Originally Posted by
ShaolinLueb
The House measure had been estimated to cost $825 billion, but the Congressional Budget Office updated the bill's price tag to $816 billion after accountants recalculated its cost. That total could still rise, however, if the House passes a Democratic amendment that would add $3 billion for mass transit.
It already includes about $550 billion in spending and roughly $275 billion in tax cuts in hopes of spurring the economy and helping those directly affected. Much of the spending would be for items such as health care,
jobless benefits, food stamps and other programs that benefit victims of the downturn
god forbid they spend it on the people and not the corporations

Yes, those are the people they need to spend it on.