Ahead of what’s shaping up to be another seasonal spike in Covid-19 cases, the Biden administration is once again offering free at-home tests through the U.S. Postal Service. Starting Monday, anyone who wants four tests shipped to their home simply has to go to CovidTests.gov and fill out a short form. It’s quick, efficient and has the potential to save lives. At the same time, it’s a reminder of how low we’ve set the bar when it comes to our expectations — of government services broadly and of public health in particular.
When President Joe Biden took office with a Democratic majority in both houses of Congress, it seemed like a real opportunity to showcase how much good government can do for people. A massive stimulus bill leveraged the pandemic’s immediate needs into an expansion of the social safety net that kept millions from falling into poverty. The initial Build Back Better plan that Biden pitched was packed with investments that would let those expansions take root and shift society in a way that we haven’t seen in decades.
When President Joe Biden took office with a Democratic majority in both houses of Congress, it seemed like a real opportunity to showcase how much good government can do for people.
Slowly but surely, though, those dreams were pared down. Bits and pieces of the initial $4 trillion plan were hacked away, either spun out into separate bills to win congressional votes or allowed to wither to lower the overall price tag. The intransigent wall of Republican opposition to what was left was aided in the Senate by two holdouts, one of whom is plotting a re-election bid that relies more on Republican votes than Democratic. The final set of bills that did pass, while impressive in their own right, pale in comparison to what could have been.
It would be one thing if the downscaling of those services was based on the failure of the pandemic’s pilot programs. But that’s certainly not the case. The Child Tax Credit expansion was allowed to expire — despite the child poverty rate falling to record lows. There’s no evidence that workers were abusing the expanded paid sick and family leave — but those provisions, too, have been mostly allowed to expire with the end of the Covid-19 emergency declaration.
As a result, we’ve seen a related contraction in public health services on offer. Private health insurance companies are no longer required to cover the cost of laboratory Covid testing. The newly released updated Covid vaccine is the first that the federal government won’t cover the full cost of. Instead, what you pay will depend on your type of insurance and whether you get the shot from an in-network provider — a new system that’s already led to headaches nationwide. (The government is providing free vaccines to uninsured people for now — but the program is only scheduled to last until December 2024.)








