Rare Wyoming Legislature special session to take on COVID-19

CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — The Wyoming Legislature will convene its first special session in 16 years Friday to help businesses and workers, allocate federal funding and take other action in response to the coronavirus.

Besides holding a rare special session, the full Legislature will meet in a way unlike ever before. A small number of lawmakers will meet in the state Capitol in Cheyenne and the rest will take part by video conference.

Lawmakers have drafted five bills, four of which have mirror versions so the House and Senate can consider them simultaneously, and plan to wrap up no later than Saturday.

The bills would:

— Give Gov. Mark Gordon guidance in allocating $1.25 billion in federal Coronavirus Aid Relief and Economic Security (CARES) Act funding. Legislators propose putting the money toward emergency public health costs, aid for families and businesses, economic development programs including infrastructure projects and, to the extent federal law allows, replacing public revenue lost during the pandemic.

— Help ensure that people who fall ill from the coronavirus can collect unemployment benefits and not be evicted for missing rent payments.

— Alter state funding calculations for school districts and authorize Gordon to make certain emergency funding transfers between state agencies.

— Allocate up to $275 million in interest-free loans and other aid for businesses affected by the coronavirus.

— Give legal immunity to businesses whose customers contract the coronavirus, a proposal to be initially taken up by the Senate only.

The public can monitor the proceedings online. Journalists will keep an eye on things from the House and Senate galleries.

Wyoming’s previous special session in 2004 involved an ultimately unsuccessful constitutional amendment to limit payouts in medical malpractice cases.