NewsNation

Breaking down the $1.9T coronavirus plan

WASHINGTON (NewsNation Now) — President Joe Biden signed the $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill into law Thursday afternoon, one day after Congress put the final stamp of approval on the bill formally titled the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021.

The bill was passed by the Senate on Saturday then sent back to the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives where it received final congressional approval by a near party line 220-211 vote Wednesday. The $1,400 stimulus check payments are set to go out within days of Biden signing it into law, with the first batch expected to go out to Americans with direct deposit set up with the IRS.


In a nutshell, the package works on three areas: pandemic response, direct relief to struggling families and support for communities and small businesses.

NewsNation’s research team looked into each part of the package. There have been moving parts as Congressional leaders have debated various parts of the bill.

PANDEMIC RESPONSE
$400 billion

Note: The cost above may differ as legislation changes. Once the Congressional Budget Office has final numbers for cost, we will update this article.

DIRECT RELIEF TO STRUGGLING FAMILIES
$1 trillion 

Note: The cost above may differ as legislation changes. Once the Congressional Budget Office has final numbers for cost, we will update this article.

SUPPORT FOR COMMUNITIES AND SMALL BUSINESSES
$440 billion 

Note: The cost above may differ as legislation changes. Once the Congressional Budget Office has final numbers for cost, we will update this article.

Reuters contributed to this report.