Government Employees Got $872 Million in Bonuses Out of COVID Aid Cash
The federal bailout of state and local governments padded the paychecks of many public employees.

Federal funds intended to be used for pandemic relief efforts were used instead to pad the paychecks of government employees from coast to coast.
In San Diego, California, for example, some 9,595 county workers were awarded bonuses funded with more than $27 million in federal COVID aid, according to a Treasury Department program set up to track the $350 billion in pandemic funds distributed to state and local governments as part of the American Rescue Plan. Bonuses of $2,500 were paid to County of San Diego employees working in "detention and medical facilities" and other places where county officials deemed "COVID-19 exposure was more likely." But employees who faced no heightened risk of job-related exposure were rewarded with $1,500 bonuses as well.
In Lexington, Kentucky, public workers deemed to have "held positions and performed duties" that included a "greater risk of contracting COVID-19" were rewarded with $5,000 bonuses, according to the Treasury's records. In the suburbs of Atlanta, more than 4,400 employees of Gwinnett County, Georgia, received temporary raises ranging from 7.5 percent to 15 percent thanks to more than $11 million in federal COVID aid. And more than $13 million in federal aid flowed to 16,000 employees of Cook County, Illinois, who were awarded bonuses up to $3,000 for the work they performed during the pandemic.
In all, state and local governments have reported spending more than $872 million on so-called "premium pay" for 404,253 of their employees, according to Reason's review of the Treasury Department's data. That's in addition, of course, to the direct stimulus checks that many of those same workers likely received from the federal government.
In some cases, it seems like simply showing up to work is the only justification needed. Public workers in Erie County, New York, got more than $3 million in boosted pay because they "continued to report to work in person throughout the worst of the pandemic," the county reported to the Treasury. "Employees have continued to work through the pandemic," explains Colombia County, Wisconsin, after it decided to distribute $471,000 in relief funds to 503 employees.
And while the pandemic surely created new stress and problems for many public employees—including the potential of infection—the exact same thing is true for private-sector workers who were not rewarded for simply doing their jobs.
The widespread use of COVID relief funds to line the wallets of public employees should also raise even more questions about whether a federal bailout of state and local governments was necessary. Expected revenue shortfalls in state and local tax coffers never materialized—and many states emerged from the pandemic with surpluses instead.
States have until the end of 2024 to spend the federal aid distributed as part of the American Rescue Plan, so the totals reported so far (the Treasury's tracker has been updated to include spending through December 31 of last year) could increase.
In an analysis of the spending published last month, the Treasury notes that state and local governments spent $5 billion of their federal COVID aid on "worker support," a category that includes those bonuses along with things like unemployment payments and job training. That's the same amount of money that states and local governments reported using for actual COVID relief—a category that includes "vaccinations, testing, contact tracing, PPE, prevention in congregate facilities, medical expenses, and other public health measures."

States and local governments are forbidden from using the American Rescue Fund spending to cut taxes but are allowed to plow it into parts of their budgets that have little if anything to do with the pandemic. Public sector unions have been happy to encourage some of those decisions. The Associated Press reported in July that an Oregon proposal to give public workers a $2,000 bonus was the subject of "a union lobbying campaign that included thousands of emails and hundreds of phone calls to lawmakers."
In many cases, police and prison guards have been on the front lines for getting extra pay.
In Virginia, law enforcement personnel and prison guards received $3,000 bonuses last year. That consumed more than $10 million of COVID aid and benefitted 1,905 workers, according to the Treasury's tracker. Some counties in Virginia went even further on their own. Pittsylvania County, on the state's southern border, doubled the bonus for their police officers and topped up other county employees' bank accounts too, ultimately spending more than $245,000 in pandemic relief to pay bonuses to 287 workers.
The state of Indiana gave all prison guards a one-time "hazard pay bonus" of $1,600 for working during the pandemic—at a total cost of $7.6 million. Clayton County, Georgia, reports spending more than $4.6 million on "lump-sum payments of $4,000" to police and prison guards.
And on and on. There are already 401 line items detailing "premium pay" in the Treasury's sprawling spreadsheet that breaks down the various ways state and local governments have blown through an unnecessary bailout by rewarding government workers for just doing their jobs.
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Thanks Congress.
I can't get enough of this woman:
love a Smiths reference. when's *she* on the Reason podcast?
Problematic. She's an old school coke-head gonzo reporter who spent her youth with her middle finger raised to the establishment. So yes, she was also pro-Brexit.
Saw PiL right before the lockdowns. Fuck did Lydon get huge. Like "Fat Bastard" from Austin Powers huge.
At least I could get a slice of pepperoni pizza at that show, unlike at a Morrissey show. More likely than not you don't even get a Morrissey performance with your tasteless vegan wrap.
Saw morrissey in the late 90s and he didn’t allow glass bottles at the venue to keep from being hit? Anyway, the show actually rocked a lot harder than I was expecting.
Thanks for posting this, might have to check out her woke trials book. I like to see the mind virus criticized from the left from time to time. Restores my faith in the future a little.
Ain't that wonderful...paying bonuses to the government people who fucked up our pandemic response.
The Russians and Chinese don't have to do a fucking thing to defeat us. We will do it to ourselves.
Wiping out the left is the key to survival for America.
Can we make out?
…. rewarding government workers for just doing their jobs.
Essential workers.
Except that many government employees and government services were shut down anyway during COVID.
I had the circumstance of having moved from one state to another just before Christmas 2018, and so once the dust settled I wanted to get my CCW in my new home state.
In the new state, this required a mandatory class (previous long-held CCW in original state, where I also had to take a class meant nothing), which was not being produced by the government because of COVID. After a lot of searching, I was able to get the class via a state-certified private instructor.
Then I needed to get fingerprinted (yet again--for someone who's never been arrested, with work requirements and CCW I feel like I've been fingerprinted way more time than the average person). Called the sheriff's department, which normally handles that. Got told that fingerprinting is *only* available on Thursday mornings between 11:00 and 12:00 due to COVID restrictions. Show up at 10:55 Thursday morning, big sign in the lobby "No Fingerprinting".
So after much research, we found that a private company is also certified by the state, only 1 hour drive from home! Made appointment with them, got fingerprints made.
Was told that processing was way behind due to COVID.
So what would have taken a few hours took weeks. And then I had to wait for almost 2 months for the license to get approved and sent to me.
You know what services were open? The ones where we had to pay the fees for the CCW license application. And the place to pay the property taxes that came due around that same time. Was weird going into the local city government center and find all of the offices except those taking money in were closed.
"... and as a writer @Reason I'm totally not surprised and a little pissed off." ?
The stimulus money was a bribe to keep us from getting pissed about inflation - because there’s no way the stimulus is the cause of the inflation - it’s the other trillions they laundered to god knows where that caused it. Has someone done the math yet on these dollar amounts?
Ding ding ding! They were checks to get us to sit down and shut up while they raided the treasury -- again.
Just the most simple math at $4T and 158M workers; shows that if your stimulus check wasn't $25,316 you got ROBBED big time...
For those idiotic lefties who like to pretend it was a tax-return.
Its so funny listening to lefties worship Gov while cursing that top 10% in the free-market.. If GOV was a corporation it would put the top 0.1% richest to unbelievable shame not only wealth disparity wise but also tactics. But so long as their shameless wealth DEBT keeps getting shoveled onto a citizens credit-card in their name; they'll just keep pretending they aren't filthy with money.
Or put more humorously... How many JETS does the GOV corp own?
Shed blood.
Lots.
Fuck you, cut spending.
The obvious and predictable consequence of raining down money from the government.
The Nazi's(National Socialists) are getting BONUSES!!! (i.e. stolen wealth)...
Um, yeah... That's why so many idiots willfully support National Socialism duh.... They don't really believe in it; they just pretend they do like a scam artist to funnel someone else's wealth as their own. Comes to mind; Specifically Bernie Sanders who wouldn't enact a State Universal Healthcare because he knew it would bankrupt his state.
Or put more humorously... How many JETS does the GOV corp own?
My kids’ school used some of their funds to hand out $3K hazard pay to teachers that taught on Zoom all year.
That was my OTHER second job, during 2020 and Spring 2021. And that Zoom teaching IS hazardous!.
You can get a bad shock if you are teaching and drop that laptop in your bathtub.
And they have the nerve to call themselves heroes at that.
I actually worked, as a "second" job, doing Covid disaster loans for the past 9 months for a government agency. The managers kept saying the program would last for two years and I think they believed it. It ended just before Memorial Day, and they realized they money had run out 3 weeks ago (for two weeks we stopped approving loans and just audited old cases for fraud).
It was a weird job. At first I was impressed and pleased about how widespread tax resistance was. I was working on reconsideration of declined loans. I'd say half or more were people declined because they had not filed taxes for 2019. Without an IRS transcript showing Schedule C business revenues you can't get a government loan, partly because they can't see what your pre-Covid revenues were to see if you actually had a business and if it actually lost money.
My reconsideration peeps were heavily immigrant and African American. I don't know why. They are less likely to file taxes? Less likely to hire some fancy CPA who makes sure they turn in everything for an application? More likely to have a marginal business that goes under? A few were independent contractor cleaning ladies who apparently file a 1040EZ and treat their business income as if it is wages - therefore no Schedule C, and therefore no government disaster loan for a business. Uber/Lyft drivers, Door Dashers, and hair braiders were a large percentage of the applicants. Uber drivers/limo service etc maybe as much as 10%, Door Dashers and hair braiders maybe 1% each. Immigrants were a heavy part of the reconsideration pool because you can't get a loan unless you are a citizen, have a green card, or have specific Visas that allow it. Many categories, like waiting for asylum to be approved, are not eligible.
I got one memorable email from a guy I declined who was a trucker, which coincidentally I received while the truckers were protesting in Canada. His records were a shambles and he could not supply what was needed so I had to decline him (everything we did takes at least 3 people to agree so I could not decline or approve on my own and have it stick). He may have been one of the many people who filed not taxes, or just supplied a 1099, or supplied a return (and the IRS had a matching transcript) with no Schedule C for business income. Often these people would then tell me their accountant messed it up or filed late, and the accountant was now often dead or in a hospital in a coma etc. (One gal, a minor reality TV show star, sent me copious affidavits and documents when I requested them demonstrating that she had filed her taxes, but two years too late, because she could not afford to pay an accountant to do them the year they should have been filed. They stopped giving loans to late filers, especially already once declined applicants, on the hypothesis that they were only filing to get a loan or a grant.) He emailed me and said he knew Mr. Trump had set aside loan money for people like him who had always worked and paid taxes, while he saw many others collecting generous unemployment. He probably wasn't wrong but his tax returns were not in order. (OK fellow libertarians roast me for saying that; but what else could I do? I was just following orders!) It's interesting that these often "marginal" - by race, education, class, or immigration status - have to have perfect paperwork to get money, while the government employees described in this article don't have to be means tested for outside income, or have their credit score checked, or be checked for whether they have a criminal conviction, or whether they have filed their taxes and paid their child support, as these loan applicants do.
Toward the end I hit a number of applicants - a realtor, a trash collection service - who did seem to have genuinely thought they filed and paid taxes - but a 2020 IRS that was "understaffed" or "tekeworking" had not processed them or had sent them back for being incorrectly filled out. Except they'd never really communicated with the taxpayer. The result was we treated them like someone who had failed to file. No loan for them.
Some animals are more equal than others.