Assuming Donald Trump remembers to sign this bill while plotting a coup against President-elect Biden (and the less said about that here, the better), people all across America will be getting financial relief necessitated by the pandemic, thanks to a bill passed this week by Congress. Among the highlights of the COVID relief package that also funds the government through September 30, sourced here from an e-mail I got from my state's senior U.S. Senator, Robert Menendez, are:
- $600 stimulus checks for adults and children
- $300/week in additional unemployment assistance
- $284 billion to support small businesses, non-profits, and faith-based organizations
- $82 billion to help reopen schools
- $69 billion for vaccines, testing and tracing, community health and provider support
- $45 billion to support transportation
- $25 billion in rental assistance (and longer eviction moratoriums)
- $13 billion in additional nutritional support $10 billion for childcare assistance
- $7 billion to increase access to broadband Internet
As well as a whole lot of other things. Alas, the bill does not include emergency finding for state and local governments, but it doesn't include liability protection for companies that might have allowed its workers to contract COVID, either. President-elect Biden will certainly have to go to Congress to get more aid.
We're also getting COVID relief in the form of two COVID vaccines, courtesy of Pfizer and Moderna, and Dr. Anthony Fauci got the vaccine yesterday, which should give confidence in the vaccine and lead to maximum vaccination ("max vax") for herd immunity. But that will take months, not weeks, and as much as I want a shot, I'll have to wait awhile for it. Indeed, the pandemic still has such a long way to go that I don't expect 2021 to be the good year I had originally expected 2020 to be. Which is why I did not wish anyone a happy new year in the Christmas cards I wrote out this year. That would have been emotionally and intellectually dishonest.

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