Thursday 19 February 2009

LETTER FROM SANTA BARBARA

Our MPs and Ministers and local newspapers (across Europe) could and should soon (once Spring Budgets are published in March) be able to write me letters like the one below from my friend Senator Barbara Boxer, Senator for California. The European Commission should also publish its details of the European Recovery Programme. The London G20 (April) will also have positive spending news regarding aid for the poorest countries of the world alongside its new financial world order plans and progress reports. When looking at all this budget good news, will our media be doing the usual of focusing on what it means for the taxes of a typical surburban one and a half children, one and half jobs, family with a mortgage, 2 cars, 2 votes and one package holiday fortnight? This time round they should think macro-economically like the lovely Senator is doing. Lady Shriti Vadera, when you read this or Darling, please take note!
Dear Friend:
This week President Obama signed the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (H.R.1), which will save or create millions of American jobs -- including some 400,000 jobs here in California.
In the face of the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression, this historic legislation offers help and hope. It will put Californians to work building the highways, bridges, transit and rail systems, and renewable energy sources of the 21st century.
The economic recovery package includes major investments in programs that will create jobs right now while laying the foundation for sustained economic growth in the future. Here are just a few examples of what California will receive under these programs:
Infrastructure
* $2.6 billion in highway funding that could also be used rail and port infrastructure.
* $1.1 billion for investments in mass transit.
* $444.8 million to address the backlog of drinking water and clean water infrastructure needs.
Education
* $4.6 billion to local school districts and public colleges and universities.
* $82.7 million for Head Start to prepare children to succeed in school.
* $1.2 billion for Special Education Part B State Grants to help improve educational outcomes for individuals with disabilities.
* $74.2 million in education technology funds to purchase up-to-date computers and software and provide professional development to ensure the technology is used effectively in the classroom.
* $1.6 billion for Title I Education for the Disadvantaged to help close the achievement gap and enable disadvantaged students to reach their potential.
Energy
* $224.5 million through the State Energy Program.
* $192.1 million through the Weatherization Assistance Program.
Protecting Those Hurt by the Recession
* $220.2 million to provide quality child care services for in low-income families who increasingly are unable to afford the high cost of day care.
* $89.8 million in Community Services Block Grants to local community action agencies for services to the growing numbers of low-income families hurt by the economic crisis.
* $843.9 million to extend Unemployment Insurance for workers who have lost their jobs in this recession.
* $13.2 million for the Emergency Food and Shelter Program, which provides grants to nonprofit and faith-based organizations to provide for the immediate needs of the
* Homeless.
Tax Relief for Families and Small Businesses
* Up to $400 for workers (or $800 for married couples) in the new Making Work Pay Tax Credit for 12.4 million workers and their families.
* $250 to Social Security beneficiaries, SSI recipients, and disabled veterans.
* $2,500 for each of 522,000 additional families in California who will qualify for the new American Opportunity Tax Credit that makes college more affordable.
We know that this economic recovery package alone will not solve the entire problem; we must also address the housing and financial crises, and we will do so. Be assured that I will keep working with the Obama Administration and my Senate colleagues to enact legislation to stimulate growth, create jobs, and make American businesses more competitive in the global economy.
BB's letter to constituents in March 2009
Dear Friend:
The recently passed American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan (H.R.1), better known as “the stimulus bill,” is often described as a series of very large monetary figures. But the real goal of the bill was to create jobs, jumpstart growth, and transform our economy for the new century. Almost everyone in America will see the change that will be created by this bill. Let me provide some examples of what it will mean for average Californians.
* About 95 percent of all working families will qualify for the Making Work Pay tax cut. Working families will receive between a $400 and $800 tax cut, with an estimated 12.5 million Californians eligible for this tax cut.
* If you have children in California schools, they may see classroom, lab or library improvements as part of the plan to modernize schools. More than 1,200 California schools will receive modernization funding. Other funding for schools will also help to update technology and enable disadvantaged students to excel.
* If you have children in college, 522,000 families in California will be eligible for the American Opportunity Tax Credit to make college more affordable. This program creates a partially refundable tax credit for four years of college and puts higher education within reach of more Californians. The Pell Grant for college loans will also be increased to provide more funds to pay for college.
* If you receive Social Security benefits, or SSI, you will likely receive a one-time payment of $250.
* If you become unemployed, you can receive an additional $100 per month in unemployment insurance benefits, and your benefits will be extended if you remain unemployed. More than 2,395,000 Californians have lost their jobs in this recession and this extra money will help boost them and our economy with their added purchasing power.
* If you or a family member have become unemployed and you had health insurance, you will receive assistance in continuing your employer-provided health insurance coverage for up to nine months. The federal government will pay up to 65 percent of your health insurance premiums during this period of unemployment.
* If your neighborhood has foreclosed and abandoned houses, funds are provided to help local governments buy up and improve homes and make them available to renters or future buyers.
* If you are in the military, funds are provided to upgrade military medical facilities, housing, and childcare facilities. Funds are also provided to upgrade veteran medical facilities and to make repairs at veterans facilities.
* If you are a first-time home buyer, you may be eligible for an $8,000 tax credit toward the purchase of a home. And if you live in a high-cost area, you will have greater access to low-interest mortgage loans.
* If you are concerned about increasing crime in these hard economic times, the bill provides federal funding to hire more police officers through the COPS program.
* If you have a health problem, or even if you just regularly visit your doctor, your medical records will be computerized, enabling faster access to medical records and saving billions of dollars in health care costs.
* If you travel on America’s roads, freeways, bridges, or transit, you are likely to see improvements, upgrades and modernization including freeway construction, modernization of infrastructure that includes energy savings, and rail and transit construction to reduce traffic and gas consumption.
These are just examples of the good programs included in this historic legislation. And while it is just a step in a long road to economic recovery, it is a crucial one.

Sincerely,

Barbara Boxer
United States Senator

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