Va. awash in stimulus money to weatherize homes
MARK GORMUS/TIMES-DISPATCH
In May, Gov. Timothy M. Kaine tried his hand at insulating Lois Marshall’s house off Parham Road in Henrico County.
Published: July 18, 2009
Updated: July 18, 2009
Ready or not, states are getting a huge boost in federal money to weatherize drafty homes, an increase so huge it has raised fears of waste and fraud and set off a scramble to find workers and houses for them to repair.
Virginia's cut is going up 23½ times, from $4 million annually to $94.1 million.
"I was stunned," said Shea Hollifield, Virginia's deputy director of housing. "Spending that much money will be a challenge."
An obscure program that installs insulation in homes and makes them more energy-efficient is distributing $4.7 billion in stimulus funds -- dwarfing the $447 million originally planned by Congress this year and the $227 million spent in 2008.
That is enough to weatherize 1 million homes, instead of the 140,000 normally done each year.
President Barack Obama said pouring money into the program would lower utility bills for cash-strapped families, provide jobs for construction workers idled by the housing slump, and make the nation more energy-efficient.
"You're getting a three-fer," Obama said. "That's exactly the kind of program we should be funding."
The Virginia Department of Housing and Community Development is allocating its weatherization funding regionally to 22 nonprofit organizations across the state, which have until March 2012 to spend the money.
On July 29, Gov. Timothy M. Kaine and members of his Cabinet are planning to pitch in on a home weatherization project in King George County in coordination with the Rappahannock Area Agency on Aging. The event is meant to highlight the increased funding for the state's Weatherization Assistance program.
Kaine will work alongside a crew from Community Housing Partners, a contractor that has doubled its staff and projects over the past eight months to meet increased demand sparked by the newly available funding, according to the governor's office.
But some worry states won't be able to keep track of the money.
Leslie Paige, spokeswoman for the Council for Citizens Against Government Waste, said the program is open to fraud because of the way oversight is divided. The federal government passes the money to states, then states pass it to community action agencies, and the agencies pass it to contractors who work with customers.
"It's such a Rube Goldberg operation it should be setting off alarm bells," she said.
Energy Department spokeswoman Christina Kielich defended the program, saying the federal government monitors state operations and does a thorough review at least every two years of the local organizations. In addition, states are getting their money in increments and must demonstrate quality control to get more.
The program helps low-income families take steps to reduce their home energy expenses, from caulking leaky windows to replacing heating and cooling systems. The Energy Department says 6.2 million households have benefited since it began in 1976, saving the average household about $350 a year on energy bills.
In addition to receiving an infusion of stimulus money, the program was expanded to cover families making up to twice the federal poverty level, or $44,100 for a family of four. Also, the average amount that can be spent per house was more than doubled to $6,500.
The funding for New York is going up from $20.1 million last year to $395 million. California's share is soaring from $6.3 million to $185.8 million. In Texas, the state's share is increasing nearly 60 times, from $5.6 million to $327 million. To spend the money efficiently and on time, state officials decided to go beyond the community organizations that normally distribute it and route $100 million to large cities.
"They have experience in administering large, complicated programs," said Gordon Anderson, spokesman for the Texas Department of Housing and Community Affairs.
Staff writer Olympia Meola contributed to this report.
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Reader Reactions
And RSweeney - lets be clear about taxes. Can you name one industrial country in the world that has a government that does not tax its citizens?
In order to live in a civilized society, there has to be a government, and one that raises revenue through taxation. Even our founding fathers recognized this. You don’t have to like it, but taxing is not stealing.
And since I always hear the righties telling the lefties to go move to Canada or Europe if you don’t like it here, I’ll say the same - why don’t you righties go move to a first-rate country with a lower tax rate than the U.S.? I know you won’t be living in Canada, Europe, or South America, but I’m sure you can go find some stable government in Asia or Africa that doesn’t tax its citizens as much as our socialist/communist/fascist leaders do.
If some of the newly converted fiscal conservatives actually researched this program just a little, you might actually like it.
Right now, another government program (that grew under the former admin) was LIHEAP - which basically cuts a check to “poor people” to help them pay their utility bill.
The Weatherization program funding actually goes to pay contractors (see local businessmen) to provide services that reduce the cost of utility bills for poor people, which reduces the amount of LIHEAP money poor people get in the future.
And if you read the article you would already see that the local agencies that administer this program have already hired new employees and contracted with new partners to weatherize these homes.
So - its creating jobs, reducing the waste of energy, and giving money to contractors and people who work for a living instead of going directly to “people looking for handouts”. It also qualifies as a public/private partnership. So it meets the Republican standard for a good program.
But it came from Obama’s stimulus program and not the Republican TARP program, so it must be some sort of evil socialist plot to create a NWO with Obama as our glorious leader.
I love this phrase “let’s give the rich a tax cut”.
GIVE???
Taxes TAKE from those who earn and own the money. A tax cut merely steals less.
It’s not giving anything.
Best that all you proto-socialists remember it is you who are taking from others.
I know. I know. Let’s give all the really rich people a really big tax cut. That will spur the sales of yachts and vacation homes in France. That money will eventually trickle down to the rest of us. Good idea. Guaranteed to work.
When anyone feels redistributing “that much” of our hard earned tax dollars is a challenge, we have MAJOR problems.
I find it a challenge to try to hire back the 6 employees I had to lay off since 1/20/09.
Of course I have to earn my money, unlike those in government.
When a state official says “Spending that much money will be a challenge.“ We’ve got problems. TIM KAINE WAKE THE F UP!!!!!!
We are just looking at a single example of the waste that comes from central planning. You ain’t seen nothing yet.
Here’s an agency “awash in stimulus money “, but at the same time we can’t afford to keep the Interstate rest areas open. The amount of money being wasted by the Federal goverment (and financed by China) is amazing!
This is what the unspent TARP funds will go for in ‘strategic’ states for the next year. The Administration hasn’t spent the TARP money because they fully intend to use it to buy elections where they can. How is weatherizing a home a ‘stimulus’? It’s not, but they’ve got that vote bought & paid for.
Anon… it’s not a mandate yet, but the socialists controlling Congress are running a bill to force anyone who wants to sell their home to have it inspected for full weatherization before they can put it on the market, and if it’s not fully weatherized they have to spend the money to make it that way. This program just means if a homeseller has to weatherize they will have to apply to a government program, probably wait six months to get the money, then fix it up, Just holding up the sales process unnecessarily.
What it means is a private property owner is losing another Constitutional right they have to care for their property as they see fit within reason, not as the government orders them to do it. Pass a law that says if a homeseller wants to use the program or weatherize before selling they may, but if the homeseller doesn’t want to have an inspection or fix it up they have to declare that to the buyer. Of course, that takes away government control and we know the socialists shiver over that.
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