Ige uses line-item veto on virus relief bill

IGE
Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

HONOLULU — Gov. David Ige said Thursday he would exercise his line-item veto on a bill appropriating federal coronavirus relief funds.

The governor’s move eliminates $230 million set aside for a $100 additional weekly payment to unemployed individuals. This payment was to have partially offset the loss of $600 in additional weekly federal unemployment payments expiring this week.

Ige said he vetoed the spending to give the state flexibility while Congress determines whether to extend the $600 payment.

The governor said at a news conference he would go ahead and implement the $100 weekly payment if Congress doesn’t create an additional federal payment before it breaks for an August recess.

The governor reduced spending on other items, including cutting to $50 million the $100 million lawmakers set aside for housing and rental assistance.

Ige said his discussions with the Housing Finance Development Corp. indicated $50 million would be sufficient to get the assistance program started. He said he also wants to make sure that the state is able to spend all of the money it received from the federal government by the end of December as the federal coronavirus relief legislation requires.

House Speaker Scott Saiki said in a statement that he was disappointed with the governor’s decision to “veto and reduce so many important items.”

“The current federal plus up of $600 per week will expire on July 31. Unemployed residents cannot wait for Congress to act, if it acts at all,” Saiki said.

Sen. Donovan Dela Cruz, the chairman of the Senate Ways and Means Committee, said he’s glad the governor decided only to use his line-item veto instead of rejecting the entire bill.

What is critical, Dela Cruz said, was that the state gets aid to those who need it quickly.

“The more important concern is making sure that the agencies can get the money out. Because people need rental assistance right away,” Dela Cruz said. “We’ve got to get the economy moving with certain programs right away.”

He said the state Legislature wrote the coronavirus relief funding bill in such a way to give the governor the flexibility to move money around to different departments. For example, there might be some agencies with needs that weren’t apparent when lawmakers passed the bill in late June.

“The situation is evolving by the day,” he said.