An unprecedented $2.2 billion in emergency federal aid is flowing to Minnesota, launching a skirmish among local government officials who want to grab the funds to cover their first responder and public health costs soaring from COVID-19.
An-end-of-year deadline set by Congress to spend all the money — and unclear guidance on how to divide it up — is setting up clashes not just between parties but among state, county and city leaders scrambling to meet the ballooning costs of the pandemic at the same time that their tax revenues are plunging.
At the State Capitol, the federal funding already has set up a confrontation between Gov. Tim Walz's administration and Republican leaders, who are uneasy about his executive orders shutting down much of the state. They're pushing for the Legislature to have a say in how the federal funds are used to respond to the crisis.
And while state officials were deciding how to use the federal bounty, leaders in Hennepin and Ramsey counties were meeting last week to start hashing out how they'll spend their slices of the pie.
"Local government has been on the front lines responding to the COVID-19 pandemic and will be on the front lines of our recovery," said Ramsey County Board Chairwoman Toni Carter.
Under the CARES Act — short for Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security — signed by President Donald Trump in late March, each state and municipalities with populations of more than 500,000 received aid.
The state received the bulk of the funding coming to Minnesota, $1.87 billion, with Hennepin County getting $212 million and Ramsey County $96 million. But the state's largest cities, including Minneapolis (population 428,000) and St. Paul (population 313,000), didn't receive a direct federal allocation. Their leaders now are making a case for a share of the emergency funds.
Minneapolis City Coordinator Mark Ruff said city officials have inquired about a cut of the CARES Act funding that went to the state and Hennepin County.