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NRF welcomes passage of financial-rescue bill
Measure to protect Main Street jobs
By Jerilynn Caliendo
October 03, 2008
Washington--The National Retail Federation (NRF) welcomed today's passage by the House of legislation to address the nation's financial crisis, saying the bill would help protect Main Street jobs in addition to stabilizing Wall Street and credit markets.
"Yesterday, we stood on the verge of an unprecedented financial calamity that had already begun to threaten millions of Americans regardless of whether they were investors, owned a modest 401(k) or simply held a job," NRF Senior Vice President for Government Relations Steve Pfister said in a media release. "Today, the House has voted for a plan that will maintain the ability of American consumers and businesses to obtain the credit needed to keep our economic engine running and to pave the road to economic recovery."
Pfister said that retailers worked diligently over the past several days to make sure members of the House and Senate fully understood the profound impact the lack of functioning credit markets would have on businesses and consumers across the nation.
"Whether you work in a retail store, a factory or in the service sector, the job of almost every American depends on his or her employer's ability to obtain credit to buy materials, update equipment and make payroll," Pfister said. "Without readily accessible business credit, hard-working Americans could quickly find themselves out of a job."
In addition to establishing a system to restore stability to the nation's financial markets, the legislation approved by the House includes two significant and longstanding retail priorities that were added to the bill earlier this week by the Senate.
The first is a provision that would renew a depreciation rule that expired at the end of 2007 that allowed retailers who lease their stores to write off remodeling expenses over 15 years rather than the previous 39 years. The rule would be extended through the end of 2009 and also expanded to include owned stores for the first time in response to the NRF's arguments that it was unfair to put retailers who own their stores--many of them small or rural merchants--at a disadvantage.
Remodeling is particularly important in the current economic climate as retailers try to revitalize failing stores, but having to depreciate the costs over 39 years rather than 15 makes it more difficult to know that the investment will pay off.
The other is a measure that would require health plans to provide the same level of coverage for mental illnesses as physical illnesses. The bipartisan compromise says coverage for mental health can be no more restrictive than for other coverage, including co-pays, deductions and out-of-pocket expenses. The NRF believes mental health parity is important to the economy because of the productivity losses that occur when any illness--physical or mental--is left untreated.
The NRF is the largest retail trade association in the world, with members including department, discount, drug, grocery, independent and specialty stores, catalog merchants, chain restaurants and e-tailers, as well as the industry's key trading partners of retail goods and services.
For more information about the NRF, visit its Web site, NRF.com.
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Majors
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