President Donald Trump today signed into law almost half-a-trillion dollars in additional relief to several sectors to deal with the coronavirus pandemic and its blow to the American economy.

The $484 billion bill was approved by the House Thursday. Since the pandemic began, Congress has approved $2.7 trillion in aid to aid business, taxpayers and other sectors.

Here’s what’s in the new bill:

Small businesses: There’s another $320 billion for the Paycheck Protection Program, which was created by the original $2 trillion stimulus package approved last month. The PPP dished out almost $350 billion in loans to small businesses before it was exhausted in less than two weeks.

Alabama small businesses received about 28,000 loans worth $4.86 billion through the program, and there are still about 5,000 small businesses waiting on more than $1 billion in loans, according to the Alabama Bankers Association.

About $60 billion of the new round of money is being directly specifically to smaller lending institutions, to be split evenly between institutions with less than $10 billion in assets, and those between $10 and $50 billion.

There’s also another $60 billion in loans and grants for the Small Business Administration’s disaster relief fund, according to NBC News.

Hospitals: There’s $75 billion for hospitals, which have managed care for the nation’s coronavirus victims but have also felt the economic pinch with an interruption in the kind of elective care that affects their bottom line.

Testing: Congress pumped another $25 billion into coronavirus testing, which experts say needs to be beefed up in order to restart the economy without fear of a second wave of the outbreak.

Lawmakers say there will probably be another round of funding, though Republicans and Democrats are already scuffling over what kind of aid can be extended to states buckling under the costs of the pandemic.