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How the economic stimulus plan could affect you

Sat Feb 14, 2009 9:30 AM EST
politics, what, stimulus, who, stakes, gets
The Associated Press
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— An examination of how the economic stimulus plan will affect Americans.

___

Taxes:

The recovery package has tax breaks for families that send a child to college, purchase a new car, buy a first home or make the ones they own more energy efficient.

Millions of workers can expect to see about $13 extra in their weekly paychecks, starting around June, from a new $400 tax credit to be doled out through the rest of the year. Couples would get up to $800. In 2010, the credit would be about $7.70 a week, if it is spread over the entire year.

The $1,000 child tax credit would be extended to more low-income families that don't make enough money to pay income taxes, and poor families with three or more children will get an expanded Earned Income Tax Credit.

Middle-income and wealthy taxpayers will be spared from paying the Alternative Minimum Tax, which was designed 40 years ago to make sure wealthy taxpayers pay at least some tax, but was never indexed for inflation. Congress fixes it each year, usually in the fall.

First-time homebuyers who purchase their homes before Dec. 1 would be eligible for an $8,000 tax credit, and people who buy new cars before the end of the year can write off the sales taxes.

Homeowners who add energy-efficient windows, furnaces and air conditioners can get a tax credit to cover 30 percent of the costs, up to a total of $1,500. College students — or their parents — are eligible for tax credits of up to $2,500 to help pay tuition and related expenses in 2009 and 2010.

Those receiving unemployment benefits this year wouldn't pay any federal income taxes on the first $2,400 they receive.

___

Health insurance:

Many workers who lose their health insurance when they lose their jobs will find it cheaper to keep that coverage while they look for work.

Right now, most people working for medium and large employers can continue their coverage for 18 months under the COBRA program when they lose their job. It's expensive, often over $1,000 a month, because they pay the share of premiums once covered by their employer as well as their own share from the old group plan.

Under the stimulus package, the government will pick up 65 percent of the total cost of that premium for the first nine months.

Lawmakers initially proposed to help workers from small companies, too, who don't generally qualify for COBRA coverage. But that fell through. The idea was to have Washington pay to extend Medicaid to them.

COBRA applies to group plans at companies employing at least 20 people. The subsidies will be offered to those who lost their jobs from Sept. 1 to the end of this year.

Those who were put out of work after September but didn't elect to have COBRA coverage at the time will have 60 days to sign up.

The plan offers $87 billion to help states administer Medicaid. That could slow or reverse some of the steps states have taken to cut the program.

___

Infrastructure:

Highways repaved for the first time in decades. Century-old waterlines dug up and replaced with new pipes. Aging bridges, stressed under the weight of today's SUVs, reinforced with fresh steel and concrete.

But the $90 billion is a mere down payment on what's needed to repair and improve the country's physical backbone. And not all economists agree it's an effective way to add jobs in the long term, or stimulate the economy.

___

Energy:

Homeowners looking to save energy, makers of solar panels and wind turbines and companies hoping to bring the electric grid into the computer age all stand to reap major benefits.

The package contains more than $42 billion in energy-related investments from tax credits to homeowners to loan guarantees for renewable energy projects and direct government grants for makers of wind turbines and next-generation batteries.

There's a 30 percent tax credit of up to $1,500 for the purchase of a highly efficient residential air conditioners, heat pumps or furnaces. The credit also can be used by homeowners to replace leaky windows or put more insulation into the attic. About $300 million would go for rebates to get people to buy efficient appliances.

The package includes $20 billion aimed at "green" jobs to make wind turbines, solar panels and improve energy efficiency in schools and federal buildings. It includes $6 billion in loan guarantees for renewable energy projects as well as tax breaks or direct grants covering 30 percent of wind and solar energy investments. Another $5 billion is marked to help low-income homeowners make energy improvements.

About $11 billion goes to modernize and expand the nation's electric power grid and $2 billion to spur research into batteries for future electric cars.

___

Schools:

A main goal of education spending in the stimulus bill is to help keep teachers on the job.

Nearly 600,000 jobs in elementary and secondary schools could be eliminated by state budget cuts over the next three years, according to a study released this past week by the University of Washington. Fewer teachers means higher class sizes, something that districts are scrambling to prevent.

The stimulus sets up a $54 billion fund to help prevent or restore state budget cuts, of which $39 billion must go toward kindergarten through 12th grade and higher education. In addition, about $8 billion of the fund could be used for other priorities, including modernization and renovation of schools and colleges, though how much is unclear, because Congress decided not to specify a dollar figure.

The Education Department will distribute the money as quickly as it can over the next couple of years.

And it adds $25 billion extra to No Child Left Behind and special education programs, which help pay teacher salaries, among other things.

This money may go out much more slowly; states have five years to spend the dollars, and they have a history of spending them slowly. In fact, states don't spend all the money; they return nearly $100 million to the federal treasury every year.

The stimulus bill also includes more than $4 billion for the Head Start and Early Head Start early education programs and for child care programs.

___

National debt:

One thing about the president's $790 billion stimulus package is certain: It will jack up the federal debt.

Whether or not it succeeds in producing jobs and taming the recession, tomorrow's taxpayers will end up footing the bill.

Forecasters expect the 2009 deficit — for the budget year that began last Oct 1 — to hit $1.6 trillion including new stimulus and bank-bailout spending. That's about three times last year's shortfall.

The torrents of red ink are being fed by rising federal spending and falling tax revenues from hard-hit businesses and individuals.

The national debt — the sum of all annual budget deficits — stands at $10.7 trillion. Or about $36,000 for every man, woman and child in the U.S.

Interest payments alone on the national debt will near $500 billion this year. It's already the fourth-largest federal expenditure, after Medicare-Medicaid, Social Security and defense.

This will affect us all directly for years, as well as our children and possibly grandchildren, in higher taxes and probably reduced government services. It will also force continued government borrowing, increasingly from China, Japan, Britain, Saudi Arabia and other foreign creditors.

___

Environment:

The package includes $9.2 billion for environmental projects at the Interior Department and the Environmental Protection Agency. The money would be used to shutter abandoned mines on public lands, to help local governments protect drinking water supplies, and to erect energy-efficient visitor centers at wildlife refuges and national parks.

The Interior Department estimates that its portion of the work would generate about 100,000 jobs over the next two years.

Yet the plan will only make a dent in the backlog of cleanups facing the EPA and the long list of chores at the country's national parks, refuges and other public lands. It would be more like a down payment.

When it comes to national parks, the plan sets aside $735 million for road repairs and maintenance. But that's a fraction of the $9 billion worth of work waiting for funding.

At EPA, the payout is $7.2 billion. The bulk of the money will help local communities and states repair and improve drinking water systems and fund projects that protect bays, rivers and other waterways used as sources of drinking water.

The rest of EPA's cut — $800 million — will be used to clean up leaky gasoline storage tanks and the nation's hazardous waste sites.

___

Police:

The stimulus bill includes plenty of green for those wearing blue.

The compromise bill doles out more than $3.7 billion for police programs, much of which is set aside for hiring new officers.

The law allocates $2 billion for the Byrne Justice Assistance Grant, a program that has funded drug task forces and things such as prisoner rehabilitation and after-school programs.

An additional $1 billion is set aside to hire local police under the Community Oriented Policing Services program. The program, known as COPS grants, paid the salaries of many local police officers and was a "modest contributor" to the decline in crime in the 1990s, according to a 2005 government oversight report.

Both programs had all been eliminated during the Bush administration.

The bill also includes $225 million for general criminal justice grants for things such as youth mentoring programs, $225 million for Indian tribe law enforcement, $125 million for police in rural areas, $100 million for victims of crimes, $50 million to fight Internet crimes against children and $40 million in grants for law enforcement along the Mexican border.

___

Higher Education:

The maximum Pell Grant, which helps the lowest-income students attend college, would increase from $4,731 currently to $5,350 starting July 1 and $5,550 in 2010-2011. That would cover three-quarters of the average cost of a four-year college. An extra 800,000 students, or about 7 million, would now get Pell funding.

The stimulus also increases the tuition tax credit to $2,500 and makes it 40 percent refundable, so families who don't earn enough to pay income tax could still get up to $1,000 in extra tuition help.

Computer expenses will now be an allowable expense for 529 college savings plans.

The final package cut $6 billion the House wanted to spend to kick-start building projects on college campuses. But parts of the $54 billion state stabilization fund — with $39 billion set aside for education — can be used for modernizing facilities.

There's also an estimated $15 billion for scientific research, much of which will go to universities. Funding for the National Institutes of Health includes $1.5 billion set aside for university research facilities.

Altogether, the package spends an estimated $32 billion on higher education.

___

The Poor:

More than 37 million Americans live in poverty, and the vast majority of them are in line for extra help under the giant stimulus package. Millions more could be kept from slipping into poverty by the economic lifeline.

People who get food stamps — 30 million and growing — will get more. People drawing unemployment checks — nearly 5 million and growing — would get an extra $25, and keep those checks coming longer. People who get Supplemental Security Income — 7 million poor Americans who are elderly, blind or disabled — would get one-time extra payments of $250.

Many low-income Americans also are likely to benefit from a trifecta of tax credits: expansions to the existing Child Tax Credit and Earned Income Tax Credit, and a new refundable tax credit for workers. Taken together, the three credits are expected to keep more than 2 million Americans from falling into poverty, including more than 800,000 children, according to the private Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

The package also includes a $3 billion emergency fund to provide temporary assistance to needy families. In addition, cash-strapped states will get an infusion of $87 billion for Medicaid, the government health program for poor people, and that should help them avoid cutting off benefits to the needy.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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  • Public Discussion (11)
Randyh

This bill does nothing to get the average American taxpayer to feel comfortable spending money. If they do not spend money, there is no demand for goods and services to infuse businesses which creates jobs. That is what would energize the economy. The commercial sector is what funds the creation and expansion of Government jobs. We will now be destimulating the private sector jobs.

We will have to save or pay off current bills to prepare for my taxes to sky rocket to pay for the massive spending programs and government expansion. What good is tax breaks for families to send a child to college, purchase a new car, buy a first home or make the ones they own more energy efficient? Without jobs, none of those tax breaks will help.

It may be good that our highly ineffective lawmakers have included more benefits for the poor, as all they have done is to create the circumstances to put more U.S. citizens into that category - instead of creating more job opportunities to get them out of it.

All the while, they continue to do nothing about the billions of our tax dollars that fund "free" medical, education and other benefits [social security] for illegal immigrants. A recent study reported that this cost is escalating to a half a trillion dollars annually. Instead of fixing that and investing money into creating jobs, our elected officials have opted to quickly throw billions or trillions of our tax dollars into the wind and misrepresent it as a Stimulas Bill.

  • 2 votes
Reply#1 - Sat Feb 14, 2009 10:36 AM EST
Doug-375144

Nothing appears in for folks retired or nearing retirement except our 401k's are tanked by mortgage bank greed and a Dem plan pushed by Barney and friends to get all those who should not have been given loans into houses that the rest of us are now paying for . Where's the bailout for people who paid their mortgages and were responsible.

It's just the pelosi / reid/ o' pork pie and a big steaming pile it is.

No help unless you're illegal or a deadbeat.

Regular working families get 8-15 dollars a week WOW !

  • 3 votes
Reply#2 - Sat Feb 14, 2009 11:57 AM EST
Dan-470975

OMG!!!

The largest welfare giveaway ever! S.O.C.I.A.L.I.S.M
Illegals will love this guy!

The Poor:

More than 37 million Americans live in poverty, and the vast majority of them are in line for extra help under the giant stimulus package. Millions more could be kept from slipping into poverty by the economic lifeline.

People who get food stamps — 30 million and growing — will get more. People drawing unemployment checks — nearly 5 million and growing — would get an extra $25, and keep those checks coming longer. People who get Supplemental Security Income — 7 million poor Americans who are elderly, blind or disabled — would get one-time extra payments of $250.

Many low-income Americans also are likely to benefit from a trifecta of tax credits: expansions to the existing Child Tax Credit and Earned Income Tax Credit, and a new refundable tax credit for workers. Taken together, the three credits are expected to keep more than 2 million Americans from falling into poverty, including more than 800,000 children, according to the private Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.

The package also includes a $3 billion emergency fund to provide temporary assistance to needy families. In addition, cash-strapped states will get an infusion of $87 billion for Medicaid, the government health program for poor people, and that should help them avoid cutting off benefits to the needy.

  • 1 vote
Reply#3 - Sat Feb 14, 2009 12:15 PM EST
Dems-4-Fairness

Just remember this day in history. It feels like the moment on a rollercoaster just before the drop. With cell phones, the internet, individual entitlement and isolationism, Social Security deficit not far off, a looming national debt, two 700+ billion plans, a war on terror, global economic crisis, climate changes, heated political debate, global racism, religions vs. other religions vs. non-religious, and nuclear bombs just to name a few.

Wow. What a generation.

    Reply#4 - Sat Feb 14, 2009 5:57 PM EST
    MHammer

    I am attaching a link that breakdowns this attrocious package of spending by category. Scroll over each block and the department or prgram getting the money will show with the amount of money designated:

    http://www.propublica.org/special/stimulus-bill-treemap

    My question is this, is the money being given to ACORN the payoff for their support of OBAMA during the election? If it is, isn't that Pay for Play, the same thing Blagoivich has been impeached for in Illinois and now faces indictment and prosecution? You make up your own minds.

    • 1 vote
    Reply#5 - Sat Feb 14, 2009 7:54 PM EST
    John Franklin Mason

    How the economic stimulus plan could affect you

    Bottom line is the economic stimulus plan helps everyone by keeping the Nation from going bankrupt. During the past eight years President Bush and Congress enacted economic stimulus plans three times. The first in 2001 to address the then current recession, the second in 2007, the third in 2008 and referred too as an Economic Bailout of America's failing and failed financial institutions.

    Notwithstanding claims of economic growth during the past eight years we are where we are today facing, if not the biggest, than the second largest challenge to America's economic health ever. Even were we to concede that the country experienced a period of respectable wealth and growth over the past eight years due to the efforts and policies of the previous Republican administration and Congress, can you ignore those polices have now proved to not have legs and in fact have brought America to it's knee's?

    You can point fingers at a previous Democrat Presidency with a majority Republican Congress and even blame what Rush Limbaugh referred too as "weak and ineffective" Democrats during George Bush's tenure. Republicans continue to blunder, blame and deny.

    However, the handwriting is on the wall and it says your benefactors who over the past eight years have filled your political coffers to overflowing, now have their corporate hands out for a bailout and bequest of you to protest in earnest in the name of capitalism a pending decimation of their compensation. Damn the women and the children, captains of industry and officers first you say?

    • 1 vote
    Reply#6 - Sun Feb 15, 2009 12:30 AM EST
    Wizeguy

    can you ignore those polices have now proved to not have legs and in fact have brought America to it's knee's?

    Two years ago I said to a buddy "the economy sucks". He jumped all over me saying are you crazy the stock market is rocking the best it's ever been. I said hey it's a house of cards no one manufacturing anything here it's just rich guys pushing paper around it's all imaginary money. Well my imaginary interest in my 401K is gone, my personal portfolio (a few thousand in stock) is now worth pennies. I plan to retire in 16 months I would have been able to pay off the balance on my house and car. Looks like I will now need to work at least part time to make ends meet. Some retirement! Yes I have been brought to my knees, along with the rest of the working class.

    • 1 vote
    #6.1 - Sun Feb 15, 2009 7:56 AM EST
    Reply
    rebel-conf

    we can all thank the obomber maniacs for this my company is gonna drop 80 bucks outta my check and wow obamee is gonna give me 13 dollars wow thanks if i was an illegal id be rich this president and liberals suck.

      Reply#7 - Sun Feb 15, 2009 1:41 AM EST
      lvh-865640

      I may me reading too much into this but........?

      "Language in the health care sections of the “stimulus bill” stipulates that the Department of H.H.S. will provide “appropriate information to help guide medical decisions at the time and place of care,” and also allows for “penalties” to be assessed to physicians who “spend too much” on individual patients. Essentially, we now have the beginnings of a governmental agency that eventually will, by force of law, determine which persons will be eligible for health care, and what treatment they will receive."

        Reply#8 - Sun Feb 15, 2009 7:58 AM EST
        Sandy - MI

        "COBRA applies to group plans at companies employing at least 20 people. The subsidies will be offered to those who lost their jobs from Sept. 1 to the end of this year."  So since I lost my job in July that means I still have to pay the full COBRA payment????  That is not right.

          Reply#9 - Sun Feb 15, 2009 11:59 AM EST
          B-online

          I think I know how the stimulus bill will affect me. It's a kick in the pants to at least *try* to work harder to pay higher taxes so everyone else can be either richer (to not have to work harder) or poorer (incapable of working harder but still needing to be taken care of).

          Don't know how it will all work out. Pretty sure that those in the middle will be stuck again. Met an old employer the other night whom we worked for for over 15 years to make *wealthy*. He sold his company (the one we worked to help become wildly successful) several years ago. What is he doing now? He told us that every week, he flies down to the Bahamas to spend M-F on his yacht there. He only comes back to party at home on the weekends. Rough life! We're still here every day trying to scrape out a life. I've never been in a limo; never been on a yacht either.

          Guess life's little rewards due to our own dedication, trustworthiness and time...go to someone else. Ain't that America?

            Reply#10 - Sun Feb 15, 2009 8:46 PM EST
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