Recovery Task Force Announces $156 Million in Recovery Act Funds Now Available for Energy Efficiency and Solar Projects

Picture 617

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s California Recovery Task Force today announced that more than $156 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act) funds are now available for application for energy efficiency and solar projects in California. A package of options under the State Energy Program (SEP) and the Energy Efficient and Conservation Block Grants (EECBG) Program offer local jurisdictions, non-profits and private organizations the opportunity to invest in energy efficiency and photovoltaic energy projects – while helping to stimulate their local economies. Governor Schwarzenegger announced that California was the first state in the nation to apply federally for SEP funding available under the Recovery Act.

Continue reading “Recovery Task Force Announces $156 Million in Recovery Act Funds Now Available for Energy Efficiency and Solar Projects”

Stimulus News Digest #6 | California Office of Small Business Advocate

You do plan on having some dinosaurs on your dinosaur ride, right?
You do plan on having some dinosaurs on your dinosaur ride, right?

Good news: Some money is flowing. Bad news: The funding doesn’t look like it’s all that small business oriented.

After reading this, I recall Jeff Goldblum’s famous line from ‘Jurassic Park’.

Headlines from the piece:

Kaiser Permanente Wins $54 Million in NIH Grants for Genetic, Other Research.

Region Gears Up for Possible $260M in Solar Power Projects.

Teachers Most Helped by Early Stimulus Funding.

Struggling Santa Cruz County Steelhead Get Bump from Federal Stimulus.

Berkeley Study Says Energy Bill to Create 1.9 Million Jobs.

California Stimulus Saved or Created 100,000 Jobs: More than 100,000 jobs have been saved or created in California.

Shasta County Nonprofit Group Wins $2.6 Million in Stimulus Funds.

California Wants $4.7 Billion in High-Speed Rail Stimulus.

Read Article.

Governor Schwarzenegger Signs Legislation Increasing Opportunities for Small Businesses

This article announces changes to how small business and Disabled Veterans Businesses are treated as it relates to state contracts. Also has a lot of nifty research information hidden amongst AHARNALD’s self congratulation. – Ed.

Bill Increases Small Business and Disabled Veteran Business Eligibility for  State Contracts and Recovery Act Projects

Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger today signed AB 31 by Senator (former Assemblymember) Curren Price (D-Inglewood), expanding small business and disabled veteran business enterprise participation in state contracts and American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (Recovery Act) projects. Small businesses and disabled veteran business enterprises make up 98 percent of all California enterprises, employ over half of our workforce and are projected to create 99 percent of the state’s future jobs. A recent study commissioned by the Procurement Division of the Department of General Services found that these firms produce about 50 percent more overall California economic impact for each dollar spent than large enterprises. Continue reading “Governor Schwarzenegger Signs Legislation Increasing Opportunities for Small Businesses”

Governor’s Office of the Small Business Advocate Releases Study Of Costs of State Regulation To Small Businesses In California

Study Provides Policy Makers With Tools to Encourage Small Business Growth In California

The Governor’s Office of the Small Business Advocate today released a study of the aggregate cost of state regulation to small businesses in California. The study was commissioned by Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2006 when he signed Assembly Bill 2330 by Assemblyman Juan Arambula (I-Fresno) and was completed by Sanjay Varshney Ph.D., the Dean of Business Administration at California State University, Sacramento, and Dennis Tootelian Ph.D., Director of the Center for Small Business at the same school.
Continue reading “Governor’s Office of the Small Business Advocate Releases Study Of Costs of State Regulation To Small Businesses In California”

U.S. Department of Energy Announce SBIRs Grants |U.S. Department of Energy

DOE Announces $37 Million for
Small Business Research and Technology

Funding Emphasizes Investment in Clean Energy Technologies and Job Creation

Washington, DC— U.S. Energy Secretary Steven Chu announced today that $37 million in funding from the Recovery Act will be made available to qualified small businesses through the Department’s Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) and Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) programs. Today’s funding announcement emphasizes the Department’s commitment to developing near-term, clean energy technologies while allowing small businesses take part in the new industrial revolution that the sustainable energy economy will bring.
Continue reading “U.S. Department of Energy Announce SBIRs Grants |U.S. Department of Energy”

Small & Disabled Veteran Businesses Power California Economy | Study, C.S.U.S.

Below is a summary of the study commissioned by the state Department of General Services. The study was just released, but is based on 2006-07 data, so a more appropriate title may have been “Small Business Used To Power California Economy”. The study contains no comment on how state I.O.U.s are going to affect these business powerhouses.

Small & Disabled Veteran Businesses Power California Economy

New study details billions of dollars of economic activity, and tens of thousands of new jobs, created by the state’s contracting efforts

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – A new study details the financial impact of the state’s efforts to increase small and disabled veteran business enterprise participation in the state’s goods and services purchasing. The analysis of results from the 2006-07 fiscal year shows how small and disabled veteran businesses enterprises produce about 50 percent more overall California economic impact for each dollar spent than large enterprises. The report also offers a picture of how much this activity increased overall business tax revenues across California’s economy, and how it affected different sectors of the state’s economy.

“The State’s efforts to contract with smaller business created a powerful multiplier effect,” said Jim Butler, that state’s Chief Procurement Officer. “$4.2 billion in new economic activity of all kinds was produced in California by the state spending around $2.66 billion-and 25,617 jobs were created.”

Read the study here.

Continue reading “Small & Disabled Veteran Businesses Power California Economy | Study, C.S.U.S.”