Music Groups Again Pressure Congress For Pandemic Relief: 'More Must Be Done'

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A coalition of music industry groups including the RIAA, NMPA and Artist Rights Alliance today (Nov. 23) sent the latest in a string of recent letters to congressional leaders, urging them to provide additional government assistance to music industry workers impacted by the coronavirus pandemic.

Specifically, the letter calls on Congress to renew and extend several forms of federal pandemic unemployment assistance; pass the RESTART Act federal loan program;"fix" the CARES Act to make mixed earners eligible for unemployment assistance; expand and pass the Save Our Stages Act for small venues and multi-use publicly owned venues; help workers keep their job-based healthcare plans by expanding employer retention tax credits and passing a 100% COBRA premium subsidy; and pass the...

The coalition has been continuously pressuring Congress for music industry relief through several letters sent since the start of the pandemic, and has also organized the centralized aid resource MusicCovidRelief.com.Dear Leader McConnell, Speaker Pelosi, Leader Schumer and Leader McCarthy, First, Congress must renew and extend existing benefits that have proved indispensable, including the weekly funding provided through Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation, Pandemic Unemployment Assistance, and Pandemic Emergency Unemployment Compensation. Congress must also act to pass the RESTART Act, to build on the short-term relief provided by the Paycheck Protection Program.

Third, with no clear direction on when safe public gatherings may resume, Congress must expand the current form of the Save Our Stages Act and pass it to provide sufficient assistance for small venues and multi-use publicly owned venues. 77% of people in the live events industry have lost 100% of their incomes, including 97% of 1099 workers. These people work at venues of all sizes and in a variety of capacities – whether it be full-time, part-time, or on the side as a gig worker.

 

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