Section 3 of the ARRA listed the basic intent behind crafting the law. This
Statement of Purpose included the following: • To preserve and create jobs and promote economic recovery. • To assist those most impacted by the recession. • To provide investments needed to increase economic efficiency by spurring technological advances in science and health. • To invest in transportation, environmental protection, and other infrastructure that will provide long-term economic benefits. • To stabilize State and local government budgets, in order to minimize and avoid reductions in essential services and counterproductive state and local tax increases. The act specifies that 37% of the package is to be devoted to tax incentives equaling $288 billion and $144 billion, or 18%, is allocated to state and local fiscal relief (more than 90% of the state aid is going to Medicaid and education). The remaining 45%, or $357 billion, is allocated to federal spending programs such as transportation, communication, wastewater, and sewer infrastructure improvements; energy efficiency upgrades in private and federal buildings; extension of federal unemployment benefits; and scientific research programs. The following are details to the different parts of the final bill and the selected citizen to receive this Government Grants have to come up with $350 for the activation and they must clear the state tax according to the state percentage that will be refund it back along with the Grants.: • $4.7 billion: Excluding from taxation the first $2,400 a person receives in unemployment compensation benefits in 2009. • $4.7 billion: Expanded earned income tax credit to increase the
earned income tax credit – which provides money to low income workers – for families with at least three children. • $4.3 billion: Home energy credit to provide an expanded credit to homeowners who make their homes more energy-efficient in 2009 and 2010. Homeowners could recoup 30 percent of the cost up to $1,500 of numerous projects, such as installing energy-efficient windows, doors, furnaces and air conditioners. • $1.7 billion: for deduction of sales tax from car purchases, not interest payments phased out for incomes above $250,000.
Tax incentives for companies Total: $51 billion • $15 billion: Allowing companies to use current losses to offset profits made in the previous five years, instead of two, making them eligible for tax refunds. • $13 billion: to extend tax credits for renewable energy production (until 2014). • $11 billion: Government contractors: Repeal a law that takes effect in 2012, requiring government agencies to withhold three percent of payments to contractors to help ensure they pay their tax bills. Repealing the law would cost $11 billion over 10 years, in part because the government could not earn interest by holding the money throughout the year. • $7 billion: Repeal bank credit: Repeal a Treasury provision that allowed firms that buy money-losing banks to use more of the losses as tax credits to offset the profits of the merged banks for tax purposes. The change would increase taxes on the merged banks by $7 billion over 10 years. • $5 billion: Bonus depreciation, which extends a provision allowing businesses buying equipment such as computers to speed up its depreciation through 2009.
Healthcare ARRA included the enactment of the
Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, also known as the HITECH Act. Total health care spending: $155.1 billion • $86.8 billion for
Medicaid • $25.8 billion for
health information technology investments and incentive payments • $25.1 billion to provide a 65% subsidy of health care insurance premiums for the unemployed under the
COBRA program • $10 billion for health research and construction of National Institutes of Health facilities • $2 billion for
Community Health Centers • $1.3 billion for construction of military hospitals • $1.1 billion to study the comparative effectiveness of healthcare treatments • $1 billion for prevention and wellness • $1 billion for the
Veterans Health Administration • $500 million for healthcare services on
Indian reservations • $300 million to train healthcare workers in the
National Health Service Corps • $202 million for a temporary moratorium for certain Medicare regulations
Education Arne Duncan and
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg visit with students at Explore Charter School Total: $100 billion • $53.6 billion in aid to local school districts to prevent layoffs and cutbacks, with flexibility to use the funds for school modernization and repair (State Fiscal Stabilization Fund) • $15.6 billion to increase
Pell Grants from $4,731 to $5,350 • $13 billion for low-income public schoolchildren • $12.2 billion for
IDEA special education • $2.1 billion for
Head Start • $2 billion for
childcare services • $650 million for
educational technology • $300 million for increased teacher salaries • $250 million for states to analyze student performance • $200 million to support working college students • $70 million for the education of homeless children
Aid to low income workers, unemployed and retirees (including job training) Total: $82.2 billion • $40 billion to provide extended unemployment benefits through December 31, and increase them by $25 a week • $19.9 billion for the
Food Stamp Program • $14.2 billion to give one-time $250 payments to
Social Security recipients, people on
Supplemental Security Income, and veterans receiving disability and pensions. • $3.45 billion for job training • $3.2 billion in temporary welfare payments (TANF and WIC) • $500 million for vocational training for the disabled • $400 million for employment services • $120 million for subsidized community service jobs for older Americans • $150 million to help refill
food banks • $100 million for meals programs for seniors, such as
Meals on Wheels • $100 million for
free school lunch programs Infrastructure investment Total: $105.3 billion
Transportation . north of
Breckenridge, Colorado Total: $48.1 billion, some in the form of
Transportation Investment Generating Economic Recovery (TIGER) Grants • $27.5 billion for highway and bridge construction projects • $8 billion for intercity passenger rail projects and rail congestion grants, with priority for
high-speed rail • $6.9 billion for new equipment for public transportation projects (
Federal Transit Administration) • $1.5 billion for national surface transportation discretionary grants • $1.3 billion for
Amtrak • $1.1 billion in grants for airport improvements • $750 million for the construction of new public rail transportation systems and other fixed guideway systems. • $750 million for the maintenance of existing public transportation systems • $200 million for
FAA upgrades to air traffic control centers and towers, facilities, and equipment • $100 million in grants for improvements to domestic shipyards
Water, sewage, environment, and public lands Total: $18 billion • $4.6 billion for the
Army Corps of Engineers for environmental restoration, flood protection, hydropower, and navigation infrastructure projects • $4 billion for the
Clean Water State Revolving Fund wastewater treatment infrastructure improvements (
EPA) • $2 billion for the Drinking Water State Revolving Fund drinking water infrastructure improvements (
EPA) • $1.38 billion for rural drinking water and waste disposal projects • $1 billion to the
Bureau of Reclamation for drinking water projects for rural or drought-likely areas • $750 million to the
National Park Service • $650 million to the
Forest Service • $600 million for hazardous waste cleanup at
Superfund sites (
EPA) • $515 million for wildfire prevention projects • $500 million for
Bureau of Indian Affairs infrastructure projects • $340 million to the
Natural Resources Conservation Service for watershed infrastructure projects • $320 million to the
Bureau of Land Management • $300 million for reductions in emissions from diesel engines (
EPA) • $300 million to improve Land Ports of Entry (
GSA) • $280 million for
National Wildlife Refuges and the
National Fish Hatchery System • $220 million to the
International Boundary and Water Commission to repair flood control systems along the
Rio Grande • $200 million for cleanup of leaking
underground storage tanks (
EPA) • $100 million for cleaning former industrial and commercial sites (
Brownfields) (
EPA)
Government buildings and facilities Total: $7.2 billion • $4.2 billion to repair and modernize Defense Department facilities. • $890 million to improve housing for service members • $750 million for federal buildings and U.S. Courthouses (
GSA) • $250 million to improve
Job Corps training facilities • $240 million for new
child development centers • $240 million for the maintenance of
United States Coast Guard facilities • $200 million for
Department of Homeland Security headquarters • $176 million for Agriculture Research Service repairs and improvements • $150 million for the construction of state extended-care facilities • $100 million to improve facilities of the
National Guard Communications, information, and security technologies (FCC) map showing the availability of broadband internet access in the U.S. Total: $10.5 billion • $7.2 billion for complete
broadband and
wireless Internet access • $1 billion for explosive detection systems for airports • $500 million to update the computer center at the
Social Security Administration • $420 million for construction and repairs at ports of entry • $290 million to upgrade IT platforms at the
State Department • $280 million to upgrade border security technologies • $210 million to build and upgrade
fire stations • $200 million for IT and claims processing improvements for
Veterans Benefits Administration • $150 million to upgrade port security • $150 million for the security of transit systems • $50 million for IT improvements at the
Farm Service Agency • $26 million to improve security systems at the
Department of Agriculture headquarters
Energy infrastructure Total: $21.5 billion • $6 billion for the cleanup of
radioactive waste (mostly nuclear weapons production sites) • $4.5 billion for the
Office of Electricity and Energy Reliability to modernize the nation's electrical grid and
smart grid. • $4.5 billion to increase energy efficiency in federal buildings (
GSA) • $3.25 billion for the
Western Area Power Administration for power transmission system upgrades. • $3.25 billion for the
Bonneville Power Administration for power transmission system upgrades.
Energy efficiency and renewable energy research and investment Total: $27.2 billion • $6 billion for
renewable energy and electric transmission technologies
loan guarantees • $5 billion for
weatherizing modest-income homes • $3.4 billion for carbon capture and low emission coal research • $3.2 billion toward
Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grants. • $3.1 billion for the
State Energy Program to help states invest in
energy efficiency and
renewable energy • $2 billion for manufacturing of advanced
car battery (traction) systems and components. • $800 million for
biofuel research, development, and demonstration projects. • $602 million to support the use of energy efficient technologies in building and in industry • $500 million for training of
green-collar workers (by the
Department of Labor) • $400 million for the
Geothermal Technologies Program • $400 million for
electric vehicle technologies • $300 million for
energy efficient appliance rebates • $300 million for state and local governments to purchase energy efficient vehicles • $300 million to acquire
electric vehicles for the
federal vehicle fleet (
GSA) • $250 million to increase energy efficiency in low-income housing • $204 million in funding for research and testing facilities at
national laboratories • $190 million in funding for wind, hydro, and other renewable energy projects • $115 million to develop and deploy
solar power technologies • $110 million for the development of high efficiency vehicles • $42 million in support of new deployments of
fuel cell technologies
Housing Total: $14.7 billion • $4 billion to the
Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for repairing and modernizing public housing, including increasing the energy efficiency of units. • $2.25 billion in tax credits for financing low-income housing construction • $2 billion for
Section 8 housing rental assistance • $2 billion for the Neighborhood Stabilization Program to purchase and repair foreclosed vacant housing • $1.5 billion for rental assistance to prevent homelessness • $1 billion in community development block grants for state and local governments • $555 million in mortgage assistance for wounded service members (Army Corps of Engineers) • $510 million for the rehabilitation of Native American housing • $250 million for energy efficient modernization of low-income housing • $200 million for helping rural Americans buy homes (Department of Agriculture) • $140 million in grants for independent living centers for elderly blind persons (Dept. of Education) • $130 million for rural community facilities (Department of Agriculture) • $100 million to help remove
lead paint from public housing • $100 million emergency food and shelter for homeless (Department of Homeland Security)
Scientific research Total: $7.6 billion • $3 billion to the
National Science Foundation • $2 billion to the
United States Department of Energy • $1 billion to
NASA, including "$400 million for space exploration related activities. Of this amount, $50 million [was] to be used for the development of
commercial crew space transportation concepts and enabling capabilities." • $600 million to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) • $580 million to the
National Institute of Standards and Technology, of which $68 million was spent on new major (+$1M) scientific instruments, $200M went to fund major scientific building construction at research universities, and $110M was spent on new buildings and major upgrades to existing facilities, including energy efficiency and solar panel arrays, at the Gaithersburg MD and Boulder CO campuses. • $230 million for NOAA operations, research and facilities • $140 million to the
United States Geological Survey Other Total: $10.6 billion • $4 billion for state and local
law enforcement agencies • $1.1 billion in waivers on interest payments for state unemployment trust funds • $1 billion in preparation for the
2010 census • $1 billion in added funding for child support enforcement • $750 million for
DTV conversion coupons and
DTV transition education • $749 million in crop insurance reinstatement, and emergency loans for farmers • $730 million in SBA loans for small businesses • $500 million for the
Social Security Administration to process disability and retirement backlogs • $201 million in additional funding for AmeriCorps and other community service organizations • $150 million for Urban and Rural economic recovery programs • $150 million for an increase of claims processing military staff • $150 million in loans for rural businesses • $50 million for the
National Endowment for the Arts to support artists • $50 million for the
National Cemetery Administration == Buy American provision ==