February 17, 2010

CONTENTS
 
NEWS YOU CAN USE
 
Teleconference on the President’s budget rescheduled for tomorrow, Thursday, Feb 18th
Sign up ASAP
   
Federal funds available for rural broadband projects
Applications due March 10th
   
 
ISSUES AND OPINIONS
 
Partnership supports Wall Street Fair Share bills in House & Senate
Center for Economic and Policy Research proposes taxing Wall Street
 
 
PARTNERSHIP NEWS
 
Congressman Dave Obey keynotes grand opening of WESTCAP (WI)
economic development Community Action/Tech College project
 
Cash prizes for your best photos showing community economic development!
Show the world your success stories and win $$$$
 
FREE TELECONFERENCE ON PRESIDENT OBAMA' S PROPOSED BUDGET


Thanks to our great colleagues at the Coalition on Human Needs, Food Research and Action Center, and the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities for making this teleconference available, Sign up now!

The President's Budget (Finally) Explained
Thursday, February 18, 3:00 - 4:30 p.m. EST
in-person and online
at Economic Policy Institute
1333 H Street, NW
Suite 300
(Near Metro Center Red Line stop)

We hope DC-environs colleagues craving human contact will be well dug out and can join us in person.
Join us online by registering at: http://www.bostonconferencing.com/chn2/register. (If you've already registered for the earlier date(s), you do not have to do so again)

Presenters:

Robert Greenstein, Executive Director, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities
Deborah Weinstein, Executive Director, Coalition on Human Needs
Moderator: Ellen Teller, Director of Government Affairs, Food Research and Action Center

Thanks for your patience! Record-breaking snow in the DC area has slowed us, but it won't stop us! We're pleased to offer this opportunity for advocates in DC and around the country to share important information about the President's budget. Please come in person if you can; if not, you'll be able to see slides and hear the speakers online by registering: http://www.bostonconferencing.com/chn2/register
Online participants can type in questions; we'll answer as many as possible.

For some introductory perspective on the budget, please see these pieces by our presenters:

Statement by Robert Greenstein, Executive Director, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, on the President's 2011 Budget Proposal; and President's Budget Requests $266 Billion to Support Economic Recovery, at http://www.cbpp.org/cms/index.cfm?fa=view&id=3078

• CHN Executive Director Deborah Weinstein's Huffington Post blog, Not Just Numbers: The President's Budget and Real Life.

 

RESOURCES AVAILABLE FOR RURAL BROADBAND PROJECTS

 

Thanks to our great colleague Janet Topolsky at the Rural Family Economic Success Action Network (RuFES). Even if you and your agency decide not to apply for this round of federal broadband grants, the item from RuFES below has useful links and other information that you can use for any future broadband initiatives you might want to implement.


EARN IT, KEEP IT and GROW IT
Here Comes Another Big Chunk of Rural Broadband Change

Is access to broadband a challenge in your rural community? If you answered yes, your area surely is not alone in rural America.

And as you well know, getting rural families fast and easy access to the internet is critical to the basic stuff of living and getting ahead. The internet is the first stop these days for searching and applying for a job, conducting financial transactions, doing your school homework, filing your taxes and EITC forms, requesting information and benefits, and getting news and the basic facts on just about anything.

Last year, federal grants were made available for rural broadband initiatives as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA - or the Stimulus Package). Now the National Telecommunication and Infrastructure Administration (NTIA) and the Department of Agriculture's Rural Utility Service (RUS) have issued a Notice of Funds Availability (NOFA) for a round of $4.8 billion in grants to support rural broadband projects.

But time is short. Applications will be accepted between February 16, 2010 and March 10, 2010.

Are you worried this process may be too complicated? To help applicants prepare for the NOFA, the NTIA and RUS have posted helpful resources at broadbandusa.gov. These include links to:

• The press release announcing the NOFA
• The on-line application form
• A list of Frequently Asked Questions
• Links to BroadBand Match - a service that helps connect potential partners in the application process. NTIA/RUS suggest that most successful applicants in the first round included a comprehensive group of local organizations, meaning coalitions that are ready to hit the ground running. BroadBand Match may help you find them
• And Coming Soon on the .gov website: the January 26th and 29th webcasts of technical assistance sessions for potential applicants

Here are two other web connections that provide helpful guidance or information:

The Blandin Foundation's Broadband Toolkit
The New America Foundation's Open Technology Initiative

We hope these Action Alerts energize your RuFES deeds and aspirations. Help us spark more RuFES action! How? Simply contact us with any news, ideas or opportunities that can help your RuFES colleagues across the nation.

NEWS FROM AMERICANS FOR FINANCIAL REFORM


Nicole Woo, Director of Domestic Policy at the Center for Economic Development and Policy Research (CEPR), provided us with the opportunity to join with other leading national organizations to promote fairness in the federal tax system. The Partnership signed the letter below which was sent to Senator Harkin and Representative DeFazio.


February 9, 2010

The Honorable Tom Harkin
731 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510

The Honorable Peter DeFazio
2134 Rayburn House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515

Dear Senator Harkin and Representative DeFazio:

We, the undersigned organizations, are writing in support of your bills, “The Wall Street Fair Share Act” (S. 2927) and “Let Wall Street Pay for the Restoration of Main Street Act of 2009” (H.R. 4191). Your bills would rein in reckless financial markets gambling, and help prevent another economic crises by placing modest taxes on financial speculation.

Your bills would also put Wall Street to work for the public good by placing a small securities transaction tax on trades of stocks, options and swaps. A tax on these trades has little impact on the average investor or pension fund because they hold their investments for the long-term, but it does curb risky financial behavior and high-volume short-term speculative trading. By exempting individual retirement accounts, tax-benefited mutual funds, pension funds, and the first $100,000 of stock purchases per year, your bills effectively exempt middle class investors.

At a time when funds are urgently needed to address the employment crisis and budget deficits at home, as well as other urgent needs such as poverty and climate crises around the globe, this bill would provide an important, reliable revenue stream. A modest tax of 0.25 percent would raise $75 billion a year. The cost of financial trading has dropped dramatically over the last three decades as a result of computerization, which has led to an explosion in trading volume and a redistribution of resources to Wall Street. The taxes proposed in your bills would raise trading costs only back to the levels in the 1980s, a period with vibrant and well-developed capital markets.

The idea of a transaction tax is not a new one. The United States had a transfer tax from 1914 to 1966 which levied a 0.2 percent tax on all sales or transfers of stock. In 1932, Congress more than doubled the tax to help financial recovery and job creation during the Great Depression.

Critics charge that if the United States reapplies this tax domestically it would simply push trading overseas. This claim is demonstrably false as the United Kingdom currently levies a similar tax and has the highest volume exchange in Europe. Moreover, every major European leader is now calling for this type of tax to be applied globally, and the United States is the major roadblock to this plan.

“The Wall Street Fair Share Act” and “Let Wall Street Pay for the Restoration of Main Street Act of 2009” are important steps in the direction of economic fairness and balance for these reasons, we fully endorse both bills.

Sincerely,

A New Way Forward
Accountable America
AFL-CIO
Alaska Center for Public Policy
Alliance for Democracy
American Income Life Insurance Company
Americans for Democratic Action, Inc.
Americans for Financial Reform*
Page 2 of 5 www.ourfinancialsecurity.org
Americans in Support of American Citizens
Arizona Advocacy Network
Campaign for America's Future
Center for Community Change
Center for Media and Democracy
Center of Concern
Center on Policy Initiatives
Citizen Action of New York
Citizen Action of Wisconsin
Citizen Action/Illinois
Colorado Progressive Action
Commonweal Institute
Community Action Partnership
Connecticut Citizen Action Group
Consumer Action
Consumer Watchdog
CtW Investment Group
Demos
Drum Major Institute for Public Policy
Empire Justice Center
Florida Citizen Action NetworkGeorgia Rural Urban Summit
Global AIDS Alliance
Global Exchange
Health GAP
Institute for Policy Studies, Global Economy
ProjectInternational Forum on Globalization
Iowa Citizen Action Network
Jobs with Justice
Liberty Tree Foundation

Maine People’s Alliance
Maryknoll Office for Global Concerns
Michigan Citizen Action
Missouri Progressive Vote Coalition
National Association of Investment
Professionals
National People's Action
NDPeople.org
Neighborhood Economic Development
Advocacy Project (NEDAP)
New Hampshire Citizens Alliance for Action
New Jersey Citizen Action
New Rules for Global Finance
Ocean State Action
Oil Change International
Oregon Action
Pacifica Climate Committee
PennAction
Progressive Democrats of America
Progressive Leadership Alliance of Nevada
Progressive Maryland
ProgressOhio
Public Citizen
Radio Free Maine
Service Employees International Union
Tennessee Citizen Action
The E.P. Systems Group, Inc.
United Action for Idaho
United Food and Commercial Workers
International Union
United for a Fair Economy
United Steelworkers of America
USAction
Washington Citizen Action Network
Wealth for the Common Good
West Virginia Center on Budget and Policy
West Virginia Citizen Action Group
Western States Center
www.globalsocialjustice.com

 

ANOTHER WEST CENTRAL WISCONSIN COMMUNITY
ACTION AGENCY SUCCESS STORY

 

Using a $4.1 million USDA Rural Development Community Facilities loan, the West Central Wisconsin Community Action Agency (West CAP) opened a new housing facility for students of the Wisconsin Indianhead Technical College and University of Wisconsin-Barron. Congressman Dave Obey was the featured speaker at the ribbon-cutting ceremony and he spoke with pride about the new facility which will house nearly 100 students.

“It gives students at these colleges a decent place to live, and secondly it helps develop the local economy. Just building the facility does some good in terms of jobs because you give people jobs they wouldn’t likely have had,” said Congressman Obey.

“This facility is heated with a geothermal system. We’ve got 24 deep wells under the parking lot that take heat out of the earth to heat our facility through radiant floor heating,” noted Peter Kilde, the West CAP executive Director.

To learn more about West CAP, visit www.westcap.org

Video clips from two local TV stations:
http://www.weau.com/news/headlines/84413847.html
http://www.wqow.com/Global/story.asp?S=11989082


EMAIL YOUR PHOTOS IN BY THURSDAY, MARCH 4th
 

 


The Partnership is offering cash prizes for your electronic photos that show your agency’s best, most successful community economic development initiatives in action! We’re looking for great photos that show CA participants and staff doing real labor, weatherization, hands-on training activities, green jobs work, housing activity, microenterprise activity, environmental restoration, outdoor work, indoor work…hey! You show us what you’re proudest of and your projects which contribute to the economic well-being of the community you serve.

Simple criteria. No shots of meetings or sitting around or group shots of folks in ties and prom dresses. We’re looking for pictures that really show your story. Pictures of workers who show pride in what they’re accomplishing; no pictures of folks who look like they’ve been sucking on lemons and hate life (we’ve gotten some of those-honest!). You’ll need to send in a caption for the photo, e.g. names, site, activity, locale and a brief description of the project so we can write it up and add to your glory. We’ll use these in our Promise magazine, on our new CED website (coming soon) and in our weekly eNews.

PRIZES:

• First prizes (dead heat!) – two $200 prizes (only one of these per agency). Check payable to your agency.

• Second place (quint-fecta!) – five $100 prizes (only one per agency; yes, you can win one 1st and one 2nd prize). Check payable to your agency.

These prizes from a private donor; no federal/public funds used. All photos will become the property of the Community Action Partnership. Your agency always will be credited as we use them.

Email your greatest pics to Ms. Stacy Flowers, our new Director of Community Economic Development sflowers@communityactionpartnership.com

Deadline: March 4, 2010.
(Please send hi-resolution jpgs, 300 dpi, as large as possible. Include description and photo credit, if appropriate. Any technical questions call Dini at 202.449.9787. Thank you.)


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