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Join Congressman Price in Telephone Meeting on Healthcare

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WASHINGTON, D.C. -  U.S. Rep. David Price will continue the discussion on health insurance reform with Triangle residents by holding telephone town hall meetings.   The next available meeting will take place on Thursday, Sept. 3 at 7:30pm.

Residents of the 4th District will hear the Congressman’s views on proposals in Congress to reform the health insurance system, and they will be able to ask as many questions as time permits.

“The current debate on health insurance reform has led North Carolinians on all sides of the issue to express their views – including more than 1,000 Triangle residents who turned out to a town hall meeting in which I participated earlier this month,” Price said.  “The telephone town hall meeting will allow an even larger audience to participate in the discussion, and they won’t have to leave home to do it.”

Residents of the 4th District who wish to participate in the telephone town hall meeting must sign up online to participate.  By entering their information on the Congressman’s website, participants will be called and conferenced into the meeting just before it begins. As of 10 a.m. Thursday, registration to participate in the call has closed.

As Congress has been working on legislation to reform the country’s health insurance system, Rep. Price has engaged North Carolinians on all sides of the issue – discussing the major proposals and soliciting feedback.  In addition to the aforementioned town hall meeting, he has held dozens of meetings and open discussions with North Carolinians on health insurance reform over the past three months.

Congressman To Participate In Roundtable about First-Time Mothers

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RALEIGH, N.C. — Wake County Human Services officials will hold a roundtable discussion Monday with three North Carolina Congressmen to brief them on Nurse-Family Partnership (NFP), a nationally recognized, evidence-based program that operates a site in Wake County.

The group will discuss how the program is helping transform the lives of first-time, low-income Wake County parents and their children.

A Wake County NFP nurse and enrolled mother will also share their experiences during the roundtable discussion.

WHO: Participants and interview opportunities include:
* Regina Petteway, Wake County Human Services’ Director of Community Affairs
* Sharon Sprinkle, NFP National Service Office Eastern Regional Manager, Nursing Consultation and Program Support
* Ida Dawson, Wake County NFP Administrator
* Susan Little, Wake County NFP Nurse Supervisor
* NFP Nurse and Mother
* Congressman Bob Etheridge
* Congressman Brad Miller
* Congressman David Price

The discussion will take place at 2 p.m. Monday at the Wake County Human Services, Sunnybrook Building, 10 Sunnybrook Road in Raleigh.

Price To Host Growth Summit at RTP

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RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK – Congressman David Price (NC-04) will host a Summit on Smart Growth and Development on Monday at the Research Triangle Foundation. 

Congressman Earl Blumenauer (OR-03), a leader in Congress on smart growth and related issues, will join Price and invited local government officials, business and environmental leaders, and grassroots activists to discuss smart growth principles and transportation infrastructure. 

They will address elements of a smart growth blueprint for the future, the appropriate role of the federal government, and how to finance future infrastructure.

NC Lawmaker Challenges Border Security Priorities

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WASHINGTON – A House subcommittee chairman has questioned whether taxpayers are getting their money’s worth in border protection as people continue breaking through barriers to enter the United States illegally.

At a hearing Tuesday on funding for border security, Rep. David Price, D-N.C., challenged the Homeland Security Department to explain why it has effective control of only 1 percent of the country’s 4,000 mile border with Canada.

Of the $3.6 billion Congress has allocated for border security, $2 billion has been spent building 610 miles of fencing along the U.S.-Mexico border.

House subcommittees are considering the agency’s requests for funding to boost security along the U.S. borders and to help curb Mexican drug violence.

Price Introduces Teacher Retention Bill

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WASHINGTON – U.S. Rep. David Price (D-NC) re-introduced legislation Tuesday to help retain public school teachers.

“Teacher retention is just as important a goal – and perhaps a more difficult challenge – as teacher recruitment,” Rep. Price said in a press release.  “We can provide federal scholarships to encourage individuals to go into teaching.  But we need to combine that financial encouragement with preparation and enrichment programs to make it easier and more rewarding for teachers to stay in the profession and make teaching their career.”

About one-third of teachers leave the profession within five years of being hired, according to the non-partisan Congressional Research Service (CRS).  In some schools, the five-year attrition rate reaches 50 percent.  The National Education Association recently released an assessment revealing that American schools would need to hire an additional two million teachers during the next decade to keep pace with student growth.

Price’s bill, the Keep Teachers Teaching Act, would help schools cope with these pressures by providing federal grants directly to states or school districts to develop innovative teacher retention programs.  The Department of Education would identify the most promising teacher retention approaches, drawing from fully-operational programs as well as those in the pilot test phase, and share information about the success of the various approaches to states and school districts around the country.

“This problem won’t be solved by a cookie-cutter approach mandated by the federal government from above,” Price said.  “Federal support, however, can be a useful tool in promoting the most innovative and effective ideas at the state and local level.  My legislation seeks to identify and support the best programs, while encouraging other states to draw upon their counterparts’ experience.”

Effective programs to address this problem are already at work in school districts around the country, and many more innovative programs could be advanced if the right kind of resources were available.  Price highlighted the Kenan Fellows Program, administered by North Carolina State University, as an example of a model program that is already working and could be replicated in other states.  Kenan Fellows are public school teachers who partner with scientists and university faculty for two years to develop innovative math, science and technology curricula for use in classrooms all across North Carolina.

Price has introduced his teacher retention legislation as the House Committee on Education and Labor prepares to draft the upcoming reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (also known as No Child Left Behind).  Last year, similar legislation introduced by Price was included in the Committee’s draft reauthorization, but the larger bill was not introduced before the end of the 110th Congress.

Price to Hold Town Hall Meetings Across Triangle

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WASHINGTON – Congressman David Price (NC-04) released the following schedule of town hall meetings and other public events for tomorrow, Feb. 14, and the week of Feb.  16.  At the meetings, Congressman Price will share an overview of economic recovery efforts and then take questions from constituents on issues before the Congress.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14

HELPING HAND EVENT AT CAROL WOODS – Price will participate in A Helping Hand’s 8th annual “Valentine Delivery and Serenade” at the Carol Woods Retirement Community in Chapel Hill.  A Helping Hand is a nonprofit founded in 1995 in Chapel Hill that provides escorted transportation and home care to senior citizens and the disabled throughout Orange, Durham, Chatham and western Wake counties.
LOGISTICS: 10:30 – 11:15 a.m., 750 Weaver Dairy Road, Chapel Hill

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16

DURHAM TOWN HALL
Durham Main Library
300 N. Roxboro Street
7 – 8:30 PM

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17
CARY TOWN HALL
Council Chambers
316 N. Academy Street
7 – 8:30 PM

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19
CHAPEL HILL TOWN HALL
Southern Human Services Center
2501 Homestead Road
7 – 8:30 PM

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.

Price, Miller To Detail Stimulus Impact On NC

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RALEIGH, N.C. – North Carolina Reps. David Price and Brad Miller said an $819 billion stimulus bill working through Congress will save or create about 130,000 North Carolina jobs in the months ahead.

The two lawmakers spoke about the measure Thursday at an Employment Security Commission center in Raleigh.

The stimulus plan that passed the U.S. House on Wednesday night would send more than $4 billion to North Carolina over about two years. Nearly $2 billion would go to North Carolina’s state government to prevent big layoffs as Raleigh struggles with a budget hole reaching into the billions.

Almost $1 billion would fund North Carolina transportation and infrastructure projects, but that’s the bottom when compared to state populations.

UNC Students Petition Price On Gaza Bill

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CHAPEL HILL, N.C. –UNC students and other community members will deliver a petition to Rep. David Price Friday afternoon, expressing outrage at his support for HR 34, a resolution condoning Israel’s attacks on Gaza and giving Israel a blank check to continue the massacre. 

Members of UNC-SDS collected hundreds more signatures on campus this week from students appalled at Price’s support for the IDF’s brutal invasion of Gaza, and Israel’s continuing occupation and blockade of Gaza.  Along with community members, including Southern Anti-Racism Network (SARN) member Theresa El-Amin, UNC students will deliver the newly gathered signatures to Price’s Chapel Hill office at 88 Vilcom Circle at 4 p.m. Friday.

Despite last weekend’s cease fire, students at UNC remain horrified by the situation in Gaza, where more than 1,300 Palestinians have been killed and 22,000 wounded in the past three weeks.  International aid organizations have made clear that thousands more will die without access to medications and food. 

UNC students and community members will call on Price to speak out for an end to Israel’s occupation of Gaza, and for an opening of Gaza’s borders.  These are essential first steps to ameliorate the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and to move towards the realization of the Palestinians’ right to self-determination.

For more information about UNC SDS, visit http://chapelhillsds.org/node/12.

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