Sunlight Foundation

Introducing Recovery Explorer

More than a year has passed since President Barack Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Federal agencies have been distributing some $787 billion appropriated by the act to jump start the economy. According to Recovery.gov, the Web site that tracks spending under the act, about 40 percent of that money has been spent, sent around the country in the form of contracts, grants, loans, tax benefits and entitlements.

The huge spending bill included funds for a mechanism to track spending under the bill, but getting a sense of which agencies have awarded the most money, or which states are reporting the most jobs funded, or which programs have spent the most money is complex. To help navigate the numbers, the Sunlight Foundation is releasing Recovery Explorer, which lets users visualize the size and scope of spending under the stimulus, and drill down to individual records.

Making sense of the more than 240,000 records in raw format from 50 states and approximately 210 awarding agencies can be challenging. Sunlight Foundation's Recovery Explorer helps users sift through the records, find out where the money is going and see trends in the data.

The data in Recovery Explorer comes from the cumulative record file, which was downloaded March 31, and will be updated as Recovery.gov releases new data. Job numbers are from the 4th quarter 2009 only; displaying cumulative jobs data (which tracks stimulus activity from February through December 2009) would double count some jobs. Also, the Recovery Board changed its methodology from "jobs created or saved to jobs funded by stimulus dollars.

The Sunlight Recovery Explorer also allows users to connect prime recipients to sub-recipients very easily.

Here are some highlights from the data:

--There are more than 21,000 prime recipients of contracts, loans or grants, over 38,000 sub-recipients and more than 33,000 vendors that have provided a service to either a recipient or sub-recipient.

--While stimulus money includes infrastructure costs and overhead expenses, of course, each job reported as funded by the stimulus works out to about $230,000 in funds invested.

--At least 6 of the10 states receiving the most money are funding the most number of jobs in the 4th quarter of 2009. Michigan reported the most jobs funded, at about 130,000. Illinois ranked fifth in money received, but only 17th in jobs created.

Recovery Explorer is part of the Reporting Group's new Resources page, where we'll roll out tools and training materials for journalists, bloggers and citizens who want to better understand their government.

Search the Blog

Popular tags

2012 election 2012 elections 2013 Inauguration Ad Ad Hawk Ad Hoc AIG american crossroads Arab Spring Barack Obama BP budget Campaign contributions Campaign Finance Center for Responsive Politics Citizens United consumer banking Contracting Conventions2012 Correspondence crossroads GPS dark money Data Mine datamine debt ceiling Disclose act Distributed Research Dodd-Frank Earmarks Election 2012 Elizabeth Warren FARA FCC FDA FEC Federal Election Commission Finance Data Catalog Financial Bailout Financial Reform FLIT FOIA follow the unlimited money Foreign lobbying Foreign Lobbying Influence Tracker freshmen Fundraising Guns Handy Tools health care Hoc House House Freshmen 112th House Majority PAC Immigration Independent Expenditure Independent expenditures influence Influence Explorer investment James Bopp Jr. Lobbying lobbying tracker Logs_6553 Majority PAC Mark Sanford Market Meltdown Media Medicare meeting logs Mitt Romney National Rifle Association Newt Gingrich NRA obama OGD Open Government Directive Orrin Hatch outside spending Party Time PMA Group political ad sleuth Political Party Time Politwoops President Obama Priorities USA Action Recovery Recovery.gov Rep. John Murtha Research Restore Our Future revolving door Rick Perry Rick Santorum Romney Ron Paul Sen. Christopher Dodd Senate Sheldon Adelson states of transparency Stealthy Wealthy stimulus Sunlight Live super committee super congress Super PAC super PAC profile Super PACs supercommittee Supercongress supreme court TARP Taxpayers for Common Sense transparency