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virus makes U.S. cities to cut budgets, projects

U.S. cities are actually laying off workers,and also shelving various infrastructure projects and deferring or dropping equipment purchases as the financial fallout from the cornonavirus outbreak ravages their budgets and government funds stay elusive, a survey released on Tuesday showed.

With cities confronting an anticipated $360 billion revenue loss throughout the following three years, the National League of Cities' survey of in excess of 1,100 municipalities found that 74% have started to cut their budgets, with 20% announcing across-the-board reductions.

"American cities, towns and villages are confronting a double whammy," Matt Zone, a Cleveland City Council part, told reporters in a phone call. "We have mounting expenses identified with the pandemic while charge revenues are declining."

About two-thirds of the survey respondents said they are postponing or dropping infrastructure projects as well as equipment purchases like squad cars and waste vehicles.

"What we need presently is conviction, especially given that neighborhood economies are what drives the national economy. There's very a gradually expanding influence," said Joe Buscaino, Los Angeles Council president master tempore and National League of Cities president.

League officials said almost 70% of cities have not gotten any of the $150 billion reserved for state and neighborhood government virus-related expenses in the bureaucratic CARES Act, which just gave direct funding to the country's 36 largest municipalities, leaving the rest depending on allocations from their states or counties. The group is pushing for $500 billion in immediate and adaptable government funding for all cities, although the outlook for passage in a separated Congress is unclear.

On the jobs front, 32% of cities are looking at furloughs or layoffs, while 41% have or will institute a recruiting freeze, the survey found.

Nearby government work, excluding education, fell by just more than 500,000 jobs in April and May, as indicated by the U.S. Labor Department.

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