(AP) The White House says the $1,400 direct payments for most
Americans funded by the American Rescue Plan will start showing up in bank
accounts as early as this weekend.
Press secretary Jen Psaki says the government will make the first
direct deposits this weekend. She says payments will continue throughout the
next several weeks.
Besides the $1,400 direct payments to individuals, the plan
includes money to help distribute coronavirus vaccines, provide relief to
homeowners and renters, help reopen schools, provide aid to state and local
governments, and an expansion of the child tax credit, among other features.
What's in the bill?
AID TO THE UNEMPLOYED
Expanded
 unemployment benefits from the federal government would be extended 
through Sept. 6 at $300 a week. That’s on top of what beneficiaries are 
getting through their state unemployment insurance program. The first 
$10,200 of jobless benefits accrued in 2020 would be non-taxable for 
households with incomes under $150,000.
Additionally,
 the measure provides a 100% subsidy of COBRA health insurance premiums 
to ensure that laid-off workers can remain on their employer health 
plans at no cost through the end of September. 
MORE CHECKS
The
 legislation provides a direct payment of $1,400 for a single taxpayer, 
or $2,800 for a married couple that files jointly, plus $1,400 per 
dependent. Individuals earning up to $75,000 would get the full amount, 
as would married couples with incomes up to $150,000. 
The
 size of the check would shrink for those making slightly more, with a 
hard cut-off at $80,000 for individuals and $160,000 for married 
couples. 
Most 
Americans will be getting the full amount. The median household income 
was $68,703 in 2019, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. Biden said 
payments would start going out this month.
    
        
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MONEY FOR STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
The
 legislation would send $350 billion to state and local governments and 
tribal governments for costs incurred up until the end of 2024. The bill
 also requires that small states get at least the amount they received 
under virus legislation that Congress passed last March. 
Many
 communities have taken hits to their tax base during the pandemic, but 
the impact varies from state to state and from town to town. Critics say
 the funding is not appropriately targeted and is far more than 
necessary with billions of dollars allocated last spring to states and 
communities still unspent.
AID TO SCHOOLS
The
 bill calls for about $130 billion in additional help to schools for 
students in kindergarten through 12th grade. The money would be used to 
reduce class sizes and modify classrooms to enhance social distancing, 
install ventilation systems and purchase personal protective equipment. 
The money could also be used to hire more nurses, counselors and 
janitors, and to provide summer school.
Spending
 for colleges and universities would be boosted by about $40 billion, 
with the money used to defray an institution’s pandemic-related expenses
 and to provide emergency aid to students to cover expenses such as food
 and housing and computer equipment.
There’s
 also about $39 billion for child care through an emergency fund to help
 child care providers pay for staffing, rent and supplies, and through a
 block grant program that subsidizes the cost of child care for 
low-income families.
AID TO BUSINESSES
A
 new program for restaurants and bars hurt by the pandemic would receive
 $28.6 billion. The grants provide up to $10 million per company with a 
limit of $5 million per physical location. The grants can be used to 
cover payroll, rent, utilities and other operational expenses. 
The
 bill also provides $7.25 billion for the Paycheck Protection Program, a
 tiny fraction of what was allocated in previous legislation. The bill 
also allows more nonprofits to apply for loans that are designed to help
 borrowers meet their payroll and operating costs and can potentially be
 forgiven.
TESTING AND VACCINES
The
 bill provides about $50 billion to expand testing for COVID-19 and to 
enhance contract tracing capabilities with new investments to expand 
laboratory capacity and set up mobile testing units. It also contains 
more than $15 billion to speed up the distribution and administration of
 COVID-19 vaccines across the country. Another $1 billion would go to 
boost vaccine confidence. And $10 billion would be used to boost the 
supply of medical devices and equipment to combat the virus under the 
Defense Production Act.
HEALTH CARE
Parts
 of the legislation advance longstanding Democratic priorities like 
increasing coverage under the Obama-era Affordable Care Act. Financial 
assistance for ACA premiums would become considerably more generous and a
 greater number of solid middle-class households would qualify. Though 
the sweetened subsidies last only through the end of 2022, they will 
lower the cost of coverage and are expected to boost the number of 
people enrolled. 
The
 measure also dangles more money in front of a dozen states, mainly in 
the South, that have not yet taken up the Medicaid expansion that is 
available under the ACA to cover more low-income adults. Whether such a 
sweetener would be enough to start wearing down longstanding Republican 
opposition to Medicaid expansion is uncertain.
The
 bill would also provide abut $3 billion for states to help address 
mental health and substance use disorders, which have been exacerbated 
by the pandemic. More than $14 billion is directed toward increased 
support for the Department of Veterans Affairs.
BIGGER TAX BREAKS FOR HOUSEHOLDS WITH AND WITHOUT KIDS
Under
 current law, most taxpayers can reduce their federal income tax bill by
 up to $2,000 per child. In a significant change, the bill would 
increase the tax break to $3,000 for every child age 6 to 17 and $3,600 
for every child under the age of 6. 
The
 legislation also calls for the payments to be delivered monthly instead
 of in a lump sum. If the secretary of the treasury determines that 
isn’t feasible, then the payments are to be made as frequently as 
possible.
Families
 would get the full credit regardless of how little they make in a year,
 leading to criticism that the changes would serve as a disincentive to 
work. Add in the $1,400 checks and other items in the proposal, and the 
legislation would reduce the number of children living in poverty by 
more than half, according to the Center on Poverty and Social Policy at 
Columbia University.
The
 bill also significantly expands the Earned Income Tax Credit for 2021 
by making it available to people without children. The credit for low 
and moderate-income adults would be worth $543 to $1,502, depending on 
income and filing status.
RENTAL AND HOMEOWNER ASSISTANCE
The
 bill provides more than $30 billion to help low-income households pay 
their rent and to assist the homeless. States and tribes would receive 
an additional $10 billion for homeowners who are struggling with 
mortgage payments and other housing costs because of the pandemic.