We drive economic growth by attracting and growing local businesses and investing in entrepreneurship.

1200 Ash Avenue
McAllen, TX 78501

(T) 956-682-2871
(F) 956-687-2917

We engage business leaders, public officials and the community to foster an environment that will help grow and strengthen our economy.

1200 Ash Avenue
McAllen, TX 78501

(T) 956-682-2871
(F) 956-687-2917

We are dedicated to bringing you the resources and connections you need to grow your business today.

1200 Ash Avenue
McAllen, TX 78501

(T) 956-682-2871
(F) 956-687-2917

We create productive public and private partnerships while serving as a reliable source for McAllen’s tourism industry to boost the economy.

1200 Ash Avenue
McAllen, TX 78501

(T) 956-682-2871
(F) 956-687-2917

Stay up to date on what’s happening in the McAllen business community. The Chamber keeps you informed and puts a spotlight on the events and activities of our partners.

1200 Ash Avenue
McAllen, TX 78501

(T) 956-682-2871
(F) 956-687-2917

The McAllen Chamber of Commerce helps local businesses thrive by creating economic momentum, accelerating connections and enhancing the quality of life in the region.

1200 Ash Avenue
McAllen, TX 78501

(T) 956-682-2871
(F) 956-687-2917

Newsroom

Congressman Gonzalez provides the Framework Summary of the Bipartisan Emergency COVID Relief Act of 2020

Framework Summary
December 9, 2020
Total: $908 Billion
Support for State, Local and Tribal Governments
  • Agreement in principle to provide $160 billion as the basis for good faith negotiations
Unemployment Assistance
  • Extension of all pandemic unemployment insurance programs by 16 weeks, from their expiration at the end of December
  • Federal supplemental unemployment insurance benefits expanded by $300 per week for16 weeks, from the end of December into April 2021
  • $1 billion for state systems for technology modernization and fraud prevention
  • Small administrative adjustments, e.g. to certification requirements and overpayment standards
Paycheck Protection Program & Small Business
  • $300 billion to Small Business Administration
  • Funding to allow the hardest-hit small businesses to receive a second forgivable Paycheck Protection Program (PPP)loan.
    • Eligibility would be limited to small businesses with 300 or fewer employees that have sustained a 30 percent revenue loss in any quarter of2020.
    • Small 501(c)(6) organizations that are not lobbying organizations and that have 150 employees or fewer, such as local chambers of commerce, economic development organizations, and tourism offices, would become eligible for PPP.
    • Forgivable expenses are expanded to include supplier costs and investments in facility modifications and personal protective equipment to operate safely.
    • Business expenses paid for with the proceeds of PPP loans are tax-deductible, consistent with Congressional intent in the CARES Act.
    • The loan forgiveness process is simplified for borrowers with PPP loans of $150,000 or less.
    • Set-asides are included to ensure that smaller borrowers and underserved communities get the help they need, such as: for small businesses with 10 or fewer employees; for loans made by small community lenders, including Community Development Financial Institutions (CDFIs), credit unions, small community banks, Minority Depository Institutions (MDIs), and farm service lenders; and for the Minority Business Development Agency.
  • Funding for independent live venue operators affected by COVID-19 stay-at-home orders.
  • Extension of Section 1112 of the CARES Act, which provides payment of principal, interest, and associated fees on qualifying Small Business Administration (SBA) 7(a), 504, and microloans.
  • Funding for SBA loan products to increase guarantees on SBA 7(a) loans and reduce fees on 7(a) and 504 loans; provide loan subsidies for 7(a) loans; and provide Economic Injury Disaster
Loan grant advances
CDFI / MDI Community Lenders
  • $12 billion in targeted emergency investments to help low-income and minority communities withstand the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and respond to this unprecedented economic downturn
    • $2 billion in emergency COVID-19 funding to the CDFI Fund, for emergency COVID relief and relief to minority communities, and minority-owned lenders disproportionately impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and resulting economic stress
    • $10 billion in emergency capital injections to eligible CDFIs and MDIs to support immediate economic relief in low-income and minority communities struggling to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic
 Transportation Funding
  • Extension of the Payroll Support Program (PSP) through March 31, 2021. As in the CARES Act, funds will go directly to frontline aviation workers’ wages, salaries, and benefits. Workers and taxpayers are protected through measures including prohibitions on stock buybacks and dividends, and limitations on executive compensation.
  • Funding for Airports, including set-asides for airport concessionaires, Essential Air Service (EAS), and Small Community Air Service Development Program (SCASDP) through March 31, 2021
  • Funding to support the moto coach and bus industry as well as others, including passenger ferries and school buses, like the Coronavirus Economic Relief for Transportation Services (CERTS) Act of2020
  • Funding to support public transit systems across the country that will be used to prevent furloughs, meet operating needs and keep systems running
  • Funding to allow Amtrak to continue to provide existing services and prevent additional furloughs through March 31, 2021.
Supporting Health Care Providers
  • $35 billion to the Provider Relief Fund (PRF)
    • $7 billion for rural providers and $1 billion for tribes, tribal organizations, urban Indian health organizations, and health service providers to tribes
  • Fix to PRF reporting guidelines, include clarification that PRF can be used for staffing, including childcare staff
  • Allows health systems to move targeted Provider Relief Fund distributions within their system
  • Includes a directive to HHS to consider the appropriate distribution of funds, including for health providers who were under-represented in previous allocations, or are at risk of imminent closure
  • Vaccine Development & Distribution
    • $3.42B for direct grants for states, local, territories, and tribes
      • Allows states to use funds for tracking systems and data modernization
      • Directing the Secretary to take into account geographical areas with a high percentage of cross-jurisdictional workers
    • $2.58B for CDC vaccine distribution and infrastructure
      • $129 million for tribes, tribal organizations, urban Indian health organizations, or health service providers to tribes
      • Contingency/Discretionary fund to be utilized by the Secretary to send additional aid to states to assist with vaccine distribution
        • Allows states to use USPS registry to help track vaccine distribution
     Testing and Tracing
    • $7 billion in direct grants for states, territories, and tribes.
      • $3.5 billion to states, territories, and  tribes
      • $2.32 billion to hotspots
      • $825 million to be used at the Secretary’s discretion to states
        • Includes authorization for grants to Federally Qualified Health Centers, school-based health clinics, schools, academic medical centers, colleges and universities, research labs, veterinary labs, nonprofits, Indian tribes, local governments, and other entities
      • $350 million to tribes, tribal organizations, urban Indian health organizations, or health service providers to tribes
    • $2 billion for nursing homes, long term care, HCBS, and assisted living facilities.
      • Includes $200 million for nursing home strike teams
    • $300 million for Health Workforce programs, including the National Health Service Corps and Nurse Corps, to support loan repayment to recruit clinicians for underserved areas
    • $700 million to the Secretary for additional research, procurement, and medical supply needs, including:
      • To make purchases of personal protective equipment and other medical supplies as needed to address the COVID-19pandemic
      • Fund research at the National Institutes of Health, including studying Post-Acute-Covid-19 syndrome and other long-term health outcomes in COVID-19survivors
      • Develop, purchase, distribute and otherwise ensure the timely delivery of a safe and effective COVID-19 vaccine to the American public
    • Authorizes states, tribes, and territories to enter into interstate compacts or agreements, for the purposes of procuring COVID-19 tests and supplies for such tests
    • Extends telehealth flexibility through December 31, 2021
    • Education Funding
      • Provides $82 billion for education providers, funded similar to the CARES Act with provisions including funding for:
        • CARES Act Governors Emergency Education Relief Fund, including funds for private schools
        • Elementary and Secondary School (K-12) Emergency Relief Fund
        • Higher Education Emergency Relief Fund
          • Including set aside for minority-serving institutions and development institutions and for institutions with the greatest unmet needs
        • Relief for territories and Bureau of Indian Education

      Student Loans

      • Extension of student loan forbearance provisions created in CARES and extended by Executive Order, from the current expiration date of January 31, 2020, through April 30, 2021

      Rental Assistance

      • Provide $25 billion in rental assistance to states and local governments and Native American tribes through the Coronavirus Relief Fund
      • 90 percent of funds must be used for payment of rent, rental arrears, utilities, utility arrears, and related housing stability services with 10 percent of funds available for housing stability services
        • Specific guardrails to ensure support for the most in-need households, with a preference for households with 50 percent of area median income and below
        • Support can cover up to 18 months of arrears and forward assistance
      • Provide an eviction moratorium until the end of January 2021

      Nutrition

      • Temporary increase in individual monthly Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program(SNAP) by 15 percent for four months
      • Expands the Pandemic-EBT program to cover families with children in childcare
      • Provides funding for The Emergency Food Assistance Program (TEFAP), including funds for storage and administration, to support food banks and food pantries
      • Provides support for the Special Supplemental Nutrition Program for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) to temporarily increase the value of WIC benefits to allow participants to purchase additional fruit and vegetables
      • Provides funding for senior nutrition services, including Meals on Wheels, and extends waivers providing flexibility in Older Americans Act nutrition services
      • Extends free meals reimbursement through the Child and Adult Care Food Program to young adults up to age 25 residing in emergency shelters
      • Includes food assistance to U.S. territories not served by SNAP (Puerto Rico, American Samoa, Commonwealth of the Northern Marianas Islands)
      • Includes additional funds for Food Distribution Program on Indian Reservations
      • Includes additional funds for the Commodity Supplemental Food Program to provide food boxes to more senior citizens

       

    • Agricultural Assistance and Fisheries
      • $13 billion to provide funding to address COVID-related impacts on farmers, ranchers, growers, etc., and rural communities
        • Includes $600 million for fishery disaster relief, including funding for tribal and Great Lakes fisheries
      • USDA Rural Development funding for water and wastewater programs

      USPS

      • Modify the CARES Act to specify that Treasury shall provide the $10 billion at USPS’s request without requiring repayment nor applying the terms or conditions agreed to in principle by USPS and Treasury in July 2020
      • Require the Board of Governors to present to Congress within 180 days of enactment a plan to ensure the USPS’s long-term solvency
      • Require USPS to include information on the use of these funds as part of its quarterly and annual reports to the Postal Regulatory Commission
       Childcare Providers
      • $10 billion to support childcare providers struggling due to the COVID 19pandemic

      Broadband

      • $6.25 billion for State Broadband Deployment and Broadband Connectivity grants to bridge the digital divide and ensure affordable access to broadband during the COVID 19pandemic.
      • $3 billion for an Emergency Educational Connectivity Fund to provide E-Rate support to educational and distance learning providers to provide hotspots, devices, and other connected devices, and advance digital equity/inclusion. Funds prioritized to rural areas with the highest need.
      • $200 million to Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) to purchase and distribute Internet-connected devices to libraries in low-income and rural areas
      • $475 million to FCC COVID-19 Telehealth Program to support efforts of healthcare providers to address coronavirus, including a 20% set aside for small, rural health providers
      • $100 million to the Department of Veterans Affairs for Telehealth and Connected Care Program to purchase, maintain, and refresh devices and services to veterans for provision of access to telehealth services

      Addiction and Mental Health

      • $3.15B to SAMHSA programs for the Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment Block Grant, the Community Mental Health Services Block Grant, tribal programs, emergency relief, and peer recovery programs
      • $1.3B to the State Opioid Response (SOR)Grants
      • $150M to the Certified Community Behavioral Health Centers (CCBHCs)Program
      • Expanding access to Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT): Limited extension of associated CMS and DEA telehealth waivers and eliminate the requirement that requires practitioners to apply for a waiver through the DEA in order to prescribe buprenorphine for substance use disorder treatment to the end of the Public Health Emergency or to December 31, 2021, with appropriate state oversight and study to be conducted on buprenorphine diversion
      Liability
      • Agreement in principle as the basis for good faith negotiations

      Rescissions

      • Re-allocates unused Treasury direct loans and excess funds from Federal Reserve facilities authorized in the CARES Act
      • Re-invests unspent balances of funds remaining from the Paycheck Protection Program back into the Paycheck Protection Program

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