Infrastructure Bill Takes Shape
We are now receiving long-awaited details on the two infrastructure bills that are being negotiated, and have some sense of how they will “move.” First is the bill that does not include our priorities – the bipartisan group of Senators that have been negotiating a traditional infrastructure bill (bridges and roads) announced that they have agreed to a $1T package, details expected by the end of the week. This bill is designed to go through “regular order” and garner the minimum 60 votes to defeat any filibuster. We can call this “prong 1”.
Prong 2 is the human infrastructure bill that the President committed to in his American Jobs and American Families Plans, and is expected to contain provisions supporting aging services and older adults. Since that legislation is not expected to receive enough votes to overcome a filibuster, it must go through reconciliation, the process that allows a majority vote in the Senate on bills that affect the budget. Majority Leader Schumer announced this morning that Democratic leadership has agreed to a $3.5T package (which will be incorporated into a budget resolution that must pass both House and Senate by majority vote, and which will provide instructions to committees on how much funding each with have as they develop the substance of the reconciliation bill). It is this bill that is to cover aging services, low income housing, child care and other “human infrastructure” provisions.
While we don’t have a lot of details on what will be included in the reconciliation package, we understand that it will include funding to cover affordable housing, nutrition assistance, paid FMLA, child care, community college, etc., and add five major new health and home care programs, including a new dental, vision, and hearing benefit to Medicare; Home and Community-Based Services expansion; extension of the Affordable Care Act expansion from the American Rescue Plan; closing the Medicaid “Coverage Gap” in the States that refused to expand Medicaid; and reducing patient spending on prescription drugs.
The cost of both bills will need to be offset, as well. Some of the offsets expected include reducing federal spending on prescription drugs; tax reform affecting corporations and high-income individuals; and long-term savings.
Continued advocacy for our LeadingAge priorities on LTSS and senior housing are critical; we want to make sure that aging services and housing, and older adults are not lost in the final bills, which gives us about two months to continue to be in front of our representatives and Senators, so watch for continued advocacy alerts.
Most Recommended
December 18, 2024
Year-End Package Analysis: Wins, Ins, and Outs for Aging Services
December 10, 2024
4 Top Tech Themes from 2024
January 03, 2024
Pathways for Foreign-Born Workers
November 27, 2024
Analysis: November 2024 LTC Surveyor Guidance Updates
Recently Added
January 08, 2025
Colleagues on the Move, January 8, 2025
January 07, 2025
Five Years Later: What Did We Learn from the Pandemic?
January 07, 2025
HUD Publishes HOME Final Rule
January 06, 2025