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4.11.2011

Washingtons Recession-Proof Industry

Here's one sector that hasn't suffered in the recession: Washington lobbyists.

Since 2000, the financial services industry's spending on federal lobbying rose 102%, to $472.9 million last year, according to an analysis by the Center for Responsive Politics, a nonpartisan group that tracks lobbying.

Spending by the pharmaceutical and health-products industries, meanwhile, rose 139%, to $240.3 million last year.

The electric utilities industry increased its spending by 139%, to $191 million,

while the oil and gas industry raised its spending by 184%, to $146.5 million, last year. Both increases can be attributed in part to the climate-change debate.

And business groups in general got busier in the Obama era as well.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Washington's wealthiest lobbying outfit, and the Business Roundtable, which represents corporate CEOs helped push spending in business associations' sector up 203%, to $170 million, last year.

"It's the kind of expansion that any industry would have envied during that very dark period," says Dave Levinthal, editor of opensecrets.org, the Center for Responsive Politics' blog.

None of this should be surprising. Businesses mobilized when Obama was elected first to prevent — and then to shape — the health care and financial reform measures that Congress adopted in 2010.

Both measures were once-in-a-generation, multi billion dollar reforms that industries were keen to fashion according to their interests. What is more unexpected is that even as Washington's lobbying industry spends more money than ever, the pool of registered lobbyists is shrinking: The number of registered lobbyists — 12,986 — is nearly 4% higher than a decade ago, but it's lower than the recent peak of 14,885, in 2007, according to the CRP's analysis of federal records.

The reasons are two-fold. First, firms are hiring a narrower group of lobbyists – often former Congressional staffers and elected officials with formidable rolodexes, at six-figure salaries, Levinthal says. It's hard to create a profile of who is leaving the lobbying industry. The second reason is President Obama's January 2009 Executive Order banning former lobbyists from working the federal agencies they once lobbied. That led many potential lobbyists to shy away from registering as one in the first place. Exhibit A: Until very recently, Chris Dodd was a Democratic senator from Connecticut. Now, he runs the Motion Picture Association of America. But he isn't a registered lobbyist. "If you're trying to stay in the game but don't want that 'lobbyist' label attached to you," Levinthal says, "you operate differently."

Washington's Recession-Proof Industry

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Join Us at These St. Louis-Area Events

On Mon, Apr 11, 2011 at 9:09 AM, Missouri Coalition for the Environment <moenviron@moenviron.org> wrote:
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UPCOMING EVENTS

Volunteer Opportunities 
Earth Day
Saturday, April 17 11:00am - 6:00pm
Forest Park
The Festival is the oldest and largest environmental event in the Midwest featuring over 250 vendors and attracting 25,000 people from the St. Louis and Midwest region gather in Forest Park on the Muny grounds to engage in learning and celebration. 
  
Earth Day Expo and Farmers Market - Kirkwood
Saturday, April 23rd 10:00am - 3:00pm
This family-friend festival will have something for everyone such as demonstations on how to make your home more earth-friendly, music and entertainment.  

Protest
Ameren Shareholders Meeting
Thursday, April 21 · 7:30am - 9:30am

Powell Symphony Hall, 718 N Grand Blvd, Saint Louis, MO
Ameren Missouri is holding their annual Meeting of Shareholders to vote on several issues pertaining to their governing laws.The anti-CWIP law states that investor-owned utilities, like Ameren, are not allowed to collect money from ratepayers for costs associated with new power plants until they are producing electricity. This law saved Ameren ratepayers $400 million after the completion of the 1st nuclear reactor in Callaway County. Ameren wants to repeal part of this law. Know the talking points and make a difference.


Join us for Upcoming Events
Keifer Creek MLK Hike
Saturday, April 9 10:00am - 12:30pm
Castlewood State Park, 1401 Kiefer Creek Road
Link to the map. The weather this weekend should be lovely. We are going to talk about ecosystem restoration and look at ways the Kiefer Creek watershed would benefit from an infusion of native plants in Castlewood and along the riparian corridor. 

Missouri Food Bill Forum - 5-stop Missouri Tour
April 28 - May 4
We are hosting 5 forums across Missouri. We are partnering with the esteemed conservation leader, the Izaak Walton League, and local organizations to host a number of forums across Missouri on America's Food Future.  At these events, you can join the conversation about the next Food Bill. It is a 5-stop Missouri tour and I invite you to  attend a forum near you. For more information click here.

'Truck Farm' Screening at the Tivoli
May 12 7:00pm
Tivoli Theater, 6350 Delmar Blvd., St. Louis, MO 63130
From the Peabody-winning co-creators of "King Corn" comes "
Truck Farm", a new documentary telling the story of an old truck, a new kind of farming, and the future of food in the American city. Tickets are $10 ($5 for Missouri Coalition for the Environment members). Tickets are available online, but MCE members should RSVP by calling 314-727-0600.

Tree Identification Tour and BYO Lunch at Tower Grove Park
Thursday, May 15th 11:30am - 1:30pm
Tower Grove Park - Meet Up Location TBA
Tower Grove Park's Executive Director John Karel will lead a spring tour through south St. Lous' most beautiful gem. Participants will learn about the park's amazing and diverse trees, then enjoy their lunch while discussing the pleasures of picnics and urban green space.Tickets are $25 per person. If you would like to attend, please email me dfarrand@moenviron.org
Missouri Coalition for the Environment | 6267 Delmar Blvd., Ste. 2E | St. Louis | MO | 63130



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Scott's Contracting


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Chicago Wastes $9M A Year of Energy on Street Lights

Chicago has ~250,000 street lights, most are sodium vapor (yellow street lights) HED lights that send light basically in every direction

Saturday, 09 April 2011 Time is Energy - Daniel Simon

While most sane people would probably say no...if you live in Chicago you actually say YES!

I am talking about the annual $ value of the wasted energy from our street lights. Chicago has ~250,000 street lights, most are sodium vapor (yellow street lights) HED lights that send light basically in every direction. While the point of street lights is to light the street, the most common model of street light sends as much light up into the night sky as it does down to the street, where we want it. That is waste--pure and simple.

I spent a few minutes researching the question today and ran across this website that runs through the numbers (check out the photo of Chicago from space at the bottom of the website to "see" the waste). The group is called Illinois Coalition for Responsible Lighting...I only ran across their website today, but their math looks right (their homepage shows a map of the whole US lit up).

The bottom line is that Chicago streetlights burn a bit over 300 million kwh each year, and Chicagoans pay ~$18 million/yr--according to the 2008 values/calculation on the website above. This means that if we use LED street lights which direct their light down (plus I've read that they save over 50% of the energy of sodium vapor lights) we would get just as much light, but save $9 million each year (and eliminate 150 million kwh/yr of unnecessary energy demand, carbon emissions etc.). According to the case study linked to above, the payback would be under 5 years (maybe less today since LEDs improve every year and that study is 6 years old).

Since Chicago is nearly 1% of the US population, scaling this to the whole country means we could reduce more than 15 billion kwh of energy waste each year (3% of our total electricity use) and save over $1 billion in electricity costs alone. (Note the $9 million in savings was based on less than $0.06/kwh rate the City of Chicago payed in 2008.)

Actually along the north end of the Lake Shore Drive, some LED lights have been installed just in the last ~6 months and are working great. Hopefully we can roll those out citywide in a hurry!

cross posted >Source

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Scott's Contracting

Green Me UP-Scotty
scottscontracting@gmail.com
http://stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
http://scottscontracting.wordpress.com

http://twitter.com/StLHandyMan
https://www.facebook.com/GreenMeUPScotty

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