Tuesday
Apr222008
Congressman Baird urges Americans to go green
Congressman Brian Baird (D-WA) held a press conference to encourage Americans to spend the money they receive from President Bush’s stimulus package on “green” products in order to both help the environment and boost the sagging economy.
Baird discussed how Americans have to spend the money “being put in our pockets” responsibly, and by improving our environment we could in turn better the future of our country. He cited his urging Congress to pass the bipartisan resolution H. Res. 987 as a start to begin convincing citizens to support his “Buy Green to Save Green” legislation.
Baird mentioned that although legislation to “go green” has been slow to implement, individual efforts to improve the environment have been successful. At the press conference, representatives from Lowes Hardware, Sears, and Home Depot spoke about how their companies have made efforts to increase the sales of environmentally friendly products by offering consumers discounts on such goods.
Baird discussed how Americans have to spend the money “being put in our pockets” responsibly, and by improving our environment we could in turn better the future of our country. He cited his urging Congress to pass the bipartisan resolution H. Res. 987 as a start to begin convincing citizens to support his “Buy Green to Save Green” legislation.
Baird mentioned that although legislation to “go green” has been slow to implement, individual efforts to improve the environment have been successful. At the press conference, representatives from Lowes Hardware, Sears, and Home Depot spoke about how their companies have made efforts to increase the sales of environmentally friendly products by offering consumers discounts on such goods.
tagged baird, economy, environment, green in News/Commentary
Billions from Bush to Bank
President Bush’s plan calls for a two billion dollar contribution from the United States to the World Bank. An additional eight billion dollars would come from other developed countries. Funding would then be distributed through the World Bank, a decision met with skepticism by Brent Blackwelder of Friends of the Earth. Blackwelder said that the World Bank has a history of allocating funds for damaging projects and that there is “no confidence” that the bank has changes its policies.
Jacob Wersman, , program director of the World Resources Institute's Institutions and Governance Program, said that the United States was at last taking the lead in issues pertaining to global climate control, adding that the Clean Technology Fund has potential to also reform the United States’s energy sector.
Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) expressed discomfort with the monetary price of instituting the program, a discomfort that Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.) pointed out challenges a policy formed by Paul’s own party. In reference to government spending, Paul said that the United States “will have to wake up and be responsible.” Frank said that, though he supports the initiative, the Clean Technology Fund would likely be cut ahead of other government projects.