Letter to The Hon. Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of The House of Representatives, and The Hon. Kevin Mc Carthy, House Minority Leader - Moulton, Fitzpatrick, 142 Other Members of Congress and Nation's Leading Nonprofits Urge House Leadership to Support Relief for America's Nonprofits

Letter

By: Doris Matsui, T.J. Cox, Gil Cisneros, Diana DeGette, Jim Himes, Val Demings, Donna Shalala, Raja Krishnamoorthi, John Sarbanes, Fred Upton, Lacy Clay, Jr., Alma Adams, Bonnie Watson Coleman, Jared Huffman, Zoe Lofgren, Linda Sánchez, Scott Peters, Joe Courtney, Darren Soto, Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, Mike Quigley, Lori Trahan, Chellie Pingree, Betty McCollum, David Price, Tom Malinowski, Yvette Clarke, Elise Stefanik, Marcia Fudge, Brian Fitzpatrick, Steve Cohen, Marc Veasey, Ron Kind, Barbara Lee, Julia Brownley, Harley Rouda, Jason Crow, Eleanor Norton, Ted Deutch, Hank Johnson, Jr., John Yarmuth, David Trone, Angie Craig, Bennie Thompson, Donald Norcross, Thomas Suozzi, Eliot Engel, Josh Harder, Salud Carbajal, Alan Lowenthal, Joe Neguse, Jahana Hayes, Alcee Hastings, Sr., Sanford Bishop, Jr., Brad Schneider, Anthony Brown, Debbie Dingell, Emanuel Cleaver II, Chris Pappas, Deb Haaland, Carolyn Maloney, Joe Morelle, Kendra Horn, Chrissy Houlahan, Al Green, Rick Larsen, John Kennedy, Dave Loebsack, Jim Banks, Bill Huizenga, Rashida Tlaib, Albio Sires, Adriano Espaillat, Michael McCaul, Sylvia Garcia, Seth Moulton, Jim Costa, Tony Cárdenas, Juan Vargas, John Larson, Lisa Blunt Rochester, Frederica Wilson, Cindy Axne, Jim McGovern, Jamie Raskin, Dean Phillips, G. K. Butterfield, Jr., Jeff Van Drew, Kathleen Rice, Paul Tonko, Marcy Kaptur, Peter DeFazio, Jim Cooper, Eddie Johnson, Adam Smith, Ted Lieu, Sean Casten, Ayanna Pressley, Elissa Slotkin, Ilhan Omar, Steven Horsford, Tom Cole, Veronica Escobar, Filemon Vela, Jr., Max Rose, John Katko, Steve Stivers, Mary Scanlon, Lizzie Fletcher, Suzan DelBene, Mike Gallagher, Al Lawson, Jr., Bill Foster, Bill Keating, Andy Levin, Andy Kim, Pete King, Brendan Boyle, Will Hurd, Don Beyer, Jr., Joyce Beatty, Suzanne Bonamici, David Cicilline, Sheila Jackson Lee, Derek Kilmer, Charlie Crist, Jr., Rodney Davis, Dutch Ruppersberger, Haley Stevens, Joshua Gottheimer, Grace Meng, Susan Wild, Henry Cuellar, Gerry Connolly, Chuy Garcia, Susan Brooks, Dan Kildee, Brenda Lawrence, Don Payne, Jr., Sean Maloney, Vicente Gonzalez, Colin Allred
Date: April 29, 2020
Location: Salem, MA

Dear Speaker Pelosi and Minority Leader McCarthy:

Charitable nonprofits are significant employers ready to serve. The 12 million people working for America's charities are the backbone of our communities: the food banks, shelters, domestic violence services, houses of worship, early care and education centers, after-school facilities, and more that are being called on to feed, house and care for people whose lives have been disrupted by sickness, closures, and job loss. Cities and states are relying on nonprofits to help mitigate the impact of the pandemic. We will continue to rely on the experience, expertise and ingenuity of the sector during future recovery efforts. As we work to build on the CARES Act in the next relief package, we cannot overlook the needs of these community-based institutions and must ensure that charitable nonprofits are fully supported in their service on the front lines of responding to the COVID-19 crisis.

Specifically, we urge you to include the following clarifications and provisions in the next relief package:

1. Expand Nonprofit Access to Relief and Support: Establish a distinct reserve dedicated to funding nonprofit loans and expand the eligibility for nonprofits to participate in the Paycheck Protection Program by modifying the current 500-employee cap or by other means. Adjust Economic Stabilization Fund or other mechanisms to implement programs to support nonprofit employers with between 500 and 10,000 employees, including loan-forgiveness and other provisions. Provide clear guidance and maximum flexibility to private lenders to prioritize processing the applications of charitable nonprofits.

2. Increase Unemployment Insurance Reimbursement: Treat self-funded nonprofits fairly by increasing the federal unemployment insurance reimbursement for self-funded nonprofits to 100% of costs. As currently written Section 2103 of the CARES Act will subject nonprofits throughout the country to crippling payments to their state unemployment systems later this year, while other employers will likely experience little or no additional costs resulting from mass COVID-19-related layoffs. The impacts will be real. States will be greatly challenged to distinguish among employers in an already overburdened system due to the unprecedented surge in new applicants. Many nonprofits will be hit with a bill for reimbursement to states at a time when they will be in the highest demand for providing services. This could actually inhibit nonprofits' ability to perform.

3. Strengthen Charitable Giving Incentives: Encourage donations to the work of charitable organizations in their communities by enabling taxpayers making donations on and after March 13 (date of national emergency declaration) and before July 16 to claim the deductions on their 2019 tax filings. This retroactive application should apply to itemized and above-the-line deductions during this critical period to encourage an influx of donations when these nonprofits need them most. Also, enhance the Above-the-Line Deduction in the CARES Act by increasing the $300/person cap and extending the effective date of the incentive.

On behalf of the nonprofit charities in each of our districts providing critical services to our constituents, we appreciate your attention to this request and believe that the inclusion of these provisions will directly help charitable nonprofits respond to the fallout from this pandemic and will continue to serve our communities in the aftermath. We appreciate your consideration and attention to this request.

Sincerely,

Brian Fitzpatrick
Member of Congress

Seth Moulton
Member of Congress


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