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New York - Proposed Fund Would Create Energy-Saving Home Loans

Published on:   September 20, 2009 10:37 PM
News Source: AP
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New York - Middle-class New Yorkers may soon be able to hire contractors to do $13,000 worth of home improvements like adding insulation and buying new furnaces, storm windows and water heaters - and never cut a check to the contractor.

The innovative bill awaiting action by Gov. David Paterson would create a revolving loan fund that allows consumers to pay off the project costs over time through their residential and business utility bills, benefiting at the same time from savings from the energy efficiencies. Contractors would be paid from the loan fund, which the Legislature wants to prime with $112 million of state proceeds from selling carbon emission permits to businesses that pollute.

It won’t start this winter. Passed recently by the Senate 50-8, the bill gives the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority six months to start the program.

“Gov. Paterson is working to position New York state as the global leader in the clean energy economy through the dual goals of renewable energy and energy efficiency. The Green Jobs bill aligns with these goals,’’ spokesman Morgan Hook said. Paterson will make a final decision on signing the bill, touted also as a job generator, from stakeholders on both sides, he said.

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Opponents see a downside, saying $1.5 billion is already available in state and federal programs to weatherize homes and upgrade appliances, mainly for low-income New Yorkers.

Also, the carbon auction receipts were previously earmarked for other purposes, with $29 million for renewable energy projects, $49 million for a greenhouse gas performance program and $15 million for new carbon sequestration technologies, though that plan is currently subject to a lawsuit.

“The projects that were committed to through the NYSERDA plan would certainly do more to reduce greenhouses gases and capture carbon emissions than various weatherization projects, which already get a ton of money,’’ said Gavin Donohue, president of the Independent Power Producers of New York.

Drew Mangione, spokesman for Sen. Darrel Aubertine, a Watertown Democrat and bill sponsor, countered that the new revolving fund would probably need $40 million to $60 million as seed money and would be maintained through loan repayments. “It’s for middle class and businesses,’’ he said, unlike existing programs.

Homeowners, landlords and authorized tenants could borrow up to $13,000 to contract for insulation, storm windows, weather stripping and more efficient furnaces, water heaters and appliances. Small businesses and not-for-profits could borrow up to $26,000 for nonresidential buildings, with NYSERDA setting amounts for multifamily buildings.

Loans would be repaid through “innovative financing mechanisms’’ with oil and natural gas providers, the bill said. If it works as touted, customers’ bills would decline even as loans are repaid.

“On-bill financing would be one way we could work with utilities to finance these projects,’’ NYSERDA spokesman Tom Lynch said. Program specifics, including contractors, financing mechanisms and loan rates, have yet to be determined.

Sen. Tom Morahan, a Republican sponsor who represents parts of Orange and Rockland counties, wrote that the typical New York resident pays $3,000 and $4,000 per year to heat energy-inefficient homes. The loans would eliminate the upfront cost of retrofit construction, a major obstacle for many people, which could cut bills 30 percent to 40 percent and get repaid in about eight years, he said.

On the Senate floor, Sen. Kevin Parker, D-Brooklyn, related the bill to polar bears drowning as ice floes melt from global warming. “This is about our carbon footprint,’’ he said.

The Assembly passed the bill 147-0 in June. Speaker Sheldon Silver said aging and inefficient building stock is a leading contributor of high New York utility costs and climate change.

Senate Republican leader Dean Skelos voted against it, noting the measure takes money from state programs for renewable energy, while hundreds of millions of dollars in weatherization funds are set aside for inner-city apartments under NYSERDA and Division of Housing and Community Renewal programs. Skelos said if anything, money should go back to utility rate payers who’ve been hit with higher taxes.

Under the revolving-fund loans, certified contractors would be authorized to enroll applicants, train workers and make energy-saving retrofits. Backers estimate that 5,000 to 15,000 new jobs would be created.

Local 32BJ of the Service Employees International Union called the new measure a step in the right direction, but said officials need to ensure new jobs “pay livable wages.’’ Spokesman Eugenio Villasante said the union represents 70,000 building workers in New York, many in buildings the legislation seeks to retrofit.


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Read Comments (6)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Sep 20, 2009 at 09:50 PM Anonymous Says:

The more money we spend on fixing the global warming problem the better off we and children will be. This is clearly the biggest environmental problem we face today and our rav spoke about it today during his drasha before musaf.

2

 Sep 21, 2009 at 07:40 AM Funny Says:

#1... You made me laugh. Thank you!

3

 Sep 21, 2009 at 08:24 AM FVNMS Says:

Reply to #1  
Anonymous Says:

The more money we spend on fixing the global warming problem the better off we and children will be. This is clearly the biggest environmental problem we face today and our rav spoke about it today during his drasha before musaf.

What about the whales? And Mumiyah? Why didn't your rav speak about these pressing topics? What was she thinking?!

4

 Sep 21, 2009 at 09:51 AM Anonymous Says:

Nos. 2 and 3: Why do some OJ's so hate the idea of protecting the environment? What type of earth do you want your children to inherit?

5

 Sep 21, 2009 at 11:02 AM Charlie Hall Says:

Reply to #4  
Anonymous Says:

Nos. 2 and 3: Why do some OJ's so hate the idea of protecting the environment? What type of earth do you want your children to inherit?

Because they've assimilated non-Jewish values! Protecting the environment from unnecessary destruction is certainly a Torah value and saving energy can reduce the income of our Arab enemies.

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 Sep 21, 2009 at 01:30 PM FVNMS Says:

I don't know what segment of society you belong to, but you clearly seem to feel a need to point out that you assume I'm an OJ. Why is this? The fact that you must always bring race and ethnicity into everything is an example of how liberalism is antithetical to itself. Don't you remember what you learned on Sesame Street? We're all the same.

As far as global warming is concerned, it (yawn) has been shown so many times to have nothing to do with human activity, and (gasp!) might not even be a bad thing. I guess more "OJ's" than others realize that, perhaps because the void in your life which you fill with liberal hogwash is prefilled with G-d's wisdom (aka Torah). I dunno, it better equips us to deal with the world and process things logically and non-hysterically.

Crash course: Liberalism is about change. And what are we changing? Logic and intuition are to be replaced with manufactured utopian ideas. Most intelligent "OJ's" reject that nonsense. Oh, and Charlie: most liberal thinking is diametrically opposed to the Jewish values you lament that we have assimilated. Abortion, gay rights, sexual emanciation, etc, are not really Jewish values, now, are they?

Also, I don't mind sticking my neck out to state that Envirowhackos and their minions who resort to terror are just as dangerous as our Arab enemies.

Finally, not everyone who thinks conservatively is an "OJ."

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