Poverty & Safety Net
Article

Cuyahoga County Executive and Council to spend remaining CARES Act dollars

Community Solutions Team
Transforming data into progress
Additional Contributors
No items found.
December 7, 2020
Read time:
Download Fact Sheets
Register now
Share this resource
Subscribe to our Newsletter
By subscribing you agree to with our Privacy Policy.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Download this as a PDF

A few weeks ago, Community Solutions wrote about the county’s proposed plan to spend $100 million in CARES Act funds, as well as that the county still had some undesignated dollars remaining. The Budish administration proposed the county take advantage of some new guidance issued by the Treasury Department, which permitted CARES Act dollars to be spent on payroll and personnel expenses of “public safety” agencies. According to the county, this carried a double advantage, freeing up previously budgeted general fund dollars and send that money back into the county budget. It also allowed the county to get the federal dollars out the door before the December 31 deadline. Otherwise, the county would have to give the money back to the federal government. The Budish administration’s intent was to submit the proposal to Cuyahoga County Council and gain its approval to spend all of the remaining CARES Act dollars (approximately $125 million) at its October 27 meeting. That did not occur. Rather, Council decided that the proposal on how to spend the balance of the CARES Act dollars needed its own committee hearing. which happened at the November 9 Cuyahoga County Council meeting, chaired by Finance Committee Chairman Dale Miller.

 By “overspending” the CARES Act allotment, the county can ensure that if any other additional projects come in under budget, there is a high chance the county will not have to give those remaining funds back to the federal government at the end of the year.

In that hearing, Catherine Tkachyk, Cuyahoga County Chief Innovation and Performance Officer, explained the county wants to use CARES Act dollars for Sheriff’s Department personnel costs, Juvenile Court, and the county jail. He also said the county also wanted to give to other nonprofit agencies that incurred expenses as a result of COVID-19 such as the Cleveland Rape Crisis Center, YWCA, Legal Aid and Ohio Guidestone. General fund dollars originally budgeted for public agencies such as the Sheriff’s Department and Juvenile Court would then not be spent from the general fund, but would rather be folded back into the county budget and carried over into the next year. The county is assuming that the expenditures by these agencies are directly related to COVID-19, and therefore eligible to be paid for by the CARES Act. According to the county, this isn’t necessarily revenue replacement, but rather expenditure replacement. This is an important distinction, because the county wanted to ensure that it does not run counter to September 2 Treasury Department guidance language which says:

 Funds may not be used to fill shortfalls in government revenue to cover expenditures that would not otherwise qualify under the statute. Although a broad range of uses is allowed, revenue replacement is not a permissible use of Fund payments.

An updated version of the spreadsheet, including a list of nonprofits that received some CARES Act dollars, is included in the link below. The county spreadsheet shows a balance of more than $215 million because there were some projects that were approved by council, such as building modifications, where the county did not use all of the money allocated for the project. By “overspending” the CARES Act allotment, the county can ensure that if any other additional projects come in under budget, there is a high chance the county will not have to give those remaining funds back to the federal government at the end of the year.

CARES Act Budget

Download Fact Sheets

Geauga County

Download

Lake County

Download

Cuyahoga County

Download

Thompson

Download

South Russell

Download

Russell

Download

Parkman

Download

Newbury

Download

Munson

Download

Montville

Download

Middlefield Township

Download

Middlefield Village

Download

Huntsburg

Download

Hambden

Download

Claridon

Download

Chester

Download

Chardon Township

Download

Chardon City

Download

Burton

Download

Bainbridge

Download

Auburn

Download

Willowick

Download

Willoughby Hills

Download

Willoughby

Download

Wickliffe

Download

Waite Hill

Download

Timberlake

Download

Painesville City

Download

Mentor-on-the-Lake

Download

Mentor

Download

Madison

Download

Lakeline

Download

Kirtland Hills

Download

Kirtland

Download

Eastlake

Download

Concord

Download

Highland Heights 2018

Download

Garfield Heights 2018

Download

Fairview Park 2018

Download

Euclid 2018

Download

East Cleveland 2018

Download

Cleveland 2018

Download

Cleveland Heights 2018

Download

Cities in Cuyahoga County Combined 2018

Download

Brooklyn 2018

Download

Brook Park 2018

Download

Broadview Heights 2018

Download

Brecksville 2018

Download

Berea 2018

Download

Bedford 2018

Download

Bedford Heights 2018

Download

Beachwood 2018

Download

Bay Village 2018

Download

Westlake 2018

Download

Warrensville Heights 2018

Download

University Heights 2018

Download

Strongsville 2018

Download

South Euclid 2018

Download

Solon 2018

Download

Shaker Heights 2018

Download

Seven Hills 2018

Download

Rocky River 2018

Download

Richmond Heights 2018

Download

Pepper Pike 2018

Download

Parma 2018

Download

Parma Heights 2018

Download

Olmsted Falls 2018

Download

North Royalton 2018

Download

North Olmsted 2018

Download

Middleburg Heights 2018

Download

Mayfield Heights 2018

Download

Maple Heights 2018

Download

Lyndhurst 2018

Download

Lakewood 2018

Download

Independence 2018

Download

Woodmere

Download

Westlake

Download

Warrensville Heights

Download

Walton Hills

Download

Valley View

Download

University Heights

Download

Strongsville

Download

South Euclid

Download

Shaker Heights

Download

Seven Hills

Download

Rocky River

Download

Richmond Heights

Download

Pepper Pike

Download

Parma Heights

Download

Orange

Download

Olmsted Falls

Download

Olmsted

Download

Oakwood

Download

North Royalton

Download

North Randall

Download
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Download report

Subscribe to our newsletter

5 Things you need to know arrives on Mondays with the latest articles, events, and advocacy developments in Ohio

Explore the fact sheets

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Suspendisse varius enim in eros elementum tristique.

No Related Fact Sheets

Explore Topics

Browse articles, research, and testimony.

Poverty & Safety Net
Article

ARPA 3 Years later: Lessons learned in Ohio

Dylan Armstrong
November 18, 2024
Poverty & Safety Net
Article

New Human Services Chamber launching in December

Emily Campbell
November 17, 2024
Maternal & Infant Health
Article

Neighborhood Family Practice partners with Birthing Beautiful Communities

Taneisha Fair
November 11, 2024
Poverty & Safety Net
Article

U.S. Census to halt publication of state-level hardship data

John R. Corlett
November 11, 2024