The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act: Opportunities for Texas and Tarrant County

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The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act: Opportunities for Texas and Tarrant County April 14, 2009 Eva DeLuna Castro, deluna.castro@cppp.org

American Recovery & Reinvestment Act $787 billion over ten years: Public Law 111-5, signed February 17, 2009 also called Stimulus or Recovery package Purpose: to invest in health & human services, education, infrastructure, energy, and information technology, create jobs, and spur an economic recovery How ARRA encourages job creation/recovery: individuals have more to spend because of direct payments or tax code changes; federal, state, and local governments can maintain/expand public services

Texas Impact of ARRA Total estimated for Texas: $38 billion Making Work Pay Tax Credit Other state govt. spending Infrastructure (highw ays, w ater/w astew ater, schools) EITC Expansion Child Tax Credit expansion AMT and other tax cuts Other federal spending, not thru state govt. Education (including Stabilization Grants) Unemployment Insurance Medicaid

Selected Education Provisions from Recovery Legislation: $215 million for Child Care and Development Block Grant. $188 million in non-targeted funds (enough to serve about 20,480 children a year); $10 million to improve quality of toddler/infant care; $18 million for other quality improvements (or regulation/licensing of providers). Translates to $12-$13 million more each for Tarrant County and North Central workforce areas (assuming 09 shares/state set-asides). $59 million for Head Start; similar amount through competitive grants for Early Head Start

Selected Education Provisions from Recovery Legislation: $1.2 billion for Title 1 Grants. $945 million in grants to local school districts; $285 million for school improvement. $1 billion for Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Part B-State grants, $946 million, Preschool grants, $24 million, and Part C-Infants and Toddlers, $39 million $3.5 million for Education of Homeless Children and Youth.

By Tarrant County ISD: Title I, A & D (Apr 7 est.) IDEA Part B Preschool (Apr 9) IDEA Part B Formula (Apr 9) Fiscal Stabilization Arlington ISD $10.8 $.323 $12.5 $41.6 Azle ISD 0.4.028 1.1 1.5 Birdville ISD 2.4.113 4.4 9.1 Carroll ISD -.034 1.3 - Castleberry ISD 0.5.019 0.7 1.8 Crowley ISD 0.8.074 2.9 2.9 Eagle Mt. Saginaw ISD 0.3.074 2.8 1.3 Everman ISD 0.6.027 1.0 2.1 Fort Worth ISD 24.7.425 16.4 94.6 Grapevine-Colleyville ISD 0.5.063 2.5 2.0 Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD 2.2.103 4.0 8.2 Keller ISD 0.6.139 5.4 2.3 Kennedale ISD 0.2.015 0.6 0.7 Lake Worth ISD 0.3.015 0.6 0.9 Mansfield ISD 1.0.148 5.7 3.9 White Settlement ISD 0.4.029 1.1 1.7

Selected Income Provisions from Recovery Legislation: $170 million for Workforce Investment Act (WIA) Training & Employment Services. In fiscal 2010: additional $82 million for youth programs, $53.8 million for dislocated workers, $34 million for adults (of which $10 million goes to Skills Development Fund, not local workforce boards). Tarrant County workforce area: $3.2 million more for Dislocated Workers, $1.3 m for Adults, $4.3 m for Youth North Central: $3.9 million more for Dislocated Workers, $1.2 m for Adults, $4.2 m for Youth (assuming 09 shares/state set-asides).

Selected Income Provisions from Recovery Legislation: $503 million more for Texans from Earned Income Tax Credit. (Increase EITC for working families with three or more children) $1.5 billion for Texas families from increased eligibility for the refundable portion of Child Tax Credit.

Selected Income Provisions from Recovery Legislation: Up to $296 million in supplemental funding for TANF. $52.7 million because supplemental grant is continued through 2010; another $243 million over two years contingent on increased cash assistance caseloads or benefits. Feb. 2009: 4,358 TANF recipients in Tarrant County, of whom 3,526 (81%) were children. Avg. monthly benefit per recipient: $72.

Selected Income Provisions from Recovery Legislation: $1.8 billion through 2013 for Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits. Starting April 2009, a 13.6% increase in the maximum benefit. Also, $27.6 million for state administration. April 2009: About 152,400 SNAP recipients in Tarrant County, including 89,300 children and 6,500 elderly (65+). Avg. monthly benefit per household: $332.

Selected Health Provisions from Recovery Legislation: $2.5 billion for Community Health Centers (CHCs) As much as $5.45 billion for Texas because of a higher match rate for Medicaid. All states get 6.2% increase from Oct 2008 to Dec 2010, with larger increase for states with higher unemployment rates. $1 billion for preventive care $500 million for Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) $1.3 billion for Transitional Medical Assistance for families leaving TANF. $24.7 billion for COBRA Premium Assistance

Selected Other Provisions from Recovery Legislation: $48.2 million for the Community Services Block Grant (CSBG). Two-year increase in grants to local Community Action agencies to administer such programs as Head Start, LIHEAP, housing, emergency food, etc. $200 million for AmeriCorps programs nationwide $50 million nationwide for capacity-building grants to nonprofits. To expand delivery of social services to people and communities affected by the recession.

More Information

Grant Information Advanced Search: narrow results down to ARRA grants for nonprofits (501(c)(3) or not), or by federal agency

Other Federal Legislation Omnibus Appropriations Act of 2009 FY 2010 Appropriations Bills Presidential Budget (outline) State Children s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) Other policy and tax bills

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