oregon, where economists recently upgraded the state’s revenue forecasts — moving it from projected deficits to surplus — in a report that surprised and delighted many lawmakers.

“It’s extremely surprising,” said Mark McMullen, the Oregon state economist.

“Obviously, when the shutdowns first set in and we saw these catastrophic employment losses, we treated them as a normal recession in our forecasts,” he said.

But surging income tax revenues and several rounds of federal assistance have now put the state “above our prepandemic forecasts,” Mr. McMullen added.

The strong revenue figures come as more federal relief money is just beginning to roll out the door. The Treasury Department began sending funds to states this month and has so far distributed more than $100 billion — about half of what is available to be disbursed immediately. Local governments are expected to receive the rest next year, although states still experiencing a sharp rise in unemployment will get a lump sum right away.

The Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget estimates that state and local governments have received a total of nearly $1 trillion in relief money in the past year. State and local revenues were running about 7 percent above their prepandemic levels in the last quarter — excluding the federal aid they have received.

Marc Goldwein, the senior policy director for the committee, said that states like Hawaii and Nevada that rely heavily on tourism clearly needed the assistance, but that for many others, the money was unnecessary.

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The reasons vary, but Mr. Goldwein noted that home values have been surging around the country, providing a boost to property taxes; that states that were struggling from sagging oil prices have seen those prices pick up; and that consumers have been spending at a healthy clip thanks to stimulus checks and expanded jobless benefits.

“State and local governments, by and large, are frankly swimming in revenue,” Mr. Goldwein said. “It’s pretty clear to me that we spent a lot of money on states that we didn’t need to.”

Some economists, like Harvard’s Lawrence H. Summers, a former Treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton, have pushed Mr. Biden to repurpose the state and local aid for longer-term infrastructure projects, in hopes of easing what Mr. Summers warns is a dangerous buildup of inflationary pressure. Administration officials view high inflation as a much lower risk than Mr. Summers does.

Other analysts warn that state budget situations could sour if the stock market dips sharply or economic growth fizzles. Many cities, like New York, have struggled with sluggish tax revenues and still are reliant on federal to help avoid further layoffs.

New York expects to receive more than $22 billion in Covid-19 federal aid, according to the nonpartisan Citizens Budget Commission. Despite the funds, the city is still anticipating budget gaps in the coming years, the result of declining revenues like property taxes.

In retrospect, said Lucy Dadayan, a senior research associate at the Tax Policy Center, the March law should have included “more targeted funding” for the states and cities that need it most.

“I would still be all for helping state and local governments — more local governments than state governments, given what we know,” Ms. Dadayan said.

Treasury Department officials say the Biden administration wants states to have sufficient resources to cover immediate costs related to emerging from the pandemic and to be able to pay for more expansive services to help people who were hardest hit.

But many states and cities are eyeing windfall spending plans that go well beyond repairing their safety nets. Gov. Gavin Newsom of California, a Democrat facing a recall vote, has proposed a series of spending increases, including $1,100 stimulus checks to individuals and tax credits for filmmakers.

In Florida, the revenue forecast for 2021 has been revised upward twice in the past year. The state is now expected to get $8.8 billion from the federal government. Ben Watkins, the director of the Florida Division of Bond Finance, said the state was using the relief money to invest in infrastructure and water quality projects and directing some of its surplus funds to hurricane preparedness.

He described the windfall as staggering.

“It’s a good problem to have,” Mr. Watkins said, “but that doesn’t mean that it’s not excessive.”

States have substantial leeway in how they use the money, though they are prohibited from using the funds to subsidize tax cuts. Several Republican-led states have sued the Treasury Department, arguing that the restriction infringes on state sovereignty.

The lawsuits do not appear to be slowing the delivery of the funds. Ohio failed to win an injunction blocking the restrictions from being enforced this month, and Missouri had its case thrown out of court after a federal judge said the state did not demonstrate that the law caused it harm.

The Treasury Department plans to closely monitor how the money is spent and whether states are using budget gimmicks to actually fund tax cuts. The agency maintains that the federal government has a right to place conditions on how federal funds are used and that states are allowed to decline the money. A Treasury Department official said that no state had indicated yet that it would reject the funds.

In the meantime, states that are flush with revenues are pressing ahead with their plans. Nebraska approved a $26 million corporate tax cut last week, and lawmakers have told The Omaha World-Herald that they believe that by keeping the federal funds in a separate account from the state’s general fund, they will be in compliance with the law.

Nicholas Fandos and Dana Goldstein contributed reporting.

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Politics

White Home to Permit Undocumented College students Entry to Pandemic Support

The Biden Administration Early Tuesday it announced an ordinance would be enacted to allow undocumented students access to some of the $ 36 billion in emergency aid that goes to colleges. This is a disconnect from the Trump-era decision to ban these students – even among the nationwide protected known as dreamers. from access to previous funding rounds.

“The pandemic has not discriminated against the students,” Miguel Cardona, the education minister, told reporters during a phone call on Monday that previewed the government’s plans. “We know the final rule will include all students, and we want to make sure that all students have access to funds to get them back on track.”

The decision is a 180-degree lynchpin in attempts by Trump administration officials to prevent most immigrant students from accessing relief supplies. Last June, Betsy DeVos, Donald J. Trump’s Education Secretary, issued an emergency rule banning international undocumented students – including tens of thousands of so-called dreamers protected under the Deferred Action on Child Arrivals program – Access to an earlier round of over $ 6 billion in emergency funds. This decision was quickly made by legal challenges.

Biden administrative officer for months considered whether the emergency benefits should be extended to undocumented students who are not entitled to other forms of study allowance. Under current welfare laws, undocumented immigrants are still largely ineligible to receive money from federal programs. including funds from the $ 1.9 trillion pandemic relief package signed by President Biden on March 11.

On Monday evening, an education spokeswoman who was not empowered to explain the planning publicly stated that the administration had the authority to allocate funds to undocumented students through the $ 2.2 trillion Emergency Fund for Higher Education under the CARES Act distribute Former President Trump signed in March last year, and Congress “did not draw sharp lines on who is a student” when determining who could get money from this fund.

Existing admission requirements for the fund “make it clear that the emergency financial aid can support all students who are or were enrolled at a university during the national COVID-19 emergency, and it is up to the institution to distribute the funds to the students on most in need, “said the spokeswoman in a statement. (Last year, Ms. DeVos relied on a similarly vague definition to create the Trump-era rule.)

Mr. Cardona previewed the decision to reporters and phrased it for convenience: “What she’s doing is really simplifying the definition of a student. This makes it easier for colleges to manage the program and get money into students’ hands sooner. ”

About half of the $ 36 billion allocated for colleges will go directly to students, Cardona said, and about $ 10 billion will be given to community colleges.

Aside from direct grants to individual students, the funds will be used to strengthen academic support services, purchase laptops, and expand mental health programs. All students, including those who have not previously applied for formal federal grants, are now eligible for grants, according to the Department of Education.

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Business

You Nonetheless Have Time to Ask Faculties for Extra Monetary Support

DeRionne Pollard, president of Montgomery College, a three-campus community college in Maryland, said using the SwiftStudent tool was invisible to grant officials, but helped the students create a clear, comprehensive appeal.

“It enables and empowers students to stand up for themselves,” said Dr. Pollard.

In a survey last fall, college financial aid advisors reported a “remarkable” increase in requests for professional assessment reviews, according to the National Association of Student Financial Aid Administrators. The group will conduct another survey next month to update their results.

Here are some questions and answers about financial support:

I am confused by my letters of help. How can I ensure that I am comparing offers correctly?

Colleges are encouraged to use standard auxiliary letter formats and avoid jargon, but not all do. Be careful to distinguish between “gift” aid such as grants and scholarships that do not have to be repaid and loans that do. Subtract the gift aid from the college’s cost of attendance – the total cost of tuition, housing, meals, books, and supplies – to get a net price. Do this for each school before considering how much of the cost you can recover from savings and income, and how much you would have to borrow to cover any deficits.

U.Aspire, a nonprofit committed to helping students afford college with less debt, has created a free online expense calculator that applicants can use to compare “apples to apples” offers of help. The Consumer Financial Protection Bureau also offers an online bid comparison tool and the Institute for College Access & Success has a leaflet.

And remember: you are under no obligation to borrow all or any of the loans included in your auxiliary letter, said Jessica Thompson, vice president at the institute. On the other hand, some colleges may not include the maximum federal student loan amount to which you are eligible. So if you think you may need to borrow more, give the financial help office a call to discuss your situation, she said.

What documents do I need to file an appeal?

Colleges differ in how they rate an appeal. But collect anything that indicates reduced hours or wages, such as letters from employers, pay slips or unemployment records, and medical bills to represent your case, Ms. Warick said.

Can I make a deposit in more than one college?

Colleges disapprove of this practice because you ultimately won’t be able to attend more than one college. If you make two deposits, another student – one on the waiting list or a late applicant – will not be offered a place, Hawkins said. It also affects less affluent applicants who may not be able to afford more than a security deposit. Therefore, members of the admissions advisory association advise against it, he said.

Categories
Politics

Federal Help to Renters Strikes Slowly, Leaving Many at Danger

WASHINGTON – Vier Monate, nachdem der Kongress zig Milliarden Dollar an Notmiethilfe bewilligt hatte, hat nur ein kleiner Teil Vermieter und Mieter erreicht, und an vielen Orten ist es unmöglich, überhaupt einen Antrag zu stellen.

Das Programm erfordert, dass Hunderte von staatlichen und lokalen Regierungen ihre eigenen Pläne ausarbeiten und umsetzen, und einige haben nur langsam begonnen. Das Tempo wird jedoch hauptsächlich durch die Komplexität der Aufgabe behindert: Das Starten eines riesigen Popup-Programms, das Millionen von Mietern erreicht, ihre Schulden überprüft und Vermieter gewinnt, deren Interessen nicht immer mit denen ihrer Mieter übereinstimmen.

Das Geld, um das es geht, ist riesig. Der Kongress genehmigte im Dezember 25 Milliarden US-Dollar und fügte im März mehr als 20 Milliarden US-Dollar hinzu. Die Summe, die die Bundesregierung jetzt für die Nothilfe in Höhe von 46,5 Milliarden US-Dollar zur Verfügung hat, entspricht dem Jahresbudget des Ministeriums für Wohnungsbau und Stadtentwicklung.

Experten sagen, dass eine sorgfältige Vorbereitung die Ergebnisse verbessern kann; Es braucht Zeit, um die bedürftigsten Mieter zu finden und die Zahlungsgenauigkeit sicherzustellen. Da jedoch jeder siebte Mieter angibt, dass er mit den Zahlungen im Rückstand ist, erleiden die Vermieter destabilisierende Verluste, je länger die Verteilung des Geldes dauert, und die Mieter riskieren die Räumung.

Millionen von Mietern sind nur durch ein dürftiges Bundesmoratorium vor Räumung geschützt, das mehreren gerichtlichen Herausforderungen gegenübersteht, viele Haushalte auslässt und voraussichtlich im Juni ausläuft.

“Ich bin beeindruckt von der Menge an Arbeit, die unbesungene Beamte leisten, um diese Programme einzurichten, aber es ist problematisch, dass nicht mehr Geld aus der Tür kommt”, sagte Ingrid Gould Ellen, Professorin an der New York University studiert die Anstrengung. “Es gibt nachgelagerte Effekte, wenn kleine Vermieter ihre Gebäude nicht aufrechterhalten können, und Sie möchten Familien erreichen, wenn sie zum ersten Mal in eine Krise geraten, damit sich ihre Probleme nicht verschärfen.”

Die Schätzungen der unbezahlten Mieten variieren stark zwischen 8 und 53 Milliarden US-Dollar, wobei die vom Kongress genehmigten Beträge am oberen Ende des Bereichs liegen.

Die Situation zeigt den Patchwork-Charakter des amerikanischen Sicherheitsnetzes. Lebensmittel, Bargeld, Gesundheitsversorgung und andere Arten von Hilfe fließen durch separate Programme. Jedes hat seine eigene Mischung aus Bundes-, Landes- und lokaler Kontrolle, was zu großen geografischen Unterschieden führt.

Während einige Pandemiehilfen durch etablierte Programme geflossen sind, ist die Miethilfe sowohl dezentral als auch neu, was die Abweichung besonders ausgeprägt macht.

Unter den Hilfesuchenden befindet sich Saundra Broughton, 48, eine Logistikarbeiterin außerhalb von Charleston, SC, die sich im Herbst als sichere Mittelklasse betrachtete, als sie eine Wohnung mit Fitnesscenter und Salzwasserpool mietete. Zu ihrem Schock wurde sie bald entlassen; Nachdem sich ihre Arbeitslosenunterstützung verzögert hatte, erhielt sie einen Räumungsbescheid.

“Ich habe immer gearbeitet und auf mich selbst aufgepasst”, sagte sie. “Ich war noch nie in öffentlicher Unterstützung.”

Ein Richter gab Frau Broughton 10 Tage Zeit, um ihre Wohnung zu verlassen. Nur ein Anruf in letzter Minute zur Prozesskostenhilfe brachte die Nachricht vom Bundesmoratorium, wonach sich die Mieter bewerben müssen. Sie eilte in die Bibliothek, um das Formular innerhalb von 24 Stunden auszudrucken. “Aber ich schulde immer noch das Geld”, sagte sie, ungefähr 4.600 Dollar und zählte.

Wenn Frau Broughton im nahe gelegenen Berkeley County gelebt hätte, hätte sie bereits am 29. März Hilfe suchen können. Im ein paar Meilen entfernten Charleston County hätte sie sich am 12. April bewerben können. Als Einwohnerin des Dorchester County muss sie sich jedoch durch bewerben Der Staat, der 272 Millionen US-Dollar an Bundesgeldern hat, aber noch keine Anträge entgegennimmt.

“Warum halten sie das Geld?” Sie sagte. „Ich habe Tausende von Dollar Schulden und könnte jederzeit rausgeschmissen werden. Es ist ein sehr beängstigendes Gefühl. “

Die enormen Hilfsmaßnahmen, die zu Beginn der Pandemie ergriffen wurden, enthielten keine spezifischen Bestimmungen zur Unterstützung der Mieter, obwohl sie den meisten Haushalten Bargeld gaben. Aber Hunderte von staatlichen und lokalen Regierungen haben Programme mit diskretionärem Geld aus dem CARES-Gesetz gestartet, das im März 2020 verabschiedet wurde. Diese Bemühungen zahlten 4,5 Milliarden US-Dollar aus, was einem Übungslauf für die derzeit laufenden Bemühungen mit dem Zehnfachen des Geldes entsprach.

Zu den genannten Lektionen gehört die Notwendigkeit, die ärmsten Mieter zu erreichen, um ihnen mitzuteilen, dass Hilfe verfügbar ist. Technologie war oft ein Hindernis: Mieter mussten sich online bewerben, und vielen fehlten Computer oder Internetzugang.

Die Forderung nach Unterlagen verhinderte auch die Hilfe, da viele Personen ohne Nachweis von Mietverträgen oder Einkommensverlusten die Anträge nicht abschließen konnten. Einige Vermieter lehnten eine Teilnahme ab und zogen es möglicherweise vor, neue Mieter zu suchen.

Trotz des steigenden Bedarfs gaben Programme in Florida und New York, die durch den CARES Act finanziert wurden, zig Millionen nicht ausgegebener Dollar an die Staaten zurück. Als der Kongress im Dezember das neue Programm verabschiedete, gab fast jeder fünfte Mieterhaushalt an, mit den Zahlungen im Rückstand zu sein.

Die nationalen Bemühungen, das Emergency Rental Assistance Program, werden von der Finanzabteilung durchgeführt. Es verteilt Geld an Staaten sowie an Städte und Landkreise mit mindestens 200.000 Einwohnern, die ihre eigenen Programme durchführen möchten. Etwa 110 Städte und 227 Landkreise haben sich dafür entschieden.

Das Programm bietet Mietern mit niedrigem Einkommen, die durch die Pandemie wirtschaftlich geschädigt wurden, bis zu 12 Monate Miete und Nebenkosten, wobei Haushalte mit weniger als der Hälfte des Durchschnittseinkommens der Region Vorrang haben – in der Regel etwa 34.000 USD pro Jahr. Das Bundesgesetz verweigert die Hilfe für Einwanderer ohne Papiere nicht, obwohl dies in einigen Bundesstaaten und Landkreisen der Fall ist.

Moderne Hilfe scheint eine Mischung aus Jacob Riis und Bill Gates zu erfordern – Kontakt zu den Ausgegrenzten und Hilfe bei der Software. Die Fortschritte verlangsamten sich einen Monat lang, als die Biden-Regierung die unter Präsident Donald J. Trump herausgegebenen Leitlinien annullierte und Regeln entwickelte, die weniger Dokumentation erfordern.

Andere Gründe für langsame Starts variieren. Progressive Gesetzgeber in New York diskutierten monatelang darüber, wie die bedürftigsten Mieter am besten geschützt werden können. Die konservativen Gesetzgeber in South Carolina konzentrierten sich weniger auf das Thema. Das Ergebnis war jedoch weitgehend dasselbe: Keiner der Gesetzgeber hat sein Programm bis April verabschiedet, und keiner der Staaten nimmt noch Anträge an.

“Ich weiß nur nicht, warum es nicht dringender war”, sagte Sue Berkowitz, die Direktorin des South Carolina Appleseed Legal Justice Center. “Wir haben ununterbrochen von Leuten gehört, die sich Sorgen um die Räumung machen.”

Es gibt keine vollständigen Daten darüber, wie vielen Mietern geholfen wurde. Aber von den 17,6 Milliarden US-Dollar, die an die Regierungen der Bundesstaaten vergeben werden, gehen 20 Prozent an Bundesstaaten, die noch keine Anträge stellen, obwohl einige lokale Programme in diesen Bundesstaaten dies tun. Florida (mit 871 Millionen US-Dollar), Illinois (566 Millionen US-Dollar) und North Carolina (547 Millionen US-Dollar) gehören zu denen, die noch nicht begonnen haben.

“Das Tempo ist langsam”, sagte Greg Brown von der National Apartment Association, der betonte, dass die Vermieter Hypotheken, Steuern und Unterhalt zu zahlen haben.

In einem kürzlich in der Brookings Institution gehaltenen Vortrag lobte Erika Poethig, eine Immobilienexpertin im Innenpolitischen Rat des Weißen Hauses, die „beispiellose Menge an Mietunterstützung“ und sagte, „die Bundesregierung hat nur so viel Fähigkeit“, schnellere Maßnahmen zu fördern.

Das Akzeptieren von Bewerbungen ist nur der Anfang. Mit 1,5 Milliarden US-Dollar hat Kalifornien 150.000 Anfragen nach Hilfe angezogen. Von den beantragten 355 Millionen US-Dollar wurden jedoch nur 20 Millionen US-Dollar genehmigt und 1 Million US-Dollar ausgezahlt.

Texas, mit 1,3 Milliarden US-Dollar, begann schnell, aber das Unternehmen, das es mit der Ausführung des Programms beauftragte, hatte Softwarefehler und Personalmangel. Ein Ausschuss im Repräsentantenhaus stellte fest, dass das Programm nach 45 Tagen nur 250 Haushalte bezahlt hatte.

Im Gegensatz dazu hatte ein Programm, das von der Stadt Houston und Harris County gemeinsam durchgeführt wurde, etwa ein Viertel seines Geldes ausgegeben und fast 10.000 Haushalte unterstützt.

Nicht jeder ist von dem Tempo betroffen. “Das Geld schnell rauszuholen ist hier nicht unbedingt das Ziel, insbesondere wenn wir uns darauf konzentrieren, sicherzustellen, dass das Geld die am stärksten gefährdeten Menschen erreicht”, sagte Diane Yentel, die Direktorin der National Low Income Housing Coalition.

Angesichts der Herausforderung sagte sie: “Ich denke, es geht in Ordnung.”

Sie weist auf ein Programm in Santa Clara County, Kalifornien, hin, das letztes Jahr für seine Reichweite gelobt wurde. Viele der Leute, denen es diente, sprachen wenig Englisch oder es fehlten formelle Mietverträge, um sie einzureichen. Jetzt, da 36 Millionen US-Dollar im Rahmen des neuen Programms ausgegeben werden sollten, entschied man sich für wochenlange zusätzliche Planungen, um 50 gemeinnützige Gruppen auszubilden, um die ärmsten Haushalte zu finden

“Geld zu verschenken ist eigentlich ziemlich schwierig”, sagte Jen Loving, die Destination: Home leitet, eine Wohnungsgruppe, die die Kampagne leitet. “Das ganze Geld der Welt spielt keine Rolle, wenn es nicht an die Menschen geht, die es brauchen.”

In Charleston, SC, wurde der Wohnungsbau zu einem Problem, nachdem eine Studie aus dem Jahr 2018 ergab, dass das Gebiet die höchste Räumungsrate des Landes aufweist. Charleston County führte drei Runden Mietentlastung mit CARES Act-Geldern durch, und der Staat führte zwei Runden durch.

Das zweite staatliche Programm, das im Februar mit 25 Millionen US-Dollar begann, zog so viele Anträge an, dass es innerhalb von sechs Tagen abgeschlossen wurde. Aber South Carolina bearbeitet diese Anfragen immer noch, während es entscheidet, wie die neuen Bundesmittel verteilt werden sollen.

Antonette Worke gehört zu den Bewerbern, die auf eine Antwort warten. Sie zog letztes Jahr von Denver nach Charleston, angezogen von günstigeren Mieten, wärmerem Wetter und einem Jobangebot. Aber der Job scheiterte und ihr Vermieter beantragte die Räumung.

Frau Worke, die an Nieren- und Lebererkrankungen leidet, ist vorübergehend durch das föderale Räumungsmoratorium geschützt. Es gilt jedoch nicht für Mieter, deren Mietverträge ablaufen, wie dies Ende nächsten Monats der Fall sein wird. Ihr Vermieter sagte, er würde sie zum Umzug zwingen, selbst wenn der Staat die überfälligen 5.000 Dollar Miete zahlen würde.

Trotzdem sagte sie, die Hilfe sei wichtig: Eine saubere Tafel würde es einfacher machen, eine neue Wohnung zu mieten und sie von einer unmöglichen Schuld zu befreien. “Ich bin so gestresst, dass ich mich krank gemacht habe”, sagte sie.

Charleston County bewegte sich schneller als der Staat und startete vor zwei Wochen sein 12-Millionen-Dollar-Programm. Die Arbeiter haben Computer zu Bauernmarkierungen, Gemeindezentren und einem Parkplatz in einem Einkaufszentrum gebracht. Christine DuRant, eine stellvertretende Bezirksverwalterin, sagte, die Hilfe sei notwendig, um Zwangsvollstreckungen zu verhindern, die den Wohnungsbestand verringern könnten. Kritiker würden sich jedoch stürzen, wenn das Programm Zahlungen an Personen senden würde, die sich nicht qualifizieren. Sie sagte: „Wir werden geprüft“, möglicherweise dreimal.

Latoya Green ist dort gefangen, wo der Wunsch nach Geschwindigkeit und Buchhaltung aufeinander treffen. Als Angestellte, die durch die Pandemie Stunden verloren hat, schuldet sie 3.700 US-Dollar an Miete und Nebenkosten und ist nur bis zum Ablauf ihres Mietvertrags im nächsten Monat durch das Räumungsmoratorium geschützt.

Sie beantragte an dem Tag, an dem das County-Programm begann, Hilfe, hat den Antrag jedoch noch nicht ausgefüllt. Sie sagte, sie sei verunsichert über die E-Mails, in denen sie um ihren Mietvertrag gebeten werde, der ihr fehlt, und über den Nachweis von Einkommensverlusten.

Dennoch kritisiert Frau Green keine Beamten des Charleston County. “Ich denke, sie versuchen ihr Bestes”, sagte sie. “Viele Leute machen Betrug.”

Mit der Zeit fügte sie hinzu: „Ich hoffe nur und bete zu Gott, dass sie mir helfen können.“