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$214 Billion in Obama's Stimulus Money Is Still Out There: 10 Ways You Can Benefit from It

By Aaron Glantz, New America Media. Posted October 13, 2009.


There are countless government programs that give citizens access to money earmarked to boosting the economy. Here's where the money is being spent.
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Eight months since President Barack Obama signed his $787 billion stimulus package, the government has obligated only 48 percent of the money, and $214 billion in stimulus cash is still available to families, students, nonprofits, local governments and small businesses. Here are 10 ways to access the stimulus.

1) Weatherize your home
If you want to make your home more energy efficient, the stimulus package sets aside $5 billion for the Department of Energy’s Weatherization Assistance Program. The average family can make up to $6,500 in energy efficiency upgrades. It’s available to everyone who makes under 200 percent of the federal poverty level - about $44,000 a year for a family of four. Contact your state energy office, which will refer you to a local nonprofit who will visit your house and do an energy audit before carrying out the work.

2) Get Extended Unemployment Benefits
As a result of the Recovery Act, everyone on unemployment will be receiving $25 extra each week. The stimulus package also suspends federal income tax on the first $2,400 in unemployment compensation that unemployed workers collect in 2009. The stimulus package also extends by 13 weeks the amount of time an unemployed worker can receive cash assistance.


3) Get the Government to Pay Your Health Insurance
If you’re laid off from your job between September 1, 2008 and December 31, 2009 and you had health insurance with your old employer, the government will pay 65 percent of your health insurance premiums for nine months. This COBRA subsidy is available to most laid-off workers with a family income of under $250,000 – although in many states it does not extend to companies with fewer than 20 workers. Submit a claim for benefits with your health plan. web site The Department of Labor web site on COBRA and the Recovery Act has information.


4) Buy an Appliance and Get $200
Buy an Energy Star-qualified appliance and get up to $200. Dishwashers, refrigerators and washing machines are covered by the Recovery Act’s $300 million grant State Energy Efficient Appliance Rebate Program. Details of how the program will be administered by each state are still being ironed out.

5) Buy a House and Get $8,000
If you’re a first time home buyer – or if you buy a house and have not owned your own home for at least three years – the IRS will send you a check for $8,000. All you have to do is fill out an IRS Form 5405 and include an amended copy of your 2008 tax return. Then, in about six weeks, the IRS will send you a check in the mail. This credit applies to purchases that close after April 8, 2008, and before Dec. 1, 2009.

6) Get a Small Business Loan
The American Recovery Capital loan program offers interest-free loans of up to $35,000 to help businesses with existing debt for up to six months. The loans carry a 100 percent guaranty from the Small Business Administration (SBA) to the lender, and require no fees paid to SBA.

7) Get Money for College
The Recovery Act appropriated $17 billion for Pell Grants , which increased the amount of money for each grant from $4,850 to $5,350 in 2009 and $5,550 in 2010. You can apply for this benefit with your campus financial aid office. There’s also a new American Opportunity Tax Credit of up to $2,500, which can be used for education-related expenses and an additional $200 million for work-study programs to help students find jobs on campus.

8) Get Trained for a Green Job
The Recovery Act sets aside a large pot of money for green jobs training in environmentally sustainable fields. The advocacy group Green for All has put together a Recovery Resource Center that lists opportunities created by the stimulus.

9) Get Help Paying Your Transit Bill
Under the Recovery Act, you can set aside up to $230 a month from your paycheck tax-free for the cost of commuting to work on public transit (the previous benefit was $120 a month). Your employer must enroll in the program for you to claim this benefit. Tell your boss or supervisor they’ll also save money because they won’t have to pay payroll tax on the money you spend on your commute.

10) Eat
If you’re having trouble putting food on the table, you can get more money for groceries from the federal government. Families eligible for Food Stamps can receive on average $80 more per month because of the Recovery Act.


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See more stories tagged with: economy, obama, stimulus

Aaron Glantz is the author of two upcoming books on Iraq: The War Comes Home: Washington's Battle Against America's Veterans (UC Press) and Winter Soldier Iraq and Afghanistan: Eyewitness Accounts of the Occupations (Haymarket). He edits the website Liked this story? Get top stories in your inbox each week from Belief! Sign up now »


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What about foreclosure assistance?
Posted by: beachcomberT on Oct 13, 2009 3:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Too bad the gov't anti-foreclosure program is so negligible it doesn't even merit a place on this checklist. Even the Obama administration admits it's reaching only 15 or 20 percent of those at risk.

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BS
Posted by: Lucidity on Oct 13, 2009 7:13 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Most of the government programs are about as useful as the government itself.

1. Weatherize your home: Yeah with what? Most of us are flat broke.
2. Get Extended Unemployment Benefits: An extra $25 for 13 weeks. Wow!
3. Get the Government to Pay Your Health Insurance: 65% of $800 is $280 a month. The average unemployed person can not afford to pay $280 a month for insurance.
4. Buy an Appliance and Get $200: Again, with what? Most people are struggling to put food on the table.
5. Buy a House and Get $8,000: How many first time buyers have the money for the down payment of a house?
6. Get a Small Business Loan: Are banks even lending?
7. Get Money for College: I’ll give the feds credit for this one.
8. Get Trained for a Green Job: Yeah where?
9. Get Help Paying Your Transit Bill: Have fun getting your employer to comply.
10. Eat: Try it and you’ll soon discover the meaning of government red-tape.

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» RE: BS Posted by: clvngodess
» yep, total bs Posted by: undrgrndgirl
The continued fallacy that this money belongs to the Obaminator.
Posted by: franklyspanking on Oct 13, 2009 8:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It belongs to you and I and the rest of the folks who still pay federal income tax.

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And if you weren't laid off...?
Posted by: MT512 on Oct 13, 2009 10:14 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some aren't "fortunate" enough to be officially laid off. Some are technically "fired" for reasons other than poor performance or behavior. I wonder if this is common, as a way for employers to avoid giving out their usual severance packages.

Allegorically... Upper management tells a crew of master carpenters and their many apprentices to build a big house on a sandy beach. The master carpenters sternly warn against it, but to no avail. They all do the best they can, but of course in time the house sinks and falls. Upper management, now furious, decides the solution is to fire select apprentices, who obviously sabotaged the whole project. Here, I'm an "apprentice" who just did what he was told, though not as speedily as the masters.

After ignoring the writing on the wall, they find scapegoats and then change the writing. I guess it's the GWBush "We create our own reality" approach to management.

If we just had universal health care, we'd all be so much more mobile, to change jobs, locations, careers. The personally rewarding jobs most often have no health benefits.

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My own list, with serious hat tips to Lucidity who beat me to it
Posted by: DaBear on Oct 13, 2009 10:46 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The implied classism and owning-class kool-aid in the list is shocking and very revealing (not Glantz's fault, it's the author of the stimulus' fault). The disconnect with lived-reality is classic owning-class fuckheadedness.

1. Weatherize your home: Only works if you own and don't rent. Just try to get your landlord to agree to anything energy efficient. Without meaningful tenants rights in this nation, "weatherizing" structures is bullshit. Thanks, massa.

2. Get Extended Unemployment Benefits: Great! Only works for folks who were in the system. Most small biz employees and PT workers aren't. UEB's always go back to your last full-time employer (and then only the one that paid into the system). If that was too far back or doesn't apply, you get no "benefits" in the first place. Extensions to imaginary things don't pay the bills, nice try rich boyz.

3. Get the Government to Pay Your Health Insurance: A family of four in SoCal has to pay $1340 for the cheapest plan that covers even a few things. Mainly even while paying that amount (the lowest available plan as of this morning in SoCal) you won't be covered for most things and the copays and deductibles render the 65% "assistance" utterly devoid of any real meaning. Primarily, the gubbamint will pay for rich people's care, that's the real story. For the rest of us... "don't get sick" is still our universal plan. Thanks, rich fuckers.

4. Buy an Appliance and Get $200: This is a wash. Only available for certain appliances at certain times and most big box stores don't honor the program. Lucidity is right, most people can't swing $200 for anything these days. My 8 year old microwave just burned out. Back to reheating on the stovetop. Piece by piece we'll be in the stone age eventually. Thanks, rich pricks.

5. Buy a House and Get $8,000: They didn't get the memo: MOST OF US DON"T OWN OUR HOMES ANYMORE. They sit vacant while REO and "banks" let them rot. Sub-primes, Foreclosure, ring a bell, rich fuckers? They were your inventions afterall, classholista mofos!

6. Get a Small Business Loan: You have to already have a small business and have debts owed by it. Again, more corporate welfare for those that Have. Thanks, rich brats.

7. Get Money for College: A Pell Grant? You mean that $500 grant that I wasn't eligible for because my parents earned $50 over federal poverty? Again, you have to be in school already to be eligible and then the Pell is just one small portion of recently significantly increased tuition. More corporate welfare for the privileged. Thank you, rich classholes.

8. Get Trained for a Green Job: Um, the operative work being "job" I wonder WTF that is. There are no jobs let alone Green ones. So much for "shovel ready" if you gotta train for one. Nice website though. Thanks again, rich people.

9. Get Help Paying Your Transit Bill: This "stimulus" presumes you have transit to use. Remember, we're in 'Merkuh, land of the megaSUV/auto? Mostly "transit" is a semi-daily singular route to nowhere, through nowhere at times no one can use it. You think Julita from El Salvador is going to get "her missus" to do the paperwork to cover the monthly Metro pass so "her girl" can come clean "the missus'" mega-mcmansion? Yeah, thought so. Thanks, rich morons.

10. Eat: If you earn more than $40K for a family of four in SoCal (Um, if you earn that little you're a.k.a. "homeless" given that rent is about that much on ave--official local poverty in my county is $58K... and that still won't pay rent or even qualify you to be able to have the glorious privilege of renting). You can't get food stamps if you can pay rent. Sorry, nice try, rich bleeding hearts. We're still fuckin' hungry....

....and we know where the rich people live.

178-fuckin'-9

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» You nailed it! Posted by: Lucidity
Trend toward contract labor
Posted by: lasirene on Oct 13, 2009 12:10 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
In the last few years there has been a big shift from regular paid employee to contract labor. I was a real estate appraiser for a few years and that's how I was paid. When the system just got too fraudulent and vomitous to sleep at night - and because lenders were no longer paying us on time if ever, I could not claim unemployment bennies, even though I was paying taxes. I think unemployment rates are being totally underreported due to this trend.

A

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Thanks DaBear & Lucidity
Posted by: bonapartist on Oct 14, 2009 2:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Really nothing more to say after you guys commented.

On the plus side, if you can call it plus side, the next economic crisis will hit harder and sooner. By then there might be enough people ready to get pitchforks and torches and visit the overlords.

The trick is surviving by then and it ain't easy.

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well done, lucidity
Posted by: Juven on Oct 17, 2009 3:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
excellent coverage of all points!

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