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9.17.2010

Poverty Rises as Wall Street Billionaires Whine

Les Leopold

Les Leopold

Posted: September 17, 2010 09:01 AM
The ranks of the working-age poor in the United States climbed to the highest level since the 1960s as the recession threw millions of people out of work last year, leaving one in seven Americans in poverty. The overall poverty rate climbed to 14.3 per cent, or 43.6 million people, the Census Bureau said yesterday in its annual report on the economic well-being of US households. Gulfnews.com
While 43.6 million Americans live in poverty, the richest men of finance sure are getting pissy. First Steve Schwartzman, head of the Blackrock private equity company, compares the Obama administration's effort to close billionaires' tax loopholes to "the Nazi invasion of Poland." Then hedge fund mogul David Loeb announces that he's abandoning the Democrats because they're violating "this country's core founding principles" -- including "non-punitive taxation, Constitutionally-guaranteed protections against persecution of the minority, and an inexorable right of self-determination." Instead of showing their outrage about the spread of poverty in the richest nation on Earth, the super-rich want us to pity them?


Why are Wall Street's billionaires so whiny? Is it really possible to make $900,000 an hour (not a typo -- that's what the top ten hedge fund managers take in), and still feel aggrieved about the way government is treating you? After you've been bailed out by the federal government to the tune of $10 trillion (also not a typo) in loans, asset swaps, liquidity and other guarantees, can you really still feel like an oppressed minority?

You'd think the Wall Street moguls would be thankful. Not just thankful -- down on their knees kissing the ground taxpayers walk on and hollering hallelujah at the top of their lungs! These guys profited from puffing up the housing bubble, then got bailed out when the going got tough. (Please see The Looting of America for all the gory details.) Without taxpayer largess, these hedge fund honchos would be flat broke. Instead, they're back to hauling in obscene profits.

These billionaires don't even have to worry about serious financial reforms. The paltry legislation that squeaked through Congress did nothing to end too big and too interconnected to fail. In fact, the biggest firms got even bigger as they gobbled up troubled banks, with the generous support of the federal government. No bank or hedge fund was broken up. Nobody was forced to pay a financial transaction tax. None of the big boys had a cap placed on their astronomical wealth. No one's paying reparations for wrecking the US economy. The big bankers are still free to create and trade the very derivatives that catapulted us into this global crisis. You'd think the billionaires would be praying on the altar of government and erecting statues on Capital Hill in honor of St. Bailout.


Instead, standing before us are these troubled souls, haunted by visions of persecution. Why?

The world changed. Before the bubble burst, these people walked on water. Their billions proved that they were the best and the brightest -- not just captains of the financial universe, but global elites who had earned a place in history. They donated serious money to worthy causes -- and political campaigns. No one wanted to mess with them.

But then came the crash. And the things changed for the big guys -- not so much financially as spiritually. Plebeians, including me, are asking pointed questions and sometimes even being heard, both on the Internet and in the mainstream media. For the first time in a generation, the public wants to know more about these emperors and their new clothes. For instance:

• What do these guys actually do that earns them such wealth?

• Is what they do productive and useful for society? Is there any connection between what they earn and what they produce for society?

• Did they help cause the crash?

• Did these billionaires benefit from the bailouts? If so, how much?

• Are they exacerbating the current unemployment and poverty crisis with their shenanigans?

• Why shouldn't we eliminate their tax loopholes (like carried interest)?

• Should their sky-high incomes be taxed at the same levels as during the Eisenhower years?

• Can we create the millions of jobs we need if the billionaires continue to skim off so much of our nation's wealth??

• Should we curb their wealth and political influence?

How dare we ask such questions! How dare we consider targeting them for special taxes? How dare we even think about redistributing THEIR incomes... even if at the moment much of their money comes directly from our bailouts and tax breaks?

It's true that the billionaires live in a hermetically sealed world. But that doesn't mean they don't notice the riffraff nipping at their heels. And they don't like it much. So they've gotten busy doing what billionaires do best: using their money to shield themselves. They're digging into their bottomless war chests, tapping their vast connections and using their considerable influence to shift the debate away from them and towards the rest of us.
We borrowed too much, not them. We get too much health care, not them. We retire too soon, not them. We need to tighten our belts while they pull in another $900,000 an hour. And if we want to cure poverty, we need to get the government to leave Wall Street alone. Sadly, their counter-offensive is starting to take hold.

How can this happen? Many Americans want to relate to billionaires. They believe that all of us are entitled to make as much as we can, pretty much by any means necessary. After all, maybe someday you or I will strike it rich. And when we do, we sure don't want government regulators or the taxman coming around!

Billionaires are symbols of American individual prowess and virility. And if we try to hold them back or slow them down, we're on the road to tyranny. Okay, the game is rigged in their favor. Okay, they got bailed out while the rest of us didn't -- especially the 29 million people who are jobless or forced into part-time work. But what matters most is that in America, nothing can interfere with individual money-making. That only a few of us actually make it into the big-time isn't a bad thing: It's what makes being rich so special. So beware: If we enact even the mildest of measures to rein in Wall Street billionaires, we're on the path to becoming North Korea.

Unfortunately, if we don't adjust our attitudes, we can expect continued high levels of unemployment and more people pushed below the poverty line. It's not clear that our economy will ever recover as long as the Wall Street billionaires keep siphoning off so much of our wealth. How can we create jobs for the many while the few are walking off with $900,000 an hour with almost no new jobs to show for it? In the old days, even robber barons built industries that employed people -- steel, oil, railroads. Now the robber barons build palaces out of fantasy finance. We can keep coddling our financial billionaires and let our economy spiral down, or we can make them pay their fair share so we can create real jobs. These guys crashed the economy, they killed billions of jobs, and now they're cashing in on our bailout. They owe us. They owe the unemployed. They owe the poor.

Dwight D. Eisenhower was no radical, but he accepted the reality: If America was going to prosper -- and pay for its costly Cold War -- the super-rich would have to pony up. It was common knowledge that when the rich grew too wealthy, they used their excess incomes to speculate. In the 1950s, memories of the Great Depression loomed large, and people knew that a skewed distribution of income only fueled speculative booms and disastrous busts. On Ike's watch, the effective marginal tax rate for those earning over $3 million (in today's dollars) was over 70 percent. The super-rich paid. As a nation we respected that other important American value: advancing the common good.

For the last thirty years we've been told that making as much as you can is just another way of advancing the common good. But the Great Recession erased that equation: The Wall Streeters who made as much as they could undermined the common good. It's time to balance the scales. This isn't just redistribution of income in pursuit of some egalitarian utopia. It's a way to use public policy to reattach billionaires to the common good.

It's time to take Eisenhower's cue and redeploy the excessive wealth Wall Street's high rollers have accumulated. If we leave it in their hands, they'll keep using it to construct speculative financial casinos. Instead, we could use that money to build a stronger, more prosperous nation. We could provide our people with free higher education at all our public colleges and universities -- just like we did for WWII vets under the GI Bill of Rights (a program that returned seven dollars in GDP for every dollar invested). We could fund a green energy Manhattan Project to wean us from fossil fuels. An added bonus: If we siphon some of the money off Wall Street, some of our brightest college graduates might even be attracted not to high finance but to jobs in science, education and healthcare, where we need them.

Of course, this pursuit of the common good won't be easy for the billionaires (and those who indentify with them.). But there's just no alternative for this oppressed minority: They're going to have to learn to live on less than $900,000 an hour.

Les Leopold is the author of The Looting of America: How Wall Street's Game of Fantasy Finance destroyed our Jobs, Pensions and Prosperity, and What We Can Do About It Chelsea Green Publishing, June 2009.
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St Louis Construction News-Wind Farm-Eads Bridge

Eads Bridge fix-up, Missouri wind farm on list of stimulus projects

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buy this photo LAURIE SKRIVAN OCTOBER 7 2009 - A metro link train travels underneath the Eads Bridge Wednesday morning. Metro is preparing to plow $25 million in federal stimulus funds into rehabilitating the structural supports of the historic Eads Bridge. The work will include rehab of the steel work, repainting the framework, and replacing the track and overhead lines that power the MetroLink trains that use the bridge. Laurie Skrivan lskrivan@post-dispatch.com

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WASHINGTON - The Obama administration has more than a few doubters when it comes to the beneficial impacts of the $800 billion-plus stimulus program.

Trying to counter perceptions, Vice President Joe Biden put out a http://www.whitehouse.gov/sites/default/files/100-Recovery-Act-Projects-Changing-America-Report.pdf"> report today with the title "100 Recovery Act Projects That Are Changing America."

They include traditional bricks-and-mortar spending along with new-style initiatives such as expenditures for broadband expansion, solar energy and electric car battery plants.

Biden sounded like he was warming up for the 2012 election in a statement contending that with the kind of projects being funded, "we're starting to turn the page on a decade of failed economic policies and rebuild our economy on a new foundation ..."

A $25 million grant for work on the Eads Bridge connecting Missouri and Illinois at St. Louis is among the old-style infrastructure projects on the list of 100.

The report says that engineering will be completed in coming months and that the project will create some 875 construction jobs over two years when it gets going next spring.

The work will provide safety upgrades to both the superstructure and the piers that support the 136-year-old bridge and "would not be possible" without the stimulus money, the report asserts.

Among the "green" projects in the report is a $107 million grant-in-lieu-of tax credit for the Lost Creek Wind Farm in northwest Missouri.

That project is developed by Wind Capital Group of St. Louis, whose president and CEO is Tom Carnahan. He's the brother of Rep. Russ Carnahan, D-St. Louis, and Missouri Secretary of State Robin Carnahan.

The report says that the award occurred in July and that the project created 300 jobs during construction. A Lost Creek spokesman said that the wind farm, which already is in operation, created 2,500 throughout the supply chain.

Also on the list is a $32 million grant to Smith Electric in Kansas City. The report says that the award will enable the company to build some 500 all-electric trucks and support more than 220 direct and indirect jobs. $25 million grant for work on the Eads Bridge connecting Missouri and Illinois at St. Louis is among the old-style infrastructure projects on the list of 100.



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Re: No Back Room Deals for Big Polluters



On Fri, Sep 17, 2010 at 12:37 PM, Environmental Defense Action Fund <takeaction@edf.org> wrote:

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According to a news report this week, Congressional climate action opponents are hosting back room meetings with polluter lobbyists promising to block action on any new climate legislation in exchange for campaign donations.

Help us tell your members of Congress, "No Back Room Deals for Big Polluters."

Environmental Defense Action Fund

Dear Scotts Contracting,

smokestack red

Climate action opponents are promising big polluters to block climate action next year in exchange for campaign contributions.

Tell your members of Congress "No Back Room Deals for Polluters."

According to a report in Politico, House Energy and Commerce Committee ranking member Joe Barton (R-TX), Committee member Fred Upton (R-MI), and three other Republican Committee members met this week with 40-50 corporate lobbyists at the National Republican Club.

An industry source who attended the meeting said the message was clear:

"You should be giving us money because we're going to be in charge. We'll ensure there is no climate bill. But at the same time, they think they'll build nuclear plants and more clean coal."

Meanwhile, in the Senate, West Virginia Democrat Jay Rockefeller claimed to have 53 Senators supporting his bill to block the Environmental Protection Agency from cutting climate pollution from America's largest carbon emitters. He needs only 7 more votes to reach the filibuster-proof 60-vote majority.

These are very high stakes in our fight to hold polluters accountable, promote cleaner air, and fight for climate action. We need your continued support and activism now more than ever before.

Please send an email to your members of Congress today and tell them "No Back Room Deals for Polluters."

Our members of Congress need to hear from their constituents on these issues -- they need to know that the polluters aren't the only ones paying attention. Let them know that you oppose any and all efforts to weaken America's clean air laws and that you support clean energy and climate action.

What's at Stake

The EPA is scheduled to begin implementing new climate pollution limits on January 1. This is the result of a 2007 Supreme Court ruling declaring that the EPA not only has the authority to regulate carbon emissions under the Clean Air Act, it has the obligation to do so.

Last year, the EPA issued an endangerment finding detailing the threat of global warming to human health. EPA later issued its plans to initiate pollution limits starting with America's biggest emitters.

When the Senate decided it was not going to vote on a comprehensive climate and energy bill this year, the full attention of the big polluters and their lobbyists shifted to EPA climate action. Senators from both sides of the aisle have offered legislative proposals to limit EPA authority, including an insidious plan to attach an amendment to must-pass appropriations bills.

This is part of a broader strategy by the big polluters to strike down a wide range of pollution limits. Corporate lobbyists are also pushing to weaken the "boiler rule," which limits emissions of toxic mercury, dioxins, and other hazardous pollutants.

The polluting industries have already spent $514 million over the last 18 months to block climate legislation. And the U.S. Chamber of Commerce has pledged to spend $100 million over the next few years to continue to promote big polluter and other corporate interests. We must remain vigilant in the fight.

Please email your members of Congress today to make sure they know you support EPA climate action and you support America's clean air laws.

With your support, we can stand up to the big polluters and their friends in Congress and keep up the pressure to promote climate legislation.

Thank you for your activism and support,
Environmental Defense Action Fund

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Environmental Defense Action Fund
1875 Connecticut Ave. NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20009
1-800-591-1919

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American states get report card on energy efficiency

American states get report card on energy efficiency


Portland, Ore., September 15, 2010 — Energy Resource Management, an energy efficiency finance company, announces the publication of a research report in collaboration with the U.S. Center for American Progress in Washington, D.C.

The report, titled "Efficiency Works: Creating Good Jobs and New Markets Through Energy Efficiency" notes the top 10 U.S. states leading in the creation of energy efficiency-fueled jobs and industries and provides a report card on innovative state energy policies.

The states profiled are leaders in creating energy efficiency programs that work as effective partnerships between regulatory agencies, utilities, commercial and residential building owners, large campus owners and private capital investors.

The top states recognized for promoting energy efficiency are: Connecticut, New York, California, Texas, Maryland, North Carolina, Massachusetts, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Ohio.

A near term solution to cutting dependence on foreign oil and coal, the states recognized in this report are aggressively addressing the needs of customers and investors in their markets.

The report argues the need for innovative financial tools that can have a transformational impact on the energy efficiency opportunity while creating jobs immediately. Included in the report are suggestions and highlights to drive new business investment through energy efficiency retrofits and clean energy.

"Energy efficiency is the true stimulus that America's economy needs: good jobs, higher productivity, lower carbon emissions and energy security all rolled into one," notes Curtis Robinhold, CEO of Energy Resource Management. "These states and policies start to make it very attractive for the largest building owners in the commercial and government sectors to implement financially beneficial energy efficiency upgrades to their real estate portfolios — turning their real estate into energy resources."

Bill Campbell, chairman of EnergyRM, and co-author of the report, notes, "Energy efficiency is the lowest cost delivery of the highest quality real energy in the world. Putting efficiency to work will require thousands of new engineering and construction jobs right away. We can create these jobs — and enhance job security and national energy security — starting today."

The report applauds the states that are able to create sustainable energy efficiency models and driving employment by doing the right thing and doing it profitably. The premise is that to be a sustainable nation we must create public-private partnerships between government and non-government entities, private business and public citizens.

Highlights of the report include:

· The most progress has been made in California estimated to create nearly 18,000 new jobs in the next two years as a result of energy efficiency-related initiatives), New England (the best at coordinating adjacent states' conservation efforts), the Mid-Atlantic region and New York.

· The unemployment rate in the construction industry remained at nearly 25 percent for three straight months by 2010. The implications of collapsing demand in construction are devastating. A national focus on retrofitting American homes, commercial buildings and campuses will be led by public policy shifts and investment from the private sector to be sustainable and scalable.

· Government policy shapes the overall market and underlying costs of delivering energy to consumers. The report outlines 10 policies that are effectively used in states and can have significant impact in shaping the market for energy efficiency.

· It is imperative that we embrace a national program to retrofit America's homes, offices and factories for energy efficiency. It will likely take public policy leadership to mobilize the private sector investment needed to grow this emerging market.

· Innovative approaches can create new opportunities for unbundled utilities to meet their energy efficiency targets within a structure that assures ratepayers of delivery of permanent demand reduction.

· By all accounts, utilities are not incentivized to make energy efficiency work. A misalignment of priorities, incentives, public policy and consumer demand is often credited for the low levels of commitment to energy efficiency within energy markets.

· There is a real need to educate and engage consumers, policy leaders, utilities and private investors in the solving the energy crisis and defining the consequences for ignoring or misappropriating efforts in this area.

The report identifies the leading states where smart policies are poised to set the stage for clean energy jobs and the businesses that will serve increased energy demands.

By detailing state regulations and incentives critical in determining which markets are best poised for new investment to support their ongoing initiatives, the report supports the need for U.S. competitiveness and reduced dependence on foreign oil.

Researchers examined key market drivers and policies to determine where energy efficiency retrofit programs generate the most value, particularly in the underserved commercial building market segment.

The research looked at 10 policies that catalyze the creation of energy efficiency fueled industries and jobs. These 10 states and these 10 policies are critical enablers for the launch of energy efficiency markets.

EnergyRM is a financial services company focused on providing financial solutions for energy-related investments in large buildings. A part of the Equilibrium Capital Group team of companies, EnergyRM deploys capital through business structures that make existing buildings more energy efficient at no capital cost to the building owner, and keeps the efficiency building operating at design efficiency for the long term.


Article From: http://www.elp.com/index/display/article-display.articles.Electric_Light_Power_Newsletter.enewsletter.American_states_get_report_card_on_energy_efficiency/QP129867/cmpid=ELPENLSeptember172010.html



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