Stimulus | Politics.MyNC.com - Part 2

Tag Archive | "stimulus"

Perdue Announces Stimulus Transit Projects

Tags: , ,


RALEIGH, N.C. — Gov. Bev Perdue today announced that 140 transit projects across the state will receive more than $103 million in funding through the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). These funds will enhance or expand transit options in both rural and urban communities. A list of projects is attached.

“These JobsNOW recovery projects will help create and sustain jobs and provide needed economic development and mobility in counties throughout North Carolina,” said Perdue. “Not only will they put people to work, they will take people to work.”

Twenty-one urban transit systems will receive more than $70 million for 77 projects. The largest allocation, at $20.8 million, goes to Charlotte Area Transit System’s North Davidson Street bus facility. In addition, two metropolitan planning organizations (Durham-Chapel Hill-Carrboro MPO and Capital Area MPO) elected to designate $5.1 million for transit projects instead of highway and bridge projects.

Projects in rural areas across the state totaled more than $33 million. Three projects benefit transit efforts statewide, and 63 are designated for rural transit systems/areas of the state. These projects are expected to create or retain more than 3,200 jobs.

“Transit projects are a critical part of our transportation infrastructure,” said Transportation Secretary Gene Conti. “Enhancing, expanding and maintaining our existing transit options expands our ability to serve the people of the state.”

NCDOT received a total of $838 million through the ARRA, including $735 million for highway and bridge projects. To date, NCDOT has allocated more than 90 percent of the highway and bridge money received to projects across the state.

Gov. Perdue and Secretary Conti also are working with Sen. Kay Hagan, Rep. Mel Watt and the rest of North Carolina’s Congressional Delegation to pursue discretionary grant money included in the ARRA to use for the $300 million replacement of the Yadkin River Bridge on I-85 in Davidson and Rowan counties. Later this summer, the state also will apply for discretionary funding under the ARRA for the Southeast High Speed Rail Corridor, which runs through North Carolina.

For more information about recovery funding for infrastructure improvements in North Carolina, as well as other NCDOT projects and activities, visit www.ncdot.gov.

Obama, Facing High Unemployment, Defends Stimulus

Tags: ,


WASHINGTON – Eager to show action on the ailing economy, President Barack Obama promised Monday to speed federal money into hundreds of public works projects this summer, vowing that 600,000 jobs would be created or saved.

Responding to persistently high unemployment figures and criticism that the stimulus was not worth its historic price tag, the president argued his recovery plan was on track. But his fresh promises were largely political theater: The jobs goal was set a month ago, and the list of projects Obama announced were already in the pipeline.

Surrounded by his Cabinet, Obama emphasized what has become a dominant issue of public concern – an economy that keeps bleeding jobs – on the day after returning from a week of diplomacy and sightseeing in the Middle East and Europe.

He concentrated on the billions of dollars from a taxpayer-funded plan that will be disbursed this summer, spurring new debate about just how much the $787 billion stimulus plan is helping.

“We’ve done more than ever, faster than ever, more responsibly than ever, to get the gears of the economy moving again,” Obama said. Based on the work done across a broad spectrum of federal agencies during the first 100 days of the administration, the president said, “we’re in a position to really accelerate.”

But at the same time, he said he wasn’t happy with the progress made so far and pressed his Cabinet to keep at it.

He said he was pleased the economy lost fewer jobs in May than experts anticipated, asserting that was a sign things were moving in the right direction. But he said the 345,000 losses were still too many, and he cautioned bluntly that “we’re still in the middle of a very deep recession” and “it’s going to take a considerable amount of time for us to pull out.”

The jobs initiative under the stimulus law covers an array of public works ranging from parks and wastewater projects to improvements at military facilities, airports and veterans medical centers.

The ramp-up is not surprising; the administration has always viewed the summer as a peak for stimulus spending, as better weather permits more public works construction and federal agencies have processed more requests.

Republicans remain critical of the stimulus spending, slamming it as a big government program that ultimately will do little for recovery.

Said Obama: “Our ultimate goal is making sure that the average family out there, mom working, dad working – that they are able to pay their bills, feel some job security, make their mortgage payments.”

The sheer enormity of the spending plan and its long-term costs to the public have raised concern for many Americans and given Republicans a foothold.

A recent Associated Press-GfK poll found that 41 percent of those surveyed disapproved of Obama’s handling of the deficit, his highest disapproval rating on any subject polled. Other surveys show that the public is particularly attuned to government spending and the amount of red ink in the budget.

Without naming names, Obama shot back at skeptics during the Cabinet meeting.

“I know that they are some who, despite all evidence to the contrary, still don’t believe in the necessity and promise of this recovery,” Obama said. “And I would suggest to them that they talk to the companies who, because of this plan, scrapped the idea of laying off employees and in fact decided to hire employees. Tell that to the Americans who received that unexpected call saying, `Come back to work.”‘

The White House announced a Web site, www.whitehouse.gov/recovery, to allow people to share stories and videos of projects in their towns.

Just how much of an impact Obama’s recovery program had on the pace of job losses is up for debate.

Obama has claimed as many as 150,000 jobs saved or created by his stimulus plan so far, even as government reports have shown the economy has lost more than 1.6 million jobs since Congress approved funding for the program in February.

Obama initially offered his stimulus plan as a way to put people back to work, a promise that 3.5 million jobs would be saved or created. The administration’s predictions that unemployment would
rise no higher than 8 percent already have been shattered.

Federal agencies will release billions of stimulus dollars to states in the coming months.

Health and Human Services will provide funding for 1,129 health centers to provide expanded service for 300,000 patients; Interior will begin improvements on 107 national parks; Veterans Affairs will start work on 90 medical centers in 38 states; the Justice Department will fund 5,000 law enforcement jobs; the Agriculture Department will begin 200 new rural waste and water system projects and the Environmental Protection Agency will begin or accelerate the cleanup of 20 Superfund sites.

Scrambling For Stimulus

Tags: , ,


Scientists at UNC-CH, Duke and N.C. State prepare hundreds of requests they hope will snare some of the coming federal stimulus money aimed at kick-starting academic research, the N&O reports.

UNC Grant Part of Obama’s 100 Days of Recovery

Tags: ,


LAS VEGAS, NV – President Barack Obama today marked the 100th day of the Recovery Act by releasing “100 Days, 100 Projects,” a report from the Vice President that highlights the progress the country has made in the first 100 days of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act and the work that is already being done to build a new foundation for America’s economic recovery.

View the report

“One hundred days ago, in the midst of the worst economic crisis in half a century, we passed the most sweeping economic recovery act in history – a plan designed to save jobs, create new ones, and put money in people’s pockets,” President Obama said.  “Now, one hundred days later, we are meeting our economic challenges head-on and beginning to see early signs of progress across the country.”

Among the projects in the report are two new Recovery Act investments totaling over $467 million to expand and accelerate the development and use of geothermal and solar energy throughout the country that the President will announce today during a visit to Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas, Nevada with Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid.  Nellis Air Force Base is home to the largest solar photovoltaic array in the United States, and 25 percent of the energy used by the 12,000 people that live and work on the base is generated by the 72,000 solar panel installation.  The Recovery Act funds announced today represent a substantial down payment on bringing renewable energy technology like that used at Nellis to the mass market and is expected to create thousands of jobs, particularly in the western United States.  To learn more about the new Recovery Act investments in geothermal and solar energy technology, click HERE.

Today’s announcement is just one of the many ways the Recovery Act is jump-starting the economy today and building a new foundation for sustained economic growth in the future.  Across the country, the Recovery Act is already at work, providing essential financial relief for American families and businesses, creating and saving jobs, and spurring technology and infrastructure investments that will lay the groundwork for the new economy – and work is just getting started.

In Southern California, construction is underway on the I-405 Sepulveda Pass Project on the San Diego Freeway, one of the most congested highways in the nation, because of a $189.9 million Recovery Act investment.

In Cumberland, Maine, Storey Brothers Trucking, a small family-owned business that was struggling to pay its 19 employees is now back to work and boosting the local economy because of a $2 million Recovery Act grant awarded to the Portland Water District for upgrading the town’s sewer system.

In Pearl, Mississippi, a $1.3 million Recovery Act grant award is allowing the Family Health Care Clinic to open three new branches that will offer medical and dental services to low-income and uninsured residents and provide increased job oppor­tunities in the community by employing 70 staff over the next two years.

At the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, a $17.5 million Recovery Act grant is funding the development of a solar fuels research center that will conduct research on how to use artificial photo­synthesis to produce low-cost and efficient solar fuels.

President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act into law on February 17, 2009.  Just 100 days into the two-year economic recovery program, over $112 billion in Recovery Act funds has been obligated to stimulative programs and projects and over 150,000 jobs have been created or saved by the Recovery Act.

In addition to providing immediate relief measures for American families like the Making Work Pay tax credit and a 65 percent reduction in COBRA health insurance premiums, the Recovery Act also provides new and expanded energy-efficiency and first-time homebuyer tax credits that are driving fresh consumer demand and makes multi-billion dollar long-term investments in high-speed rail, broadband access, a nationwide smart energy grid and a modern health information technology system.

Perdue Announcing New Green Department

Tags: , , ,


CARY, N.C. — In front of rows of solar panels, Governor Perdue announced Thursday she is working to change the way North Carolina thinks about energy.”We intend to transform state energy policy making by providing strong leadership and creating vital links between energy policy, economic development and workforce development,” Perdue said.

One of her first moves will be to transfer the State Energy Office under the Department of Commerce, Perdue announced.

The governor also plans to name a new energy advisor who will help develop and implement policy across the state.

Also, Perdue plans to invest $18 million for an energy investment revolving loan fund, which will go towards no and low interest loans for businesses, non-profit organizations, state agencies and local governments to become more energy efficient.

Another $10 million will go to expand North Carolina’s green business fund, Perdue said.

Perdue Promotes Stimulus Avenues For NC Business

Tags: ,


KINSTON, N.C.  – North Carolina Gov. Beverly Perdue is urging business leaders to look at opportunities for contracts resulting from federal stimulus funds.

Perdue speaks Monday in Kinston at an economic recovery workshop for businesses in eastern North Carolina. It’s the third of six events around the state. She is joined by representatives of state agencies who offer updates on funds and an overview of funding requirements and contacts.

Perdue spokeswoman Chrissy Pearson said local business and political leaders may learn more about state contracts or participating in work funded by recovery money.

The stimulus includes money for green projects, road building and retrofitting homes and schools to be more energy efficient.

Perdue Urges Governments To Seek Funds

Tags: , ,


CLYDE, N.C.  – North Carolina’s governor is encouraging local governments to ask for as much money as they can from the federal stimulus funds.

Gov. Beverly Perdue told a conference in western North Carolina on Monday that local governments should move quickly to seek some of the $8.2 billion allocated for North Carolina. She says most of the money is intended to quickly create jobs.

“It’s a pot of money, and somebody in America is going to get it,” Perdue said. “It’s my tremendous ambition and aspiration that North Carolina gets more than our share.”

Perdue also said governments will have to be transparent in how they spend the funds.

“I’ve never seen such an aggressive calendar for putting the money to work, because the goal is to very quickly put America back to work,” Perdue said. “There’s going to be a lot of pressure on you in the next six-12 weeks.”

Bruce Snyder, chairman of the Graham County Board of Commissioners, said his county is interested in stimulus funds because the county has a low tax base from which to draw because so much land is federally owned.

“We’ve got our name on the list for several things when the word first started coming out all this was going to happen,” Snyder said.

Canton Mayor Pat Smathers said he was concerned that emphasis on speed could hamper long-range projects, but that the money would be welcome to help the local budget.

Perdue also says she’s recommending that the Appalachian Regional Commission provide $4.5 million to fund 16 projects in western counties of the state. The projects range from a regional livestock market to local water and sewer projects.

House Dem: Obama May Have Oversold Road Stimulus

Tags: , , ,


WASHINGTON  – A top congressional Democrat says the White House may have oversold the roads-and-bridges component of the historic stimulus law.

An Associated Press analysis of the first $19 billion in transportation spending showed that communities most in need of jobs are least likely to benefit from the program.

A spokesman for Minnesota Rep. James Oberstar, who leads the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, says the White House shouldn’t have billed road money as the signature component of the stimulus, or as a surefire boost to needy communities.

Spokesman Jim Berard says Washington is limited in how it can tell states where to spend the money. Needy communities might lose out in the short term but he says they’ll benefit from other aspects of the stimulus bill.

Ft. Bragg To Get Additional $81M In Stimulus Funds

Tags: ,


FORT BRAGG, N.C. – Officials say Fort Bragg will be getting an additional $81 million in federal stimulus funds to pay for renovations and repairs of offices, runways and fire stations.

The Fayetteville Observer reported Wednesday that the money is in addition to more than $30 million announced in March.

Rep. Mike McIntyre, D-NC, said the funds are important to keep military facilities in shape and will help the economy.

Base officials say the projects have been on a list of needed repairs but there never was money to complete them.

Video Content

Candidate Statements

Decision 2008 in your inbox

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner