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Cash for Caulkers

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

David Leonhardt, New York Times economics columnist and staff writer for the magazine talks about the weatherization stimulus and other economic news.


Comments

  • [1] George from Bay Ridge November 25, 2009 - 04:11AM

    Has Congress considered any plans to add to the Low Income Home Energy Assistance Program?

    How about solar power and renewable energy?

    Can your guest make a forecast for the cap and trade bill in Congress?


  • [2] kai from NJ-NYC November 25, 2009 - 10:24AM

    How has the rollout of the weatherization program been going?

    Is NYSERDA still involved?

    Does weatherization include boilers in older buildings?


  • [3] Dan from NJ November 25, 2009 - 10:28AM

    Of course people are down, Brian. Your show has been doing at least 60 minutes of doom and gloom *every* *single* *day* for months! What do you expect?


  • [4] Voter from Brooklyn November 25, 2009 - 10:34AM

    On the correction preceding this segment:

    If memory serves me right, it wasn’t a guest who stated twice that Major Hasan was on the Federal Terrorist Watch List, it was the WNYC reporter Arun Venugopal.

    Big difference between a guest speaking for themselves and a station reporter supposedly reporting facts.


  • [5] fhenryy from Long Island November 25, 2009 - 10:35AM

    I have been a homeowner since 1976 (same home).

    Unde Pres. Carter I received a tax deduction for weatherizing my home - insulating, caulking, upgrading my heating system, etc.. As a result, a plethora of new business and weatherizing gadgets and ideas appeared. Magazines such as Popular Science,Popular Mechanics,etc. were filled with ideas the average DIY homeowner could accomplish and get a tax deduction for. A great idea then, a great idea now!


  • [6] Diane from Brooklyn November 25, 2009 - 10:36AM

    What about people who are not owners of either cars or homes - tenants and public transportation users. We have watched our rents go up, the landlords improvements or even repairs to his/her building get passed on to tenants in the form of MCI increases and transit fares keep rising. Policies that increase renter stock and mass transit ridership form smaller carbon footprints and contribute to community, yet are left out of any handouts that their tax dollars are funding.

    I don't hear you addressing this in these discussions.


  • [7] kai from NJ-NYC November 25, 2009 - 10:36AM

    Another thing that happened to Green Collar jobs was the attack on Van Jones as well as the subsequent (and continuing) attacks on all things environmental by right-wingers who believe that environmentalists are either: 1) communists or; 2) believe in the environment as religion.

    Of course these people don't realize that they live in and use the resources of the environment, too, and that the environment is the basis of the economy.


  • [8] Mike November 25, 2009 - 10:40AM

    I was on the phone with Cablevision yesterday and they're not acting like they have competition at all. I can't wait to get out from their awfulness.

    It would be great if health insurance actually respected the consumer.


  • [9] mc from Brooklyn November 25, 2009 - 10:40AM

    Brian, pay attention. 30 years of research have shown that a third of the health care we pay for is unnecessary, unproven or redundant. Other countries control this. We should be able to do this.


  • [10] Bob from Pelham, NY November 25, 2009 - 10:42AM

    Like the guest, I easily become overwhelmed by all the weatherization options and my lack of expertise in the area. The "Cash for Caulkers" program should help pay for the energy audit, to encourage people to get started (maybe by a refundable tax credit?). Back in the 1980s Con Ed offered free electric use audits for residential customers, to cut down the need for constructing new power plants.


  • [11] Theo Coulombe from Brooklyn November 25, 2009 - 10:43AM

    American water heaters waste energy by maintaining the temperature of a large amount of water. On-demand water heaters are more efficient and cost-effective. They are standard all over Asia and Europe.

    In our country, this essential item is so expensive it seems like a crime that is being perpetrated on us.


  • [12] Calls'em As I Sees'em from Langley, VA November 25, 2009 - 11:01AM

    Another joke of the day - I guess it's writers like this who are causing subscribers to leave the NY Times and other newspapers in droves. This guest sounded like a propagandist and apologist straight off Obama's payroll. He was, of course not properly questioned by Brian. Perhaps Brian no longer knows the truth himself given his sources at NPR, BBC, AP and other totally biased companies. A person only has to read the WSJ or any one of many other papers here and abroad to get a fuller picture of what is really going here.


  • [13] greg caulfield from New York November 25, 2009 - 12:31PM

    their's to side to the story , personal and events. I heard you call say this was a great decade most of them where Gen y , who haven't live long time to gage different decade. I am 39 I remember 80,90

    Greg Caulfield


  • [14] galvoguy November 25, 2009 - 01:09PM

    are co-ops able to receive tax credits for energy improvements? many of the apartment buildings are now co-op;s. if tax incentives were given to these corporations, they may chose to replace a old system , sooner. Many of the borough co-ops are owned by regular working families, and it is their started home. These are apartments that are under 200k, more like 100k,

    should also have a show on co-op fraud, Their can be a lot of kickbacks in weatherproofing.


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