Cypress Edition | December 2023

Government

BY MELISSA ENAJE & JESSICA SHORTEN

Local governments are now looking to obligate and use any remaining American Rescue Plan Act funds before an upcoming December 2024 federal deadline. Counties received lump distributions of federal funding in 2021 to ll public revenue losses, invest in broadband and other infrastructure projects, and provide additional pay for essential workers, according to the U.S. Department of Treasury in a news release. Three of the counties which received funding in the Houston area include: • Harris: $915.5 million • Montgomery: $117.9 million • Fort Bend: $157.6 million Any funding not obligated by December 2024 and spent by the end of 2025 must be returned to the U.S. Treasury. County oŽcials must decide how to use remaining funding and continue supporting pandemic-era programs and employees. Counties balance ARPA shortfalls

ARPA funding allocations

Allocated

Unallocated

AS OF NOVEMBER

Harris County

Montgomery County

Fort Bend County

$158M

$7.4M

$40M

$915.5M Total

$117.9M Total

$157.6M Total

$757M

$110.5M

$117.3M

Jobs and education Housing Health Justice and safety

County operations

Remaining

$227.3M

$192.8M

$141.5M

Harris County

$147.5M

$47.5M

$158M

$39.8M

$42.4M

$2.9M

Montgomery County

$13.2M $11.6M

$7.4M

County ocials divided ARPA funding to meet the prioritized needs of each county.

$56.3M

$27.7M

Fort Bend County

$31.8M

$1.4M

$40M

SOURCES: HARRIS, MONTGOMERY, FORT BEND COUNTIES˜COMMUNITY IMPACT

Zooming in

What the experts say

Stay tuned

One of the major expenses counties may need to cover are employees funded by ARPA. In all three counties, a number of employees were hired for positions on mental health teams, law enforce- ment and general infrastructure projects, such as a $21 million contract in Montgomery County to reopen a Tri-County Behavioral Healthcare center and a contract to expand the Harris County jail- based competency restoration program. During „scal year 2023-24 budget workshops, all three counties outlined how to spend the remaining funds on new projects and infrastruc- ture e‰orts, while also considering the salaries which may need to be absorbed by the counties or eliminated once funding is depleted. According to oŠcials in each county, Harris County’s remaining funds are being targeted toward additional a‰ordable housing e‰orts. Montgomery County reserved roughly $2 million to fund another year of salaries for ARPA-based employees. Fort Bend County pushed to help additional small businesses with employee funding and grants.

James Thurmond, professor at Hobby School of Public A‰airs, said the one-time federal payout was historic for counties and provided an easy way to „ll budget holes without requesting additional tax dollars. While ARPA funding was intended to help replace lost public sector revenue to counties, the responsibility of monitoring any budget de„cits with county funds fell to the counties themselves.

During the FY 2024-25 budget workshops next year, ocials with Harris and Montgomery counties said they will need to discuss employee and program needs to determine whether positions and programs have to be cut or if they can be sustained on county budgets or grants.

ARPA funding deadlines

December 2024: Deadline to allocate remaining funds December 2025: Deadline to spend remaining funds December 2026: Deadline to have all unused funding returned to Treasury

“You just need to be aware when you create a new demand or a new service, is it sustainable with your

current revenue? If it’s not sustainable, then what do you cut? “ JAMES THURMOND, PROFESSOR, UH HOBBY SCHOOL OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS

SOURCE: U.S. DEPARTMENT OF TREASURYŠCOMMUNITY IMPACT

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