Help for families
- The bill would provide direct payments of up to $1,200 for most individuals and $2,400 for most married couples filing jointly with an extra $500 for each child.
- Assistance would start to phase out for individuals earning more than $75,000 and for couples with more than $150,000 in income.
- Unemployment insurance benefits would be expanded, increasing the maximum benefit by $600 a week for up to four months. Benefits would be available to workers who are part-time, self-employed or part of the gig economy. People who are still unemployed after state benefits end could get an additional 13 weeks of help.
- Food assistance programs would get a boost as would programs to help low-income households avoid eviction and a program to improve internet access in rural areas.
- Homeowners with federally-backed mortgages would be protected from foreclosures for as long as 180 days.
- Students with federal loans could suspend payments until October.
- Students receiving Pell grants who have to drop out because of coronavirus would not be penalized.
Help for small businesses
- The bill would give small businesses access to a nearly $350 billion loan program to cover monthly expenses like payroll, rent and utilities. The loans would not have to be repaid if businesses maintained their workforce.
- The eight weeks of assistance would be retroactive to Feb. 15, 2020 to help bring back workers who have already been laid off.
Help for corporations
- The package includes a financial lifeline to the hardest-hit industries, including passenger and cargo airlines. Another pot of money would be available to help other businesses for a combined $500 billion.
- Companies receiving assistance would be barred from raising the pay of certain executives.
- Any company receiving a government loan would be prohibited from buying back stocks while getting assistance as well for an additional year.
- Businesses controlled by the president, vice president, members of Congress and heads of federal agencies are not eligible for loans.
- Companies that kept on workers despite a significant loss of revenue could get a tax credit.
- The bill provides other tax relief to businesses by deferring tax payments, increasing deductibility for interest expenses and allowing immediate expensing of qualified property improvements, especially for the hospitality industry.
- Hospitals and medical centers would get billions to handle surging caseloads.
- Hospitals treating coronavirus patients would also get higher reimbursements form Medicare.
- Hospitals could request accelerated payments from Medicare.
- Across-the-board Medicare cuts that were part of a previous deficit reduction agreement would be temporarily halted.
- Extra funding for the Defense Department includes money to deploy the National Guard and use the Defense Production Act to help fast-track production of needed medical supplies to combat the coronavirus.
- Rules on using and paying for telehealth services would be eased.
- Funding would increase for federal agencies to speed work on therapies and a possible coronavirus vaccine, among other activities.
- When there is a vaccine, Medicare beneficiaries would not have to pay to receive it.
Help for state and local governments
- The package includes $150 billion to help state and local governments, which have had major unanticipated expenses while losing revenue. States would get a minimum amount and other funds would be allocated through a population-based formula.
- Disaster relief funding that state and local governments can access as well as a popular funding program for local governments would also be boosted.
- Child care programs would get a funding boost to help meet emergency staffing needs so health care workers and other critical workers will have child care.
- States, which have been postponing primaries, would get additional funds to make voting safer such as expanding early voting and the ability to vote by mail.
- Public transit agencies, which have lost ridership, would get $25 billion in assistance. Airports and Amtrak would also get billions of dollars of assistance.
- Schools and colleges could access nearly $31 billion to continue to teach students as schools are closed.
- State and local police and fire departments could get help paying for overtime and for medical items like personal protective equipment.
- The deadline for states to meet Real ID requirements for enhanced driver's licenses would be extended a year, to no earlier than October of 2021.
Help for the arts
- Museums, libraries and arts organizations across the country, which have been closing because of the pandemic, could get a boost from grants to state arts and humanities organizations.
- The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, which has been closed until May, would get $25 million so it can reopen its doors once the crisis is over.
- The Smithsonian Institution would get $7.5 million to help with teleworking, deep cleaning and overtime for security, medical staff, and zoo keepers.
Be careful, be safe out there, y'all and STAY HOME.
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