HomeMy WebLinkAboutI - 09 Deputy Secretary of the Treasury Correspondence�,�5 Op ,M
a '� THE DEPUTY SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY
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May 16, 2022
Dear State, Local, and Territorial Leaders:
One year ago, Treasury launched the American Rescue Plan's State and Local Fiscal Recovery
Funds (SLFRF), which provide the resources needed for state and local governments to respond
to the COVID-19 public health emergency and lead a strong, resilient, and equitable recovery.
At that time, the country continued to face great risk and uncertainty about the course of the
pandemic and the economic recovery.
The year since has seen tremendous progress: hundreds of millions of Americans have been
vaccinated against COVID-19, and the economy created more jobs in 2021 than any year on
record. This success was not preordained: it is the result of intentional policies, including the
American Rescue Plan and the investments made by state and local governments through
SURF.
While the first year of the program has made a difference in communities across the country,
much work remains to be done to protect public health, ensure that this economic recovery
reaches all Americans, and addresses evolving needs during the recovery. With this in mind,
SURF was designed not only to help families, small businesses, and communities weather the
pandemic — but also to support transformative investments that build a stronger and more
equitable economy for the future. As we enter the second year of SURF and as many
governments receive their second tranche of funds, these opportunities are at the forefront of my
mind.
Treasury urges state and local governments to continue to use SURF funds to confront the
most pressing challenges that our economy and communities face:
expanding the workforce and providing competitive wages,
expanding access to affordable housing, and
keeping our families and communities safe.
First, SURF can be used to make investments to expand your workforce and provide
competitive wages. In today's strong labor market — with the unemployment rate well below
4 percent and a record high number of job openings per unemployed worker — expanding the
labor force is critical to fill open positions and grow the economy. Governments across the
country are using SURF to ensure jobs offer competitive wages and working conditions to
attract talent, train workers for in -demand careers, help underserved workers reenter the labor
market, rehire public workers that educate children and keep communities safe, and expand
childcare to help working parents balance caring for their children and maintaining their jobs.
Second, SLFRF can expand affordable housing, bringing down one of the largest costs that
families face and addressing a crucial challenge in many communities. The United States faces a
long-standing shortage of affordable housing; during the pandemic, this crisis became acute, as
millions of renters and homeowners fell behind on their payments. In response, governments
used SLFRF to help 770,000 households afford rent, mortgage, or utility costs in 2021, in many
cases building on the national eviction prevention infrastructure developed over the last year.
More broadly, SLFRF presents an opportunity to dramatically accelerate development and
preservation of affordable housing, expanding access to safe, quality, affordable homes that are
critical to the wellbeing of all Americans.
Third, SLFRF can help keep communities safe, providing resources to improve public safety.
SLFRF gives communities on the frontlines of this issue access to historic levels of funding that
they can use for a comprehensive approach to preventing and reducing violence. Dozens of
governments have invested in community -based violence intervention programs and other
holistic efforts to prevent violence by strengthening communities. This includes programs that
strengthen economic opportunity and reduce crime like jobs programs for youth, which offer key
work experience, training, and productive summer opportunities. Governments across the
country have also used SLFRF to keep police officers on the beat in their communities,
preventing cuts to public safety departments amid revenue losses caused by the pandemic and
providing bonuses for recruitment and retention of police officers.
Over the past year, state and local governments have done a tremendous amount of work to put
SLFRF funds to work to fight the pandemic and support our country's recovery. Treasury is
proud to partner with you in this work and looks forward to continuing to support SLFRF
recipients as they seize this once in a generation opportunity to enhance growth and build
economic resiliency for those most in need.
As we look ahead, Treasury encourages state and local governments to share your
successes publicly, highlighting how SLFRF funds are getting people back to work and into
good jobs, expanding affordable housing, and improving public safety in your community.
Sincerely,
tj
Adewale O. rdeyenio