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<br />4 <br /> <br />• Services to address behavioral healthcare needs exacerbated by the pandemic, including: <br /> Mental health treatment <br /> Substance misuse treatment <br /> Other behavioral health services <br /> Hotlines or warmlines <br /> <br /> Crisis intervention <br /> Services or outreach to promote access <br />to health and social services <br /> <br />• Payroll and covered benefits expenses for public health, healthcare, human services, public <br />safety and similar employees, to the extent that they work on the COVID-19 response. For <br />public health and safety workers, recipients can use these funds to cover the full payroll and <br />covered benefits costs for employees or operating units or divisions primarily dedicated to the <br />COVID-19 response. <br /> <br />2. Addressing the negative economic impacts caused by the public health emergency <br />The COVID-19 public health emergency resulted in significant economic hardship for many Americans. <br />As businesses closed, consumers stayed home, schools shifted to remote education, and travel declined <br />precipitously, over 20 million jobs were lost between February and April 2020. Although many have <br />since returned to work, as of April 2021, the economy remains more than 8 million jobs below its pre- <br />pandemic peak, and more than 3 million workers have dropped out of the labor market altogether since <br />February 2020. <br />To help alleviate the economic hardships caused by the pandemic, Coronavirus State and Local Fiscal <br />Recovery Funds enable eligible state, local, territorial, and Tribal governments to provide a wide range <br />of assistance to individuals and households, small businesses, and impacted industries, in addition to <br />enabling governments to rehire public sector staff and rebuild capacity. Among these uses include: <br />• Delivering assistance to workers and families, including aid to unemployed workers and job <br />training, as well as aid to households facing food, housing, or other financial insecurity. In <br />addition, these funds can support survivor’s benefits for family members of COVID-19 victims. <br />• Supporting small businesses, helping them to address financial challenges caused by the <br />pandemic and to make investments in COVID-19 prevention and mitigation tactics, as well as to <br />provide technical assistance. To achieve these goals, recipients may employ this funding to <br />execute a broad array of loan, grant, in-kind assistance, and counseling programs to enable <br />small businesses to rebound from the downturn. <br />• Speeding the recovery of the tourism, travel, and hospitality sectors, supporting industries that <br />were particularly hard-hit by the COVID-19 emergency and are just now beginning to mend. <br />Similarly impacted sectors within a local area are also eligible for support. <br />• Rebuilding public sector capacity, by rehiring public sector staff and replenishing <br />unemployment insurance (UI) trust funds, in each case up to pre-pandemic levels. Recipients <br />may also use this funding to build their internal capacity to successfully implement economic <br />relief programs, with investments in data analysis, targeted outreach, technology infrastructure, <br />and impact evaluations.