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#Biden’s American Rescue Plan Act bucks are just a huge waste

“Biden’s American Rescue Plan Act bucks are just a huge waste”

For 20 years, golf had been wilting in the heat of South Florida. As aging players gave up the sport and younger people sought recreation elsewhere, the area’s grand, lush courses and the planned communities surrounding them — many built by overly optimistic entrepreneurs — struggled. Dozens of courses closed. 

Then COVID-19 arrived, and among the many effects it has left in its wake was a golf resurgence, as a new generation, wanting to spend more time outside, has discovered the links. Courses overflow again in South Florida, and tee times are scarce.

Not to worry: The Biden administration is coming to the rescue. The town of Palm Beach Gardens is using $2 million in federal money from President Biden’s $1.9 trillion American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) to build a $16 million public course, with a two-story clubhouse and driving range that should help at least partially slake the new thirst for golf. 

The city’s project, one of several golf-course investments  the Biden legislation is funding, is entirely within the spirit of the “rescue” act, which devotes only about 9% of its money to public-health causes that fight the virus but allocates hundreds of billions of dollars to local governments and schools for the vague task of providing “support for a recovery” and funding “investments in infrastructure.” 

As one wag at a South Florida newspaper observed, “If this keeps up much longer, Palm Beach Gardens may get an equestrian center from it.”

The People's Bus, a vehicle used to transport New York City citizens to get government help with issues from food shortages to voting. Queens, NY.
The People’s Bus in New York City, which offers free ice cream “while creatively educating the recipients about their housing, immigration, labor and voting rights.”
Alamy Stock Photo

Kids in a candy shop

Showering local governments with unprecedented federal dollars, Biden’s ARPA is the last of several emergency packages, totaling more than $5 trillion, to come from Washington in response to the pandemic. 

Though termed a “rescue bill” to enhance its appeal, the Biden legislation was more of a stimulus, designed to stoke spending by the country’s tens of thousands of local governments to boost economic activity. 

Signed by the president in March 2021, even as the economy was recovering and tax revenues were rebounding far faster than most analysts had predicted, ARPA allows for wide discretion in how to spend “Biden Bucks.”

The federal money has turned pols into the proverbial kids in the candy shop. 

They’re using it to restart parades, fund street performers, upgrade high-school weight rooms and sports fields and build bike paths, golf courses, pickleball courts and other “essential” infrastructure. 

Pickleball players and children play at Corporal John A. Seravalli Playground on Friday, September 23, 2022 in New York, N.Y.
A North Carolina county is considering $345,000 for new pickleball courts.
New York Post

Billions of dollars are going to illegal immigrants. Cities are testing efforts to give low-income residents guaranteed money that supporters say will end poverty. Municipalities are moving to construct their own broadband networks, in competition with the private sector. 

It’s all part of a program whipped up so quickly that it included billions of dollars for municipal governments that don’t even exist.

To many local officials, ARPA’s allocations seem like free money. But it comes at a cost to the United States. 

The act’s funds haven’t been generated by taxes or other federal revenues. Instead, they’re financed by “printing” new money (something done mostly via electronic keystrokes these days) — massively expanding the dollars in circulation and thus intensifying our current inflation, the highest in decades. 

Aside from the pain that the upward spiral of costs is causing ordinary Americans, inflation is also raising the price that governments pay for essential services like police and fire protection, even as politicians rush to spend their one-time Biden Bucks on ephemeral projects and untested programs.

 With a Federal Reserve–induced recession, sparked by high interest rates to curb inflation, now a distinct possibility, Biden Bucks may soon be remembered as the spending blowout that preceded a local government budget bust-up.

And the money wasn’t even needed. 

Whereas experts predicted early in the pandemic that local governments might lose as much as $200 billion in revenues, 29 states by early 2021 had already managed to bring in more yearly revenue than in the 12 months before COVID shutdowns began, reaching this recovery milestone “far faster than after at least the previous two recessions,” a Pew study concluded.

buffalo park renderings
 Buffalo will spend $23 billion on a city-wide parks reconstruction.

A more recent Pew report found that states have now amassed their largest “fiscal cushion” in history —  surplus revenues and rainy-day funds totaling $217 billion, an increase of more than $100 billion over the pre-COVID 2019 fiscal year. 

This cushion comes even after states boosted spending in 2021 by 16.2% — the highest level in at least 35 years, according to the National Association of State Budget Officers. 

Big spenders

Many governments have gotten creative in spending the federal windfall. Though no comprehensive database yet tracks this massive program, one representative file, containing the spending plans of 151 large municipal governments around the country — those with more than 250,000 residents — suggests how politicians are putting this money to work. 

The $19 billion of spending on nearly 2,300 programs and projects announced so far by these governments includes:

$96 million for arts and cultural spending. 

$477 million for direct cash subsidies to residents, or to continue cash-assistance programs that Congress stopped funding. They are spending more than $800 million on housing, $219 million on government-subsidized broadband, and $166 million on premium pay and bonuses to public-sector workers. Despite record tax collections, the governments also list some $6.7 billion in Biden spending to replace revenues in government operations “lost” during the pandemic, allowing them to spend the replaced funds on projects that Washington hasn’t approved.

Jazz artist Sweet Lew 59 years-old plays his horn as he do every Sunday morning to entertain bystanders in Times Square near 43rd Street and 7th Avenue in Manhattan.
Grants worth $5,000 are going to street performers in NYC.
G.N. Miller

The millions of dollars flowing to arts and cultural programming hardly sounds like rescue financing. New York City, one of the communities hardest hit by COVID, has allocated $25 million from the rescue legislation to arts projects, including a program called City Artists Corps that has made thousands of $5,000 grants to street performers, outdoor “pop-up” shows, poets and musicians. 

Among the grantees, according to a social-media account highlighting the works the city funded, is the creator of a giant banana sculpture touring Gotham neighborhoods; a street dancer; an evening of “Bodega Raps” in Soho; and an artist “activating” toy Plushies for kids around the city. 

Also featured: the People’s Bus, a mobile community center accompanied by something called the Ice Cream Truck of Rights, which offers free ice cream “while creatively educating the recipients about their housing, immigration, labor and voting rights.”

Buffalo is spending some $5 million in Biden dollars to bolster its arts and theater community, including capital projects and grants to institutions designed to make the city “a thriving arts, museum and cultural environment.”

The federal jackpot has also produced a spending frenzy on sports, recreation, and leisure projects. 

One category of expenditures that has particularly angered critics is on school sports and recreation equipment and facilities, drawn from the $130 billion sent to education districts, ostensibly to help them reopen and to aid students in catching up for lost classroom time. 

Migrants transported from Texas arrive at the Port Authority bus terminal in New York City, New York, U.S., August 25, 2022.
New York state spent $2.1 billion on illegal immigrants.
REUTERS/David ‘Dee’ Delgado

The CEO of a sports equipment company told the Associated Press that he’s seen some $25 million in spending from school districts looking to upgrade their high school weight rooms with pandemic money. Another said that he’s been calling school districts around the country, reminding them that they can spend the Biden money on such equipment. One Iowa district spent $100,000 of federal aid to double the size of its weight room and add a new floor with “customized school branding.” 

Federal grants gave a Wisconsin school district enough budget room to spend $1.6 million installing synthetic turf. A district school’s athletic director admitted that such a project might otherwise have been impossible, with taxpayers unlikely to vote for bonds to finance it. “I don’t see us being a district that would go to a referendum for turf fields,” he noted. 

By contrast, the district devoted just $400,000 of the federal money to tutoring and other aid for students who fell behind because of remote learning.

Cities, counties, and towns are taking a chunk of their $350 billion in Biden Bucks for similar outlays on sports, leisure, and parks. 

Communities are rushing to build courts for pickleball — a new sport that mixes tennis and other net games and is apparently storming the country. East Lansing, Mich., is deploying COVID funds to build six new courts. Passionate players in Sidney, Ohio, petitioned for new courts; officials are giving them what they want with Biden money. A North Carolina county is also considering $345,000 in the federal funding for new pickleball courts.

Beyond pickleball, Colorado Springs is lavishing about $6 million in pandemic money on installing irrigation systems in two municipal golf courses. 

Buffalo will devote a mind-boggling $23 billion in pandemic money to a parks reconstruction project that will feature “new athletic fields, a splash pad, outdoor pool, playgrounds, landscaping, shelter buildings . . . and construction of indoor sports courts, restrooms, locker rooms, concessions, and multi-purpose space.” 

Syracuse will spend $1.9 million upgrading its park system and another $2 million to develop and implement an “urban forest master plan” that will map the city’s “tree canopy” and add trees in areas seen as underserved.

Cash handouts

As ineffective, or even frivolous, as some of this expenditure appears, at least it represents dollars invested in tangible items. One of the biggest categories of rescue-act spending is direct cash to individuals — money to extend unemployment benefits, or for cities and states to cut one-time checks to those who didn’t qualify for federal benefits. 

The 151 municipalities tracked in the federal database devoted nearly half a billion dollars to such payments, representing 2.5% of their total spending. At that rate, the entire stimulus package could easily include more than $8 billion in direct cash subsidies, coming after the government had already spent billions in enhanced unemployment benefits and one-time checks in the first two rounds of COVID aid. 

In late August 2021, the Treasury Department ruled that the terms of ARPA allowed local governments to keep paying additional benefits to those who were out of work beyond Sept. 6, the date that federal benefits expired. Treasury’s ruling came as businesses struggled to hire workers and as some states that ended benefits early saw hiring upticks — making the need for the extra cash seem largely counterproductive.

Another big category of direct cash payments has been “excluded worker funds,” which states and cities are paying from ARPA money to those who didn’t qualify for unemployment benefits and other federal aid. Largely, this money is flowing to illegal immigrants. 

New York state, for instance, dedicated $2.1 billion to its controversial effort to provide one-time payments of $15,600 to approximately 90,000 unauthorized workers, which ARPA helped fund. 

Boston set aside $1 million for illegal-immigrant benefits, while Washington, DC, kicked in some $17 million for a program similar to New York’s, paying in lump sum the equivalent of a $300 weekly check over the course of a year. New Jersey set its fund at $40 million.

No ‘free’ ride

Defenders of the Biden spending point out that the money is funding many worthy programs. But much of that could have been done with taxpayer dollars from state and local governments already steeped in cash. 

Instead, the Biden rescue act reinforced an increasingly common view on the left: that deficit financing is benign because it’s basically “free” money. 

The result is the highest inflation in a generation. 

Though the Biden administration has tried to blame soaring prices on Russia’s attack on Ukraine, inflation on core items was already rising in the US well before the war, and before inflation took off in other wealthy countries, too, most of which had provided far less COVID stimulus than the United States.

In recent months, economists across the ideological spectrum have made a convincing case that ARPA has contributed several percentage points to our current inflation. Dean Baker of the Center for Economic and Policy Research put the number at somewhere between 1 and 2 percentage points. Michael Strain of the American Enterprise Institute has argued that it’s as high as 3 percentage points — meaning that it could account for more than one-third of the inflation problem.

Fighting inflation is now a necessary but uncomfortable task. Federal Reserve rate hikes have already slowed consumer and business spending, causing market declines as the country heads toward an economic slowdown and possibly a recession. 

Americans have watched inflation eat into their savings and cut the value of their wage increases. Governments are feeling the bite, too. The $1 trillion Biden infrastructure program, combined with the rescue act, has driven up wages and sparked shortages in the construction industry — pumping costs up as much as 20%. Government workers are now demanding big, inflation-driven raises.

All this is making those surpluses that local governments were boasting about a few months ago seem more likely to vanish quickly as well as making many of the projects that government is funding with Biden Bucks needless and wasteful.

Excerpted with permission from City Journal.

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