America's response to the coronavirus outbreak
continues to call for unprecedented service and
sacrifice for all of us. I tried to make
improvements to the House coronavirus bill so I
could vote for it, but in the end I couldn't
support a bill that will harm small business and
limit laid-off worker benefits. Although I
want to provide immediate financial support to
Americans and American businesses affected by the
coronavirus, I voted no on HR 6201 because the
Senate failed to address the major problem with the
bill that was eminently fixable.
My amendment, which received bipartisan
support but not enough to be adopted, would have
removed mandatory burdens on employers,
temporarily expanded eligibility, and waived the
waiting period for state unemployment benefits
and increased state benefits to provide
two-thirds of actual wages up to $1,000 per week.
It also would have reimbursed employers with
fewer than 500 employees who voluntarily provide
paid sick and family leave to employees affected
by the coronavirus.
Now that the House bill passed unamended,
laid-off workers will get far less from state
benefits, and many employers will be forced to
shoulder a financial burden they cannot
afford.
Next Steps:
'Phase 3'
America is in the midst of a national crisis
that is no one's fault. Elected and nonelected
federal, state and local officials are making
tough decisions and taking decisive action to
limit the spread of the coronavirus. They deserve
our collective support and our acceptance that
results will be far from perfect.
That said, as we legislate, we must identify
specific objectives and follow a basic
problem-solving process: Gather information,
identify and define the problem, establish
achievable goals, then design
solutions.
Read the rest of my recommendations
here.
We're All In This
Together
Thank you to everyone doing their part to slow
the spread over the coming weeks.
Keep up to date with the latest
recommendations at this new website:
coronavirus.gov
Help for Small
Business
We know the ongoing coronavirus pandemic has
caused a number of changes and challenges for
small businesses all across Wisconsin. To help
navigate these uncertainties, we've pulled
together several resources from across the
federal and state government in one convenient
place on my website. You can find our
Assistance
for Small Businesses Affected by the Coronoavirus
Pandemic linked on the home page of our
website.
I also connected with over a thousand
Wiscoinsin business owners during this webinar
Friday with Wisconsin Manufacturers and Commerce.
You can listen to it
here.
Take
Action
- If you're healthy, it's important to donate
blood even now during the coronavirus. As the
U.S. Surgeon General has been stressing, blood
centers are open and the need for blood is
constant. One donation can save up to three
people.
- The other action step you can take right
now is to respond to your
2020 Census
invitation online. All field operations
have been suspended until at least April 1.
Responding online saves taxpayer money and
allows data to be processed more
efficiently.