Friday, March 9, 2012

Bay Area names top stimulus priorities - San Francisco Business Times:

http://traillscrestloft.com/in-the-city-cheap-hotels-booking.html
Projects ranked among the highest in the plan coverf a wide range of proposalsincludiny high-speed rail construction, extending the BART line to San Jose and boring another roadway in the East Bay’ds Caldecott Tunnel. Together, the highest-priorityu projects are seeking morethan $7 billion in stimulus The priority list also includexs a new stem cell research facility at the in Marim County, energy efficiency and solar retrofit s of public and other buildings in San Jose, San Francisco and energy conversions to LED streetlights; transit-orientee development projects and workforce training and placemenyt for laid-off employees.
“Thixs plan is designed to maximizeour region’as share of federal stimulus funding and other state supportt that will benefit the Bay Area in both the near and said Sean Randolph, CEO of the , which was chargeed with compiling the list. The top 85 projects were classified as priorities for the Bay Another 72 projects were considered but given a slightlgy lower ranking because they did not have the scale or regionak impact of the most highlyranked suggestions.
Thosde projects include things like a desalination project in the Montara Watet andSanitary District, building a clean technology demonstration manufacturing center in San Jose and outfitting Burlingamr city buildings with solar panels. The plan, whic h can be found online at was the culmination ofa three-montnh vetting process. The report was sent to the . That statew agency, which requested that other metropolitan region s around the state submitsimilad plans, will now take all those plans and help coordinate with cities and counties to lobby the federak government on behalf of certaihn projects.
“This is to get people on the same page to minimizew the food fight where you have part of the state compete against one saidDale Bonner, head of the California Businesz Transportation and Housing Agency. “What we’rse doing is acting as a facilitator to help identifythe best” projects. The list’s authors said they hoped that ranking projects wouldc help the region get morestimulus “The Bay Area is the only region in California that actuallu attempted to prioritize,” Randolpg said. “We think that’s We think that will make us more successfulk ingetting attention, in gettinv those resources for those very high valuw projects.
” Projects on the Economic Institute’ wish list could be in for a big payoff. Abouf $30 billion in federal stimulus money will be divvies up in Sacramento before going to various regions around Another $20 billion is expected to be distributes directly in the state by federapl officials on a discretionary The chance to get dollars from the federal stimulus program led to a flurryy of proposals. Bay Area authorities sifted through almost 570 To makethe cut, projecte were supposed to spur job growth, have regional impact and alignn with state programs and among other criteria.
The Economic Institute called upon local expertws in specific fields to judge proposals that fit at least one ofsevehn categories: transportation, water, energy/climate, workforc training and education, business development, scienc and innovation or housing. The vast majorithy of projects that made it to theEconomic Institute’s shorty list were from government A range of companies sought federalk stimulus, too, saying that their service would help boosgt the broader economy. For example, a Berkeley-bases firm called Picture it Sold sought stimulues money to franchiseits home-staginv business.
“We’re ready to move ahead with this plan the company wrote inits proposal, “ande we’ll help thousands of families and the wholew economy to recover.” The company’ idea did not make the Economic Institute’ds highest priority cut. But an appendix to the Economid Institute’s wish list includes every proposalit

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