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Tag Archives: PACE

Last chance to pass PACE

14 Friday May 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

missouri, PACE

Folks, hear this, and make some calls this morning. It is our last chance to get PACE passed.

Pace, one of the best self-help bills to happen in decades, is on the cusp of failing in Missouri, with no opponents. What a shame.

PACE, rapidly spreading across the US, ingeniously allows homeowners to lien or borrow against a future property tax assessment to pay for energy improvements today. Whatever the future assessment is, the utility savings will always pay for it.

Two Leadership Senators hold the reins. If Charlie Shields (573-751-9476) and Kevin Engler (573-751-3455) want it, it will pass.

Their minions will join them. Tell them that this is a win/win bill that will cost the state NOTHING, even as it improves our homes and our economy, creating jobs in rural areas for a change. And the senators will get green bragging rights for decades if they pass PACE.

Ten, nine, eight, seven …

10 Monday May 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

missouri, PACE

Last month, the PACE legislation–that superb plan for helping homeowners pay for energy efficiency upgrades at no cost to the state–moved toward passage. But at a price. It was folded into HB 1871, which included among its provisions a dirty little secret: a policy to allow companies to divulge illegal emissions or spills to the Dept of Natural Resources and thereby keep the emission or spill secret from the public unless it poses a danger to human health or the environment.

Now, with the end of the legislative session coming at 6:00 p.m. this Friday, HB 1871, which passed in the House, is out of the Commerce Committee in the Senate, and all the better for its stay in committee. Because Sen Brad Lager, R-Savannah, stripped the dirty little secret out of the bill in hopes of improving its chances of passing.

But with the days dwindling to hours left in the session, will Majority Floor Leader Engler find time for the bill on the calendar? Maybe he would, if absolutely everybody loved it and it would take five minutes to pass it. But Sen. Ridgeway, R-Smithfield, opposed the idea in committee. She seems to think that if the wrong people were appointed to the finance boards that oversee the legislation, they might do damage to seniors who applied for the loans by creating liens against their homes and causing them to lose their property.

Ridgeway’s opposition might mean a lot of time spent in discussion, and time is a precious commodity this week. And besides, even if the Senate took it up and passed it, the bill differs from the House version; therefore, a conference committee would have to agree on a compromise version and then both chambers would have to vote on the final version. That’s a lot of complications. So who knows what Engler will do? It’s frustrating to see the fate of such a fine idea hanging in the balance.

PACE–good news and bad

18 Sunday Apr 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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missouri, PACE

The PACE legislation not only made it into a committee, it passed on the House floor. It was perfected–that is to say that the House passed its version–but it didn’t pass as a stand alone bill. PACE was part of an Omnibus bill, HB 1871. Sadly. The sad part is that the bill also contained a dirty little secret. The Sierra Club says that the final provision of the bill is:

a policy to allow companies to divulge illegal emissions or spills to the Dept of Natural Resources and thereby keep the emission or spill secret from the public unless it poses a danger to human health or the environment (“Audit Privilege”).

Jill Schupp, who sponsored the PACE legislation in the House was torn when her idea came up for a vote in that Omnibus bill, but she voted for it. Tough call.

So what happens now? The Senate passed its PACE bill, as a stand alone, out of committee, but it hasn’t put that on the calendar. Several possibilities emerge then–leaving the future of this idea looking like a ball balanced on someone’s nose: he leans left then frantically backpedals so that you never know when the ball may topple off. The Senate might put its own PACE bill on the calendar and vote on that, ignoring the House Omnibus bill. Then it could send the PACE bill to the House. Or it might take up the Omnibus bill, possibly even eliminating (but don’t count on it!) the dirty little secret provision. If the Senate were to pass the House bill without changes, then it’s law. If it amends the House bill, then a conference committee takes it up.

But with less than a month to go, PACE’s fate this year is very iffy. The guy with the upturned nose? He might just walk away and leave PACE bouncing on the pavement until it settles in one spot, waiting to be picked up again next year.

Home Sweet Efficient Home

12 Monday Apr 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

Jim Trout, MAAEP, missouri, PACE

The Senate Commerce Committee voted Do Pass last Wednesday on the PACE bill. So this win/win proposal is on its way in the upper chamber. But it’s having a tough go in the House because we live in a state where representatives propose such dim bulb ideas as a bill that would allow for light bulbs manufactured in Missouri to be stamped “made in Missouri”. Seriously. In contrast, PACE is a bill for grownups. It would allow homeowners to get long term loans for energy upgrades by applying to municipalities that have opted in. The bill would enable homeowners to see cash savings from the very first month they upgraded, it would create green jobs, and it would cost the state … nothing. What’s not to like? Twenty-eight other states have already instituted similar programs.

Our job is to make the House leadership notice good fortune when, wearing sequins and a sash that says “GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY”, it jumps up and down waving its arms in front of them. Let me inspire you to take the initiative by reprinting these grafs from a posting two years ago about Jim Trout’s run for the Senate seat in Kirkwood/Webster:

[Trout] told me that in the latter half of the nineties, Representative Sue Shear (D-HD 83) worked for several years to get health care coverage for poor disabled children. At the time, only parents at the poverty level could get coverage for such children. Insurance companies turned a cold shoulder to disabled children whose parents earned more than poverty level, even if the family could scrape together the money for premiums. Shear was proposing MC Plus, a program that enabled parents earning $39,000 or less to insure a disabled child; it guaranteed coverage and gave them some help from the state on a sliding scale.

One spring, Trout called Shear and asked where the bill stood in the legislature. It’s dead, she told him. The chair won’t let it out of committee. Trout asked her who the committee chair was, but he didn’t call the man. Instead, he called fifty of his friends and asked them to call the man–and to keep him on the phone with their complaints. Apparently, a lot of those fifty people did as they were asked. The bill made it out of committee in a jiffy and passed.

I’m writing in lieu of calling fifty people individually. And I can’t ask you to bend the ear of some committee chair, since no committee’s got the bill. You’ll need to call Speaker Ron Richard’s office (573-751-2173–ask for Kristen) and Majority Leader Steve Tilley’s office (573-751-1488). The PACE bill is HB2178.

Tell them that Missouri could save up to 30 percent of its energy costs just by creating more efficient buildings. But don’t come across as some Greenpeace-crazed, granola-munching hippie: they don’t want to hear about slowing climate change. Focus instead on eliminating the need to build another power plant. They still remember what a touchy subject that is. And even those who think climate change is some librul hoax know it’s a good idea to use less foreign oil.

Stress that the beauty of this legislation is that it is not an example of government poking its nose into people’s business. Instead, it’s a bill that simply allows citizens to do good for their state and their country even as they solve their own problems. PACE would let people do for themselves, at no cost to the state in these recessionary times. Think of it as deregulating consumers.

Right now, the leadership is overlooking a chance to gain bragging rights for years to come as the party that created thousands of jobs without spending a cent, merely by offering citizens a chance to do the right thing.

We’re not alone in pushing this project. Members of MAAEP (MO Assn. of Accredited Energy Professionals) have spent several days in the Jeff lobbying legislators. And last week MAAEP members Byron DeLear and Tom Appelbaum went to K.C. to quietly promote it to bankers and other business stakeholders. Here’s hoping DeLear and Appelbaum convinced some of those people to call legislators.

It’s worth the trouble to contact Richard and Tilley. Remember Jim Trout’s success story. But even if we don’t get it passed this spring, we’ll lay the groundwork to get off to a roaring start next January. So make those calls. I’ll be phoning Richard’s office and Tilley’s office later in the week, and I better not hear that I’m the only one. Don’t make me call y’all individually. … Okay, okay, that’s an empty threat. I don’t have phone numbers. But you get the idea.

A Golden Opportunity

06 Tuesday Apr 2010

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

missouri, PACE, Senate hearing

If ever there was a job producing, load on the electrical grid reducing, home restoring green legislative opportunity, it’s now. PACE is before the General Assembly, and it has a Senate hearing today, Tuesday, at 2:00. Joan Bray, the sponsor of SB 1037, is on the committee, and Jolie Justus already supports it.

Nobody seems to oppose it. (How could they? It won’t cost the state a cent to help homeowners make their houses more energy efficient and produce a positive cash flow from the changes from day one–all while creating lots of green jobs.) The senators on the Commerce, Consumer Protection, Energy, and the Environment Committee just need a nudge in the right direction. But they need it before 2:00 today:

Brad Lager (Chairman) – District 12 (R)

(573) 751-1415 – Brad.Lager@senate.mo.gov

Kurt Schaefer (Vice Chairman) – District 19 (R)

(573) 751-3931 – Kurt.Schaefer@senate.mo.gov

Matt Bartle – District 8 (R)

(573) 751-1464 – Matt.Bartle@senate.mo.gov

John Griesheimer – District 26 (R)

(573) 751-3678 – John.Griesheimer@senate.mo.gov

Luann Ridgeway – District 17 (R)

(573) 751-2547 – Luann.Ridgeway@senate.mo.gov

Timothy Green – District 13 (D)

(573) 751-2420 – Timothy.Green@senate.mo.gov

Tom Dempsey – District 23 (R)

(573) 751-1141 – Tom.Dempsey@senate.mo.gov

Jim Lembke – District 1 (R)

(573) 751-2315 – Jim.Lembke@senate.mo.gov

Joan Bray – District 24 (D).  PACE sponsor – already supportive

(573) 751-2514 – Joan.Bray@senate.mo.gov

Jolie Justus – District 10 (D). Already supportive

(573) 751-2788 – Jolie.Justus@senate.mo.gov

So far there’s no movement at all on this in the House, but if we can get this bill out of committee, it’ll be easier to get the House to perk up and take notice. Please call or e-mail senators on the committee this morning.

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