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Biden to urge mayors to spend more COVID aid to build workforces -official

Published 01/20/2022, 08:16 PM
Updated 01/20/2022, 08:21 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Joe Biden holds a formal news conference in the East Room of the White House, in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 19, 2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo

By David Lawder

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Joe Biden will urge U.S. mayors on Friday to use more of their state and local COVID-19 aid funds to expand their workforces, a White House official said, an effort partly aimed at easing economic bottlenecks and inflation.

In an address to the U.S. Conference of Mayors' winter meeting on Friday in Washington, Biden will call to spend more on worker training programs, apprenticeships, education and child care to help develop a stronger workforce and reduce income inequality, the official told Reuters.

Cities have wide-ranging ability to use money from the $350 billion State and Local Fiscal Relief Fund, which was approved in last year's American Rescue Plan COVID-19 aid legislation.

The Treasury Department earlier this month issued final rules for the program that allow greater flexibility for use of the funds on programs such as early childhood education, child care and affordable housing.

The funding also allows city, county, state and tribal governments to replace revenues lost to the pandemic, invest in broadband and water infrastructure, and other uses.

The push for cities to invest more in workforces comes as the Biden administration faces pressure to control inflation. Consumer prices soared by 7% last year, the biggest annual increase in nearly 40 years https://www.reuters.com/world/us/us-consumer-prices-increase-strongly-december-2022-01-12 as demand for goods and housing outstripped supply, a phenomenon which economists attribute partly to a lack of qualified workers.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Thursday that the administration and the Federal Reserve would take steps to control inflation https://www.reuters.com/business/yellen-says-fed-biden-administration-will-take-steps-control-inflation-2022-01-20, adding that it was critical for more people to return to the workforce to help ease supply pressures.

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Biden is expected to emphasize the importance of having enough workers to undertake construction projects enabled by his $1.2 trillion infrastructure package, the official said.

Latest comments

yeah supply chain issues are definitely because we aren't spending enough.... What pills is this guy on?
like we need more government spending. if it was not for the cost of pension we would have more than enough $$ to rebuild our infrastructure. reduce taxation, index capital gains and interest based on inflation. do the same for 401k, implement cola indexing for all.
So inflation is so high but apend kore money and get their economies moving- unless its supply chain workforce this must be a joke
Biden is full of # . Worst than Trump. Trump doesnt hide his color like Biden.
yes kaven we all know about Trumps crimes against American Democracy and the Constitution, and his support for sedition, inserection, rascists, and anti democratic militias.
Supply chain issues and inflation are a direct result of vaccine mandates and other COVID policies that have throttled supply chains everywhere, yet demand has not changed.  When everyone is at work and products are moving, prices will come down.
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