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Entries in Stimulus Funds (233)

Friday
Jan272012

ALG responds to Ener1 bankruptcy 

Jan. 26, 2012, Fairfax, VA—Americans for Limited Government President Bill Wilson today in a statement responded to the bankruptcy of yet another "green" energy company that had received taxpayer money, Ener1:

"As early as 2008, an investment advisory firm Citron Research had issued dire warnings about Ener1, saying the company was 'just a corporate shell company with a long history of failed businesses based on exaggerated promises', citing the company's long and shady history.  When it was proposed that the 'stimulus' be used to give $118.5 million to Ener1, Americans for Limited Government worked with media to help expose this bogus firm for what it was.  Predictably, it turns out those warnings were correct, unfortunately for taxpayers."

Attachments:

Citron Reports on Ener1, July 16, 2008 at http://www.citronresearch.com/index.php/2008/07/16/citron-reports-on-ener1-amexhev/

Fed money may benefit Russian-backed firm, by Jerry Seper, Washington Times, July 5, 2009 at http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/jul/5/us-tax-dollars-may-aid-russian-earmark-eyed/print/

Obama sends stimulus aid to foreign firms, by Jerry Seper, Washington Times, Aug. 6, 2009 at http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2009/aug/06/stimulus-to-aid-foreign-battery-builders/print/

Interview Availability: Please contact Rebekah Rast at (703) 383-0880 or at rrast@getliberty.org to arrange an interview with ALG President Bill Wilson.

Thursday
Jan122012

NHH Goes Solar; Receives Largest Solar Hot Water System in the State

Concord, NH – The New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services

(DHHS) announces the largest solar hot water system in the State has been

installed at New Hampshire Hospital (NHH). Fifty-nine collectors are in

place on the hospital’s roof. The entire system, which also includes

three 800 gallon tanks and an energy monitoring system, was funded through

a grant from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) State Energy

Program.



“It’s expected this will provide half of NHH’s hot water load over the

course of a year and on peak solar days it will generate more than half of

the hospital’s hot water,” stated NHH Director of Maintenance, Engineering,

and Transportation Don Ficken. “This is New Hampshire Hospital’s latest

effort to be more environmentally friendly and save taxpayer dollars. It is

a positive initiative all the way around.”



This was one of several energy improvement projects in NH funded under the

ARRA grant. “Each project proposed was evaluated based on a number of

criteria, including cost-benefit, visibility, replicability, and energy

offset,” stated Mary Downes of the NH Office of Energy and Planning. “This

solar hot water project was the most cost-effective solar project

proposed.”



The hot water system will produce over 450,000 kBTU of energy annually

which amounts to about 3,400 gallons of oil saved (that is enough hot water

to supply 30 homes in Concord). The CO2 savings each year of over 75,000

pounds is equivalent to: not driving an average car 120,000 miles; heating

6 homes all winter in Concord; and planting 188 trees in a year.



Meridian Construction managed the energy improvements and ReKnew Energy

Systems of White River Junction, Vermont installed the solar hot water

system.

Wednesday
Nov232011

NH House Leaders Statement of President Obama’s Visit to NH to Discuss 2nd Stimulus Package 

CONCORD – House Speaker William O’Brien (R-Mont Vernon) and House Majority Leader D.J. Bettencourt (R-Salem) today offered the following statement in response to President Obama’s visit to New Hampshire to discuss his second stimulus package, which he calls a “Jobs Plan.”

 House Speaker William O’Brien

“Since he’s in New Hampshire, President Obama should take the opportunity to look to the work we did here in the Granite State to get our economy moving.  Despite facing a historic, nearly $900 million deficit, we balanced our budget by cutting spending, without increasing taxes or fees.  In fact, we cut 12 taxes and fees this year, and passed 43 new laws that reduced or eliminated regulation.  And we did all this while fully funding the core functions of government, a goal the President has promised to abandon by his veto threat of any legislation to avoid automatic cuts to the defense budget. After a hangover from the last stimulus that ended in July, we are now seeing the results of our work.  Last month, New Hampshire’s economy added over 2,200 jobs and, what’s even more encouraging, our workforce expanded by nearly 2,000, meaning that discouraged workers are coming back to find new employment.  What we need from Washington is more fiscal responsibility, not more debt-inflating stimulus given to the President’s political allies.  Let’s hope that the President takes some of our New Hampshire values back to Washington.”

House Majority Leader D.J. Bettencourt

"The President's idea of compulsory job creation by government spending and borrowing didn’t work with Stimulus I and it certainly won’t work by passing his Stimulus II bill. It has led to a complete failure to lower the unemployment rate, and massive debt for our country. Businesses and entrepreneurs willing to take risks create jobs, not government. Here in New Hampshire we’re finally recovering from the Stimulus hangover and starting to see the positive results of government that spends less, taxes less, and regulates less."

Friday
Nov112011

AUFC - New Hampshire Residents Rally for Jobs, Not Cuts 

Nashua Telegraph: Group gathers at City Hall to rally for jobs

NASHUA – Downtown Nashua was Occupied on Wednesday night, however briefly, by a small group of people fed up with the status quo and demanding action from New Hampshire’s legislators.

“We’re here because American has a jobs emergency,” said Deb Howe, a teacher at Amherst Street Elementary School. “New Hampshire has a jobs emergency, and Nashua has a jobs emergency.”

The focus on the rally was to encourage Congress, specifically U.S. Sen. Kelly Ayotte and U.S. Rep. Charlie Bass, to pass the American Jobs Act, a vital bill that would spend billions to add jobs in important industries, including education, construction and emergency services, according to organizers.

The rally was organized by the New Hampshire Citizens Alliance for Action, which describes itself as a nonpartisan group focused on economic and political justice.

“We just have a group of concerned citizens really concerned about the state of our economy,” said alliance member Sarah Chaisson Warner.

About 20 people gathered at City Hall plaza around 5 p.m. toting signs and cheering at passing cars, a few of which honked in support. There was also a table with paper plates with a few crumbs representing the “99 percent” next to pots of “tax breaks” and “corporate greed” to represent the 1 percent.

The rally wasn’t formally a part of the Occupy Wall Street movement but had some of the same goals.

“They’re all tapping into the same type of energy. It’s the same concerns people around the country have,” said spokeswoman Zandra Rice-Hawkins.

Nashua resident Krista Rand has been unemployed since her stimulus-funded job was eliminated. She has been unemployed about half the time since she earned a master’s degree in engineering in December 2009.

“I’m hoping to raise awareness that there are legislative measures that would be helpful for those of us who are unemployed,” she said.

Rand said the millions of dollars in the American Jobs Act for infrastructure improvements could be helping put many people back to work and repair too-old roads and bridges.

“We have work to do and we have a way to pay for it,” she said. “We need the American Jobs Act or something like it.”

“It’s amazing to see working class people stand up against corporate greed and be sick and tired of the same old, same old,” said Nashua resident Danny Keating. “Not too much happens in Nashua. It’s not too often you see working class people standing up and saying ‘we’re sick of it.’”

Nashua resident Kathie Calder said she has been making trips to Occupy Boston to bring protesters supplies like blankets and warm clothes.

“Nashua is too good a city to miss this opportunity to speak out about what’s happening in our country,” she said. “Big money has taken over everything, and it begins in D.C. Our politicians listen to money, not to us. Our democracy has been taken from us, and I want it back.”

Joseph G. Cote can be reached at 594-6415 or jcote@nashuatelegraph.com. Also follow Cote on Twitter (@Telegraph_JoeC).

Wednesday
Oct192011

TH Daily - October 19 - Michelle Malkin, John Stossel, Walter E. Williams, Brent Bozell, Jonah Goldberg and More