Montgomery

American Recovery and Reinvestment Act Projects


Flourtown-Erdenheim Improvements

Interstate 476 Roadway Reconstruction

Interstate 76/Henderson Road Ramps

Montgomery County Curb Ramps

US 422 Preservation

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act is already helping thousands of children and families in Montgomery County.  Here's how.

How PA BenefitsPeople HelpedExplanation of Benefits
Tax Relief379,174 Taxpaying individuals and households – all but high earners qualify for taxpayer relief
Unemployment Compensation10,700Jobless adults will receive a boost in Unemployment Compensation
Health Insurance for Unemployed24,300Unemployed persons qualify for more help purchasing health insurance
Health Insurance58,707Low income children and adults will continue to have access to health care through Medical Assistance
Children's Health Insurance8,832Children and teenagers will continue to receive their health care through Pennsylvania’s CHIP and Cover All Kids.
Food Assistance26,500Hungry children and adults will receive more help through the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Food Stamps)
* all numbers are estimates for this county

Taxpayer Relief

Individuals earning up to $75,000 will receive a $400 tax credit in 2009 and 2010.  Married couples filing jointly and earning up to $150,000 will receive a $800 tax credit.  379,174 individuals and households in Montgomery County filed state tax returns in 2006 and will likely qualify for a tax credit.

A Better Safety Net for the Unemployed

There were 10,700 unemployed persons in Montgomery County who qualified for unemployment compensation at the beginning of the year.  The Recovery Act will help these Pennsylvanians with a $25 per week increase in unemployment benefits through the rest of the year.  It also provides additional weeks of benefits through December 31, 2009.

Healthcare for Unemployed through COBRA

The Recovery Act will help make health care available to individuals who are involuntarily separated from their jobs.   A new COBRA subsidy will pay 65 percent of the monthly premium for individuals earning less than $145,000 and couples earning less than $290,000.  Individuals who were separated from their employment after September 1, 2008 and before January 1, 2010 will likely be eligible.  There were 24,300 unemployed persons in Montgomery County at the beginning of the year who could potentially benefit from this provision of the Recovery Act. 

Healthcare for Low Income Children and Adults

The Recovery Act will make it possible for low income children, adults and families to continue to receive their health care through the Pennsylvania Medical Assistance program.  58,707 persons in Montgomery County received help from Medical Assistance at the beginning of the year.  Federal support will also help 8,832 children and teens in Montgomery who are not eligible for Medical Assistance receive health care through Pennsylvania’s Cover All Kids program.

Food Stamps (Supplemental Nutritional Assistance Program or SNAP)

The Recovery Act will help low income individuals and families with a 13.69% increase in the maximum Food Stamp benefit (effective April 2009).  It also suspends the 3 month limit on assistance for many unemployed childless adults for the next 18 months.  26,500 persons in Montgomery County received help from Food Stamps at the beginning of the year.