View this email in your browser

Supporting Workers and Small Businesses

Given the economic ramifications of COVID-19, states and localities are supporting small businesses by opening up access to disaster loans, providing tax deferments, waiving fees and interest, and relaxing other administrative requirements. Seattle is offering grants of up to $10,000 to small businesses while Florida activated the Small Business Emergency Bridge Loan Program to provide short-term, interest-free loans. States have been quick to step up and offer unemployment insurance to the growing number of unemployed, due to closed businesses. Guidance on unemployment insurance provisions from the National Employment Law Project can help if your state is looking at expanding unemployment insurance.

States Will Have to Address the Unique Challenges of Rural Communities

By all accounts, COVID-19 will hit more isolated and rural areas later in the progression of the disease. The economic impacts of mandatory restaurant closures are hurting small- and medium-size farms, affecting the income of farmers, but also causing a negative ripple effect for all of the small businesses that are a part of the farm direct supply chain. Further, with health care access in rural communities being woefully underfunded, there is concern that people living in our rural areas could be some of the hardest hit by COVID-19 due to inadequate access to hospitals and public health services. 

The Coronavirus’s Threat to Democracy

Just this week, voters in Illinois, Arizona and Florida went to the polls amidst the pandemic while Ohio canceled in-person voting at the last minute. Not only has COVID-19 upended our daily lives, but it has threatened the health of our democracy. Voters should not have to choose between their health and their right to vote. States can step up by implementing democracy reforms that keep voters safe and maintain opportunities for engagement.

Global Pandemic Sparks Renewed Demand for Paid Leave

Progressives have been beating the paid leave drum long before the coronavirus changed daily life in the U.S., but the arrival of COVID-19 has given new life to paid sick leave and paid family and medical leave. Colorado implemented paid sick days by executive order and New York’s bill was signed into law this week. Does your state offer paid sick time? If not, the National Women’s Law Center has recommendations specific to COVID-19, and check out SiX’s newly released Paid Family and Medical Leave Policy Playbook.

States Scrambling to Fill In Health Care Gaps

The arrival of COVID-19 has amplified the drastic inadequacies of the United States health care system. States are scrambling to provide coverage for the uninsured, require insurance to pay for tests, and encourage innovative health care options like telemedicine. Maryland, Massachusetts, Nevada, and Washington have announced special enrollment periods for the state-run health insurance exchanges. States are implementing drive-thru testing sites, some are waiving licensing requirements to increase the number of health care workers available, and others are working to expand Medicaid.

Legislators Try to Govern While Staying Away

State legislatures are grappling with how to conduct session while not congregating in large groups. A growing list of legislatures have postponed their sessions and state legislators themselves have started testing positive for the virus. Some states have started remote sessions while others grapple with constitutions or state laws that prohibit remote voting. Common Cause has guidance for how to make legislative session transparent to the public, even when the public is prohibited from the Capitol.

COVID-19's Effect on Reproductive Health

In an already stretched health care system, reproductive health care is likely to face additional challenges in the age of COVID-19. From extended wait times and supply shortages, to difficulty filling prescriptions for oral contraceptives, to childcare issues, to difficulty traveling to states with greater access, those seeking reproductive care face even greater obstacles than before.

Using the Pandemic to Pass Abortion Bans

While most of the world is focused on practicing social distancing or sheltering in place, conservative lawmakers are taking the opportunity to pass partial or total abortion bills while no one is looking. And in Idaho, conservative lawmakers exploited the world’s distraction by passing a bill that will prohibit transgender student athletes from playing sports.

Twitter
Facebook
YouTube
Instagram
stateinnovation.org

The State Innovation Exchange (SiX) is a national resource and strategy center that supports state legislators who seek to strengthen our democracy, fight for working families, defend civil rights and liberties, and protect the environment. We do this by providing training, emphasizing leadership development, amplifying legislators’ voices, and forging strategic alliances between our legislative network and grassroots movements.

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.