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KEY POINTS Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Thursday laid out details of the Trump administration's plan to send Americans relief money.

The White House is talking to congressional leaders of both parties about a massive stimulus package to blunt the impact of the coronavirus crisis.

The proposal includes sending payments directly to Americans totaling $500 billion, broken up into two tranches.

"The first one would be $1,000 per person, $500 per child," Mnuchin said. "So for a family of four, that's a $3,000 payment."

Steven Mnuchin, U.S. Treasury secretary, speaks during a news conference in the briefing room of the White House in Washington, D.C., U.S., on Saturday, March 14, 2020. Shaw Thew | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin on Thursday laid out details of the Trump administration's plan to send Americans relief money as part of a massive stimulus package to blunt the impact of the novel coronavirus crisis. Mnuchin said in a Fox Business Network interview that the plan, which is being discussed with congressional leaders of both parties, would send payments totaling $500 billion directly to Americans. That money would be divided into two large tranches.

"The first one would be $1,000 per person, $500 per child," Mnuchin said. "So for a family of four, that's a $3,000 payment." "As soon as Congress passes this, we get this out in three weeks. And then, six weeks later, if the president still has a national emergency, we'll deliver another $3,000," Mnuchin said. The Trump administration's proposal comes as stocks continue to fall, jobless claims start to rise and the number of Americans infected with or killed by the COVID-19 virus continues to expand. Mnuchin said the White House's plan would also allocate $300 billion for small businesses, noting that "there will be loan forgiveness" for employees who keep their workers on the payroll. $200 billion would also be used for "more facilities" with the Federal Reserve, as well as secured lending to airlines and other critical industries being strangled by the crisis. The administration's plan may face opposition on Capitol Hill, however. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., argued on the floor of his chamber Wednesday that sending one-or-two-time checks would not provide enough to support people who lose their jobs. Schumer suggested instead that providing expanded and "beefed-up" unemployment insurance would cover Americans "for a much longer time and would provide a much bigger safety net."