Categories
Politics

States and Cities Scramble to Spend $350 Billion Windfall

WASHINGTON — When Steve Adler, the mayor of Austin, heard the Biden administration planned to give billions of dollars to states and localities in the $1.9 trillion pandemic aid package, he knew exactly what he wanted to do with his cut.

The remarkable growth of the Texas capital, fueled by a technology boom, has long been shadowed by a rise in homelessness, so local officials had already cobbled together $200 million for a program to help Austin’s 3,200 homeless people. When the relief package passed this spring, the city government quickly steered 40 percent of its take, about $100 million, to fortify that effort.

“The inclination is to spread money around like peanut butter, so that you help out a lot of people who need relief,” Mr. Adler, a Democrat, said in an interview. “But nobody really gets all that they need when you do that.”

The stimulus package that President Biden signed into law in March was intended to stabilize state and city finances drained by the coronavirus crisis, providing $350 billion to alleviate the pandemic’s effect, with few restrictions on how the money could be used.

Three months after its passage, cash is starting to flow — $194 billion so far, according to the Treasury Department — and officials are devoting funds to a range of efforts, including keeping public service workers on the payroll, helping the fishing industry, improving broadband access and aiding the homeless.

It’s not like all places are rushing out to do the most aspirational things, since the first thing they need to do is replace lost revenue,” said Mark Muro, a senior fellow with the Brookings Institution, a nonpartisan Washington think tank. “But there is much more flexibility in this program than in previous stimulus packages, so there is more potential for creativity.”

The local decisions are taking on greater national urgency as the Biden administration negotiates with Republicans in Congress over a bipartisan infrastructure package. Some Republican lawmakers want money from previous relief packages to be repurposed to pay for infrastructure, arguing that many states are in far better financial shape than expected and the money should be put to better use.

The administration, sensitive to those concerns, has begun bending the program’s rules to allow the money to be spent even more broadly. In May, the Treasury Department told states they could use their funding to pay for lotteries intended to encourage vaccinations. In June, President Biden prodded local governments to consider using the cash to address the recent rise in violent crime, which his aides regard as a serious political hazard heading into the 2022 midterm elections.

For the most part, locals officials have been focused on undoing the damage of the past year and a half.

Maine officials are looking to spend $16 billion to bolster the fishing industry, which is facing a combination of lobster shortages and hungry consumers, flush with money after more than a year in lockdown. Alaska is already pouring cash into its fishing sector.

In North Carolina, the concerns are more terrestrial: The governor wants to direct $45 million in relief funds to the motor sports sector, which took a hit when the pandemic halted NASCAR.

In conservative-leaning states like Wyoming that did not incur major budget deficits during the coronavirus, officials have been freed to spend much of their cash on infrastructure improvements, especially rural broadband.

Places like Orange County, Calif., that poured significant funding into fighting the spread of the pandemic are using a lot of their money to pay for huge community vaccination campaigns. And the midsize cities that make up the county — Irvine, Garden Grove and Anaheim — are directing most of their $715 million to plug virus-ravaged budgets.

Updated 

July 6, 2021, 6:10 p.m. ET

Last week, New York City passed its largest budget ever, about $99 billion, bolstered by $14 billion in federal pandemic aid that will be used in nearly every facet of the city’s finances, like an infusion of cash needed to cover budget gaps and an array of new programs, including youth job initiatives, college scholarships and a $1 billion backup fund for health emergencies.

Local officials, especially Democrats, have tried to leverage at least some of the windfall to address chronic social and economic problems that the coronavirus exacerbated.

After a series of community meetings in Detroit, Mayor Mike Duggan and the City Council opted for a plan that divided the city’s $826 million payout roughly in half, with about $400 million going to recoup Covid-19 losses, and $426 million to an array of job-creation programs, grants for home repairs and funding to revitalize blighted neighborhoods.

In Philadelphia, officials are considering using $18 million of the new aid to test a “universal basic income” pilot program to help poor people. That is among the uses specifically suggested in the administration’s guidance. Several other big cities, including Chicago, are considering similar plans.

The Cherokee Nation, which is receiving $1.8 billion of the $20 billion set aside for tribal governments, is replicating the law’s signature initiative — direct cash payments to citizens — by sending $2,000 checks to around 400,000 members of the tribe in multiple states.

The $350 billion program has led to legal battles, with officials in many Republican-led states fighting one of the few restrictions placed on use of the money, a prohibition against deploying it to subsidize tax cuts, and partisan clashes erupting over which projects should have been given priority.

And the cash has spawned partisan conflict. Gov. Mark Gordon of Wyoming, a Republican, announced this month that the state would use only a fraction of the approximately $1 billion it was expected to receive on emergency expenditures this year, and would discuss how to use the rest.

“These are dollars borrowed by Congress from many generations yet to come,” he said in a statement this spring.

The idea of the federal government distributing such vast sums has been charged from the start. Republican lawmakers successfully blocked a large state and local package during the Trump administration, denouncing it as a “blue-state bailout” that helped fiscally-irresponsible local governments.

Not a single Republican in either house of Congress voted for the bill. Yet the vast majority of officials from conservative states have welcomed the aid without much fuss. In general, Republican governors and agency officials have tilted toward financing economic development and infrastructure improvements, particularly for upgrading broadband in rural areas, rather than funding social programs.

When the administration updates the guidance for the funding this summer, they are likely to loosen the restrictions on internet-related projects at the behest of Republican state officials, a senior White House official said.

One of the most ambitious plans in the nation is being formulated by Indiana, a Republican-controlled state that is using $500 million of the stimulus money for projects aimed at stemming the decades-long exodus of workers from postindustrial towns and cities.

“It’s huge — it’s found money — nobody thought it was going to be there,” said Luke Bosso, the chief of staff at the Indiana Economic Development Corporation, which has been working on the effort for years.

While lawmakers in Washington debate the scope of a new infrastructure bill this year, the package that passed in March already represents a major down payment for a variety of infrastructure projects.

Christy McFarland, the research director of the National League of Cities, said that many cities across the country were preparing to put money into infrastructure projects that had been delayed by the pandemic, and investing in more affordable housing and spending on core needs such as water, sewer and broadband.

However, she said she was also seeing creative ideas such as recurring payments to the poor and investments in remote work support emerge as cities look to expand their safety nets and modernize their work forces.

“We’re also seeing communities that never recovered from the Great Recession, have an opportunity to think much bigger,” Ms. McFarland said. “They’re asking what they could do that would be transformational.”

The slow pace of recovery from the last recession has been a driving force behind the White House’s push. Mr. Biden has been eager to avoid a mistake that hobbled the last recovery’s pace — underestimating the drag that faltering local governments would have on the national economy. Gene Sperling, a former Obama adviser now overseeing Mr. Biden’s pandemic relief efforts, said not providing help to local governments meant annual economic growth “of about 2 percent versus growth of 3 percent.”

The effort also serves Mr. Biden’s political objectives by bypassing national Republicans to build trust with voters in rural counties, small towns and midsize cities in the Midwest and elsewhere.

“Something like this creates a space for a White House to be talking to governors and mayors of both parties about the basic mechanisms of governing that just cuts through the politics,” Mr. Sperling said. “That’s a good thing.”

Categories
World News

Taiwan Drought: Residents Pray for Rain and Scramble to Save Water

TAICHUNG, Taiwan — Lin Wei-Yi once gave little thought to the water sluicing through her shower nozzle, kitchen faucet and garden hose.

But as Taiwan’s worst drought in more than half a century has deepened in recent weeks, Ms. Lin, 55, has begun keeping buckets by the taps. She adopted a neighbor’s tip to flush the toilet five times with a single bucket of water by opening the tank and directly pouring it in. She stopped washing her car, which became so filthy that her children contort themselves to avoid rubbing against it.

The monthslong drought has nearly drained Taiwan’s major reservoirs, contributed to two severe electricity blackouts and forced officials to restrict the water supply. It has brought dramatic changes to the island’s landscape: The bottoms of several reservoirs and lakes have been warped into cracked, dusty expanses that resemble desert floors. And it has transformed how many of Taiwan’s 23.5 million residents use and think about water.

“We used too much water before,” Ms. Lin said this week in the central city of Taichung. “Now we have to adapt to a new normal.”

No typhoons made landfall in Taiwan last year, the first time since 1964. Tropical cyclones are a prime source of precipitation for the island’s reservoirs. Some scientists say the recent lack of typhoons is part of a decades-long pattern linked to global warming, in which the intensity of storms hitting Taiwan has increased but their annual frequency has decreased.

Ordinary rainfall has also been drastically lower than normal this year, particularly in the central region that includes Taichung, a city of 2.8 million people and the second-largest on the island. The water shortage could begin to ease this weekend if heavy rains arrive on Saturday, as some forecasters predict. But as of Friday, the water levels at two main reservoirs that supply Taichung and other central cities were hovering between 1 percent and 2 percent of normal capacity.

In a few cases, the usual residents of the island’s lakes and reservoirs — fish — were replaced by other species: tourists and social media influencers taking pictures of the visually startling terrain for Instagram posts. In one of the most photogenic locations, Sun Moon Lake, a reservoir in central Taiwan, the receding waterline has revealed tombstones that historians say may date to the Qing dynasty.

“It’s been meltingly hot in Taichung for a while now,” said Huang Ting-Hsiang, 27, a chef who works out of his home and stopped cooking last month for lack of water. “The images of the dangerously low levels at those reservoirs are scary, but there’s nothing we can do.”

To fight the drought, the government has been drawing water from wells and seawater desalination plants, flying planes and burning chemicals to seed clouds above reservoirs, and halting irrigation over an area of farmland nearly the size of New York City.

It has also severely restricted residential water deliveries. In Taichung and other hard-hit cities, the taps have been cut off for two days a week since early April. Some residents have low water pressure even on the other days. Officials have said the curbs will become more severe, starting on Tuesday, if the heavy rainfall that is expected over the weekend does not materialize.

Lo Shang-Lien, a professor at the Graduate Institute of Environmental Engineering at National Taiwan University, said that the current restrictions were necessary in part because people on the island tend to use a lot of water.

In Taichung, the daily rate of domestic consumption per person is 283 liters, or nearly 75 gallons, according to government data from 2019. In Taipei, the capital, it is 332 liters per day. By contrast, average residential water consumption in Europe is about 144 liters per person per day and 310 liters in the United States, according to official estimates.

Professor Lo said that Taiwan’s water usage was relatively high in part because its water prices — some of the lowest in Asia, according to Fitch Ratings — incentivize excess consumption. “Given all the extreme climatic events of recent years, water policies have become something that we need to reconsider and replan,” he said.

Raising those prices would be politically sensitive, though, and a spokesperson for the Water Resources Agency said that the government had no immediate plans to do so.

For now, many people in Taiwan are watching the skies and praying for rain.

In one sign of the public mood, more than 8,000 social media users tuned in to a recent government livestream of an hourlong afternoon thunderstorm at a reservoir in northern Taiwan. A bubble tea shop in the northern city of Taoyuan said that it would stop serving ice with drinks until the water restrictions were lifted. And in Taichung, irrigation officials held a rain-worshiping ceremony at a temple — the first such event there since 1963 and only the fourth since the temple was built, in 1730.

Ms. Lin, who stopped washing her car, cleans dishes in an assembly line of metal pots with dishwater that she arranges from dirtiest to cleanest.

“I still need to wash whatever I need to wash,” she said, “but now every drop needs to be used twice.”

For the first few weeks of the rationing, some people looked for ways to escape life without running water. Ms. Lin went sightseeing in the eastern city of Hualien and visited one of her daughters in Taipei. Others went bathing in hot springs.

Lin Ching-tan, who owns the Kylin Peak Hotspring resort in Taichung, said that he had lowered the admission price by half, to about $5, as a humanitarian gesture. He also started bathing at work before going home in the evenings.

“If you don’t have water to take a shower, it can be torture,” he said.

But as the government restricts movement in an effort to fight Taiwan’s most severe coronavirus outbreak since the start of the pandemic, more of the island’s residents are stuck at home, looking for creative ways to make scarce water supplies last longer. On Facebook and other social media platforms, people have been sharing water-saving tips, including how to flush toilets more efficiently or install a second rooftop water tank.

Mr. Huang, the chef, said that he and his family have a system for storing water in buckets, pots and tanks before their taps run dry every Tuesday and Wednesday. They also try to order takeout so that they won’t have to use water for cooking, he added, although their favorite restaurants and food stalls sometimes close for the same reason.

Ms. Lin’s system includes placing a plastic container under her feet while showering, then flushing the toilet with it.

This week, on her balcony, she poured used kitchen water over some flowers but left others to wilt. “There’s no turning back from extreme weather,” she said. “Developing good habits for saving water is probably just a rehearsal for frequent droughts of the future.”

Amy Chang Chien reported from Taichung, Taiwan, and Mike Ives from Hong Kong.

Categories
Health

Within the Vaccine Scramble, Most cancers Sufferers Are Left Behind

“This was a complete – I’m not going to say disaster, but it was pretty close,” said Dr. Hanny Al-Samkari, hematologist and clinical investigator at Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School. Cancer patients get “mixed news,” he said, and the guidance they receive depends largely on their condition. Every day, he receives a barrage of messages from patients asking if they still qualify for the vaccine (in his state the answer is mostly no). They drove four hours to find a vaccination site. “It’s the Wild West,” he said.

He urged cancer patients to contact their doctors to coordinate the timing of the vaccine according to their treatment, unless they are in remission, have been treated a long time ago, or are receiving only hormonal treatment for breast or breast cancer Prostate cancer, said Dr. Tomasz Beer, professor in the School of Medicine at Oregon Health and Science University and assistant director of the school’s Knight Cancer Institute.

Covid19 vaccinations>

Answers to your vaccine questions

Am I eligible for the Covid vaccine in my state?

Currently more than 150 million people – almost half of the population – can be vaccinated. But each state makes the final decision on who goes first. The country’s 21 million healthcare workers and three million long-term care residents were the first to qualify. In mid-January, federal officials asked all states to open eligibility to anyone over 65 and adults of any age with medical conditions that are at high risk of becoming seriously ill or dying of Covid-19. Adults in the general population are at the end of the line. If federal and state health authorities can remove bottlenecks in the distribution of vaccines, everyone over the age of 16 is eligible as early as spring or early summer. The vaccine has not been approved in children, although studies are ongoing. It can take months before a vaccine is available to anyone under the age of 16. For the latest information on vaccination guidelines in your area, see your state health website

Is the Vaccine Free?

You shouldn’t have to pay anything out of pocket to get the vaccine, despite being asked for insurance information. If you don’t have insurance, you should still get the vaccine for free. Congress passed law this spring banning insurers from applying cost-sharing such as a co-payment or deductible. It consisted of additional safeguards prohibiting pharmacies, doctors, and hospitals from charging patients, including uninsured patients. Even so, health experts fear that patients will end up in loopholes that make them prone to surprise bills. This may be the case for people who are charged a doctor’s visit fee with their vaccine, or for Americans who have certain types of health insurance that are not covered by the new regulations. When you get your vaccine from a doctor’s office or emergency clinic, talk to them about possible hidden costs. To make sure you don’t get a surprise invoice, it is best to get your vaccine from a Department of Health vaccination center or local pharmacy as soon as the shots become more widely available.

Can I choose which vaccine to get?How long does the vaccine last? Do I need another next year?

That is to be determined. It is possible that Covid-19 vaccinations will become an annual event just like the flu vaccination. Or the vaccine may last longer than a year. We’ll have to wait and see how durable the protection from the vaccines is. To determine this, researchers will track down vaccinated people to look for “breakthrough cases” – those people who get Covid-19 despite being vaccinated. This is a sign of a weakening of protection and gives researchers an indication of how long the vaccine will last. They will also monitor the levels of antibodies and T cells in the blood of people who have been vaccinated to see if and when a booster shot might be needed. It is conceivable that people might need boosters every few months, once a year, or just every few years. It’s just a matter of waiting for the data.

Does my employer need vaccinations?Where can I find out more?

For example, those receiving chemotherapy might have the best chances of developing an immune response if the vaccine is given if their white blood cell counts aren’t at their lowest levels, said Dr. Beer. The recommendations for patients with leukemia or lymphoma who are under treatment or who have recently had a bone marrow transplant are particularly complex and absolutely require consultation and coordination with an oncologist, he stressed.

While some are concerned about the risk of encountering a crowd at a mass vaccination site, Dr. Al-Samkari instructs patients to receive doses wherever they are available, as long as they wear masks and keep their distance from other people. “Fears are clearly well founded,” he said. “But we have to get shots in the arms.”

In general, people with cancer should get the vaccine “as soon as possible, wherever they can,” said Dr. Carol Ann Huff, clinical director of the Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins and one of the authors of the Cancer Network’s National Comprehensive Guidelines on Covid-19 Vaccines for Cancer Patients. There are some caveats: Patients on a bone marrow transplant or CAR-T therapy should wait at least three months before receiving the vaccine, she said.

However, depending on the level of virus transmission in the patient community, it may be safer to wait to receive the vaccine. If there is high levels of transmission in the community, “the risks might outweigh the benefits of waiting,” said Dr. Beer. Patients with active cancer should contact their oncologist before receiving the vaccine. He advised unless they are in remission, have been treated a long time ago, or are just receiving hormonal treatment for breast or prostate cancer.

Those who take part in cancer clinical trials have a grimmer guide to vaccination. Allyson Harkey, 46, from Maryland, has stage four kidney cancer and is in an immunotherapy study. She said her doctor wasn’t sure she should get the vaccine. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network guidelines generally recommend that patients receiving immunotherapy receive the vaccine as soon as it becomes available. However, you should consult with your doctor beforehand as there are so many different studies out there. She feels like she is in a state of limbo, waiting for more information – a process made more frustrating by what she thinks is a ticking clock. “My prognosis is not good. I probably have a few more years, ”she said. “It’s really hard to spend this time because I know I don’t have much time left, just in my house.”

Categories
Business

‘Field’ or Gem? A Scramble to Save Asia’s Modernist Buildings

HONG KONG – When the General Post Office opened on the Hong Kong coastline in 1976, a local newspaper predicted that the modernist-style building “would certainly be as iconic” as its Victorian predecessor.

Not quite.

The building, with its white concrete facade, sharp angles and tinted glass, became an integral part of downtown Hong Kong. However, it was never included on the register of protected landmarks in the city. Now that Hong Kong officials were under pressure to generate revenue, the nearly 12-acre site, valued at over $ 5 billion, went up for sale this month.

Supporters of the building are trying to save it because whoever buys the land below has the right to demolish the post office.

“Some people in Hong Kong may think it’s just a white box,” said Charles Lai, an architect in Hong Kong, a Chinese territory, on an autumn afternoon outside the post office, where people were lining up to send packages.

“But actually, that simplified aesthetic is right where the value lies,” he added.

In cities across Asia, residents and design fans gather to rescue or document post-war buildings that officials believe are too new, too ugly, or too unimportant to save from demolition. Many of the buildings were urban buildings that served as the centers of civil life in the inner city. The campaigns are, so to speak, an attempt to preserve the collective memories stored in them.

The effort also reflects an aversion to the generic-looking malls and condos that have replaced modernist-style buildings in urban Asia, as well as the nostalgia of city dwellers watching their skylines change constantly.

Mr. Lai said the five-story Hong Kong Post Office building, designed by a government architect, was interesting because its shape defined the functions defined in it – a principle of the modernist movement that was popular in the 1920s-1970s. For example, customer floors have higher ceilings and larger windows than those for mail sorting machines.

“These are places that are part of people’s daily life. You don’t have to be very pretty to be meaningful, ”says Haider Kikabhoy. Those who lead historical walks in Hong Kong said about the city’s landmarks after the war.

For older buildings, authorities “usually focus on the rarity of the architecture, the design of the building, or the historical significance,” Kikabhoy said. “But there are many ways to understand history, and social history is just as important.”

In architecture, modernism expressed itself through “brutalism” and other styles that wanted to recall the conditions of the machine age and relied heavily on concrete as a material. The Barbican Center in London, which opened in 1982, is a classic example of the brutalist aesthetic – and was once voted the ugliest building in town.

In Asia, modernism influenced the design of landmarks like Tokyo’s Hotel Okura, which opened before the 1964 Olympics, and the dramatic curved concrete buildings designed by architect Leandro V. Locsin in the Philippines.

Some of the region’s modernist structures became instantly famous, while others had no following until recently. The interest seems to stem in part from a wider re-evaluation of brutalism in Europe and beyond, and the excitement of social media as people rediscover their unusual design features.

In some cases, buildings from the mid to late 20th century meet with public interest precisely because they are about to be demolished.

Since last year, two in Hong Kong – a 1967 office tower and a 1973 hotel – have been demolished, resulting in a reassessment of their architectural heritage.

In Thailand, ubiquitous symbols of whimsical modernist design – stand-alone cinemas – have almost been erased. Several hundred had shaped the landscape in its prime in the 1980s, said Philip Jablon, an independent researcher who wrote a book about it. The last one, La Scala, took place in Bangkok in July and made movie buffs lament the end of an era.

In Cambodia’s capital, Phnom Penh, a decade-long project documenting dozens of modernist buildings, the majority were found to have been destroyed or modified during a construction wave funded by foreign developers, said Pen Sereypagna, a Phnom Penh architect involved in the research effort was.

About 30 of the buildings were designed by Kannodsche’s most famous architect Vann Molyvann, who studied modernism in Paris with students of Le Corbusier.

In some cases, interest in modernist buildings has translated into conservation victories.

That summer, a conglomerate agreed to keep the Hong Kong State Theater, a quirky 1952 film house, as part of a redevelopment project. (Mr Kikabhoy, who worked to save the building, is now a paid consultant for the New World Development conglomerate.)

In Singapore, the Urban Development Agency announced in October that it would propose a plan to preserve the Golden Mile Complex – a huge, mixed-use building completed in 1973 that Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas once praised as a “unique work” – as part of a redevelopment the location on which it is located.

While not every modernist building in Singapore should be saved, said Karen Tan, founder of local design consultancy Pocket Projects, the protection plan for the Golden Mile Complex is “an actual affirmation of the importance of such buildings to the country’s social society and cultural identity. “

Historically, she added, the urban development model of the city-state “is based on a very tabula rasa biased approach to be demolished and rebuilt”.

Hong Kong has occasionally agreed to keep modernist buildings in the city center. Among them are the Police Married Quarters, a 1951 building that housed once married police officers and their families, and The Murray, a 1969 government building with tiled grating rests on huge white arches.

However, saving the General Post website presents new challenges.

Hong Kong Development Minister Michael Wong described the website as “very valuable and very strategic”.

The place is politically sensitive because it’s in the heart of Hong Kong’s waterfront, near the People’s Liberation Army property, at a time when the Chinese government is cracking down on the territory’s pro-democracy movement and has enforced a national security law that will take effect over the summer .

Supporters of the building expect the buyer to be a mainland China developer who may not be inclined to preserve a relic of the territory’s British colonial days, which ended in 1997.

Katty Law, a prominent proponent of the city’s modernist architecture, said of the post office, “They are looking at the money side, the amount of floor space they can generate, and how much the developer can build. You’re not looking at the building. “

A planning letter demands that some postal facilities be included in every new building on the site. However, proponents say that the existing post office itself has value.

They appeal to the city’s antiques council to reverse the 2013 decision to exclude buildings built in 1970 or later from the examination of protection status. Buildings like the General Post Office could be designed for “adaptive reuse” in a manner that generates new revenue – just as the Murray became a luxury hotel and the Police Married Quarters turned into a tangle of upscale boutiques.

The Hong Kong Development Bureau said in a brief statement that the Advisory Council’s policy has not changed. So the post office building may be at dusk.

Mr. Lai, the Hong Kong architect, said he was not sure what to make of the government’s stance on the building.

“The government, intentionally or unintentionally, treats this as something that can be replaced,” he said. “They don’t really see it as a symbol or emblem that makes people think, ‘Are you doing this on purpose to erase colonial history, or just can’t see the value?'”