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Butterfield To Talk Healthcare Today

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ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. — One of North Carolina’s strongest backers of President Obama in Congress is holding a town hall meeting to discuss health care reform.U.S. Rep. G. K. Butterfield’s district in the state’s northeast corner is one of the state’s most secure. He’ll discuss the hottest-button issue in Washington on Tuesday.

Conservative critics have used such public forums to express their anger about efforts to alter the U.S. health care system.

Democrats say the conservatives are trying to make a point by disrupting the events and trying to shame Congress members.

U.S. Reps. David Price, Brad Miller, and Bob Etheridge held a private discussion of health care Monday. Rep. Heath Shuler holds a telephone news conference on the subject Thursday.

Butterfield Wants Perdue To Consider Black DA

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WILSON, N.C. – U.S. Rep. G.K. Butterfield prefers that North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue appoint a black district
attorney in Edgecombe, Nash and Wilson counties.

Butterfield wrote Monday asking Perdue to interview and consider qualified black lawyers to succeed retiring DA Howard Boney to increase diversity in the court system.

Butterfield said there’s only one black district attorney in the state and that black Democrats in the counties comprise 60 percent of the registered voters. The congressman also criticized what he called a lack of racial diversity in Boney’s office.

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People made similar calls last week.

Perdue’s office said last week she’s committed to “appointing highly qualified people to serve who reflect all of North Carolina.”

Butterfield To Tour Tarboro Boat-Building Plant

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TARBORO, N.C.  – Rep. G.K. Butterfield will tour the World Cat boat manufacturing facility in Tarboro, which plans to add 120 jobs over the next three years.

Butterfield plans to tour the plant Monday afternoon. World Cat recently announced that plans to invest $2.6 million and add the jobs, which will pay almost $30,000 a year, plus benefits.

The company now employs 60 people.

Butterfield has said the jobs are critically important to Tarboro, which is located in Edgecombe County, where the latest figures show an unemployment rate of almost 17 percent.

Butterfield To Visit Rocky Mount Schools

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ROCKY MOUNT, N.C. – Congressman G. K. Butterfield will visit two schools on Friday to talk with students about the importance of community service.

This week the House approved the Generations Invigorating Volunteerism and Education (GIVE) Act, which seeks to launch a new era of American service and volunteerism.

The GIVE Act would more than triple the number of volunteers, from the current 75,000 to 250,000, and increase the education reward they receive to $5,350 for next year, the same as the maximum Pell Grant scholarship award. The education award would also be linked to match future boosts in the Pell Grant scholarship in order to keep up with rising college costs.

It would create a new national Call to Service campaign to encourage all Americans to get involved in service and would encourage Americans to observe September 11th a National Day of Service and Remembrance.

The legislation would also provide new incentives for middle and high school students to volunteer in their communities. It would create a Summer of Service program to engage students in service and allows them to earn a $500 education award to be used for college costs.

Butterfield will be visiting D. S. Johnson Elementary School and Rocky Mount Senior High School where he will meet with classes taught by teachers placed by Teach for America.

“The Teach for America program exemplifies community service at its best,” Butterfield said.

House Panel Likely To Pass Tobacco Regulation Today

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A House panel is expected to approve today sweeping tobacco regulation that would put the bill on pace for House passage far earlier in the congressional session than in the last Congress.The House Energy and Commerce Committee vote, expected this afternoon or evening, would give the Food and Drug Administration the power to police the tobacco industry.

The Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act (H.R. 1256) is nearly identical to a bill the House passed by a wide margin last summer. The Senate did not take action last year.

Health advocates — comfortable their bill will pass the House again this Congress — are already looking to the Senate where they ran out of time last year.

Some Republican House members grumbled that the committee, which has nine new members, was rushing to action without holding hearings on the health issue.

Rep. Phil Gingrey, R-Ga., a physician, argued today that FDA should focus on securing the nation’s food supply first. He said people understand the dangers of cigarettes and smokeless tobacco, which are blamed for taking the lives of 442,000 people each year.

“What they don’t understand is why a child should die from eating a peanut butter and jelly sandwich,” Gingrey said.

The arguments were similar to last year’s House committee debate.

“There’s nothing new before us today,” said former committee chairman John Dingell, D-Mich. “But then as now, the Senate is the obstacle to getting this legislation passed into law.”

The measure has split the tobacco industry, with industry giants Altria, Inc., parent company of Philip Morris USA, and United Smokeless Tobacco favoring the bill.

Reynolds American and Lorrilard Tobacco have argued the bill’s marketing restrictions and expansion of health warning labels would freeze the competitive market, favoring arch rival Philip Morris.

Rep. Steve Buyer, R-Ind., is planning to introduce a Republican alternative bill to create a new tobacco harm reduction center within the Department of Health and Human Services. The center would combine smoking cessation programs with industry strategies to reduce the harm from tobacco products, Republicans said.

Aides to Sen. Richard Burr, R-N.C. said he may introduce a similar bill in the Senate.

With Democrats winning expanded majorities in the House and Senate last fall, neither bill is expected to receive much support.

Democrats contend FDA is the right agency to police tobacco. They would pay for the regulation through a tax on cigarettes that would start at about a penny per cigarette pack this year and rise to at least 5 cents per pack within a decade, generating between $85 million and $712 million per year, according to committee staff.

Rep. G.K. Butterfield, D-N.C., who represents the largest tobacco-producing district in the country and serves on the commerce committee, praised the proposal for protecting tobacco farmers. The bill will allow farmers to “continue to earn a living … so they can support their families and their communities,” he said.

In NC, Dodd Sees Hope From Infrastructure Spending

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RALEIGH, N.C.  – With banks weighed down by bad debt, long-delayed infrastructure spending offers a way to both generate jobs and rebuild the country’s flagging optimism, current and former politicians said Monday.

“We can do big and bold things that can last a long time,” said former Gov. Jim Hunt, who created the annual Emerging Issues Forum nearly a quarter-century ago.

The two-day forum hosted by North Carolina State University brings together public policy leaders to discuss looming challenges. This year’s focus on infrastructure deficiencies came just as Congress and the Obama administration grapple with a federal stimulus package that includes spending to repair highways and bridges, expand railroad and mass transit routes, and update public water systems.

But while President Obama has urged quick spending on public projects to put people to work, less than 8 percent of the Senate’s $827 billion package is directed at infrastructure projects. About 11 percent of the House’s $820 billion version is for public construction needs.

That boosts the $1.1 trillion in annual U.S. infrastructure spending, but it’s a fraction of the estimated $2.2 trillion in needs over the next five years, according to a report last month by the American Society of Civil Engineers.

A quarter of the country’s bridges are deficient; in North Carolina a third of the spans aren’t up to the demands of their use, ASCE president Wayne Klotz said. Seven billion gallons of clean drinking water just leaks away because water systems in some cities are a century old, he said. The country’s average grade was D in 15 areas including aviation, dams and bridges evaluated by the society, Klotz said.

“Our infrastructure system’s parts are not serving their intended purposes,” Klotz said, and are not adequate for a growing economy.

The risks of failing to maintain public works were captured most dramatically when levees protecting New Orleans failed from insufficient maintenance and investment, flooding the city during Hurricane Katrina, Klotz said.

But the need for improved public works is being recognized at the same time the U.S. economy needs a jolt that business investment or consumer spending seem unable to provide, said U.S. Sen. Christopher Dodd, D-Conn.

“To do things differently, you need to begin thinking differently,” Dodd said, calling the infrastructure spending in the federal stimulus package “downpayments on the long-term needs of our nation.”

Infrastructure construction has fueled nearly every successful society in history, Dodd said, from the Roman water-delivery networks still in use today, to the highways the Incas built across South America’s Andes mountains, to the Erie Canal that opened trade from the Great Lakes frontier to East Coast ports in 1825.

Today, China is building super-modern airports and mag-lev trains to climb into the ranks of leading economies.

But America’s big challenge creates opportunities, like an idea for a high-speed, coast-to-coast freight railroad between Long Beach, Calif., and Wilmington that could compete with the Panama Canal as a faster way to move goods from Asia to Europe, Dodd said.

Rural electrification, massive dams and other public projects built during the Depression continue to deliver benefits today, Dodd said. But those efforts also restored confidence “that Americans can push back against any odds,” a benefit that would come from new infrastructure projects, Dodd said.

Butterfield Statement on Stimulus

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Congressman G. K. Butterfield made the following statement after the House today voted 244 to 188 to approve the economic stimulus package:

“Five of the counties I represent are suffering from double digit unemployment. People are hurting and this package provides a strong and rapid response. This package will create and save up to four million jobs, provide a tax cut for 95 percent of working Americans and invest in our county’s infrastructure. In the face of the highest unemployment rate in 26 years and a deep state budget shortfall, North Carolina will benefit with billions of sorely needed dollars.”

Among the share of benefits specifically for North Carolina, Butterfield listed:

·       $2.26 billion for addition Medicaid funding

·       $1.87 billion for “state fiscal stabilization funding” to help state and local governments fund education and other key services

·       $1.26 billion for education funding, including $361 million for school improvements

·       $626 million for additional Food Stamp Funding

·       $117 million for additional funding for Supplemental Social Income (SSI)

·       $67.4 million for job training and employment services for dislocated workers, youth, and adults.  

·       $29 million for Emergency Shelter Grants

Also:

·       More than 3.1 million North Carolina residents will benefit from the Making Work Pay Tax Credit.

·       An expansion of the Child Tax Credit will cover an additional 439,000 children in North Carolina.

·       And, an estimated 603,586 North Carolina workers would benefit from the $25 per week unemployment increase, and an estimated 127,814 workers would benefit from the extension of benefits.

NC Officials Gather Monday To Support Obama

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RALEIGH, N.C. — Former Gov. Jim Hunt, N.C. Secretary of State Elaine Marshall, U.S. Reps. David Price, Bob Etheridge, Brad Miller, G.K. Butterfield and N.C. Senate Majority Leader Tony Rand will join forces Monday to support Senator Obama and his healthcare plan.

The event will focus on how an Obama Administration will address the challenges facing North Carolina families. The event begins at 9:30 a.m. at the State Farmers Market Restaurant, 1240 Farmer’s Drive, Raleigh.

Eight NC Leaders To Meet In Raleigh Monday For Obama

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RALEIGH, N.C. – Former Gov. Jim Hunt, N.C. Secretary of State Elaine Marshall, U.S. Reps. Bob Etheridge, David Price, Brad Miller, G.K. Butterfield and N.C. Senate Majority Leader Tony Rand will gather Monday in Raleigh to support Senator Barack Obama’s economic plan.

The group will appear at 9:30 a.m. at the Raleigh Farmer’s Market, 1201 Agriculture St.

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