Christie Breedlove
Putting People First

OEA kicks off initiative petition drive

July 31st, 2008 by christie breedlove

by: The Associated Press
7/31/2008 

SAND SPRINGS — Teachers and parents are kicking off a petition drive to increase funding for public education in Oklahoma by $850 million.The HOPE, or Helping Oklahoma Public Education, campaign aims to amend the state constitution and require the Legislature to fund public education that’s at least equal to the average per-pupil spending amount in neighboring states.

The campaign is backed by the Oklahoma Education Association, among other groups, and wants to collect 200,000 signatures by the first week of November.

That goal is well above the 138,970 needed to place the question on the ballot.


Source: Tulsa World

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The New Power Jobs

July 15th, 2008 by christie breedlove

Heather Boerner

White-hot jobs are opening up in the power sector.

“These aren’t just hot jobs, they’re sizzling jobs,” said Christine Real de Azua, spokeswoman for the American Wind Energy Association. Wind energy grew by 45 percent last year. “We need every type of job candidate.”

Indeed, with oil topping $100 per barrel, expect power industry jobs to explode in the next 10 years — and not just in petroleum or the electric company. Want to repair wind turbines, manage a nuclear reactor or install solar panels? The jobs await.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) and energy leaders reveal what fields are expected to grow, and they are listed below with projected growth levels through 2016, salary data, and what you need to get a related job.

Engineers
11 percent projected growth
$44,790-$145,600 annually, depending on specialty

“We’re experiencing a comeback in ‘dirty jobs,’” said Chris McCormick, partner and head of the energy division of venture capital firm Landmark Ventures. “While a few years ago, what we wanted were the ‘clean’ jobs in computer engineering, now we’re back to the types of engineers who get their hands dirty with chemistry and broad-application engineering.”

Chemical engineers who work with biofuels, electrical engineers who design power plants, mechanical engineers who find better ways to capture air and wind energy, and nuclear engineers who make plants run more efficiently will all be in high demand — with salaries to match. While some engineers, like chemical engineers, may need a PhD to do their jobs, most others, like environmental engineers, only require a bachelor’s degree in physics or engineering, according to the BLS.

Nuclear Power Reactor Operators
11 percent projected growth
$35,590-$75,240 annually

“When I got out of college, people told me, ‘Go do other things.’ The conventional wisdom was that nuclear power was going to go away,” said Carol Berrigan, senior director for industry infrastructure at the Nuclear Energy Institute. “But now, with some regulatory changes, we have something like nine applications out there for 16 new nuclear power plants in the next few years.”

Which jobs will grow fastest? Think Homer Simpson, but with more computer knowledge and less buffoonery. On top of the billions of dollars the industry is spending on new construction, the field’s employees are aging: In the next 10 years, half of all nuclear reactor operators are expected to retire. You don’t need to have an engineering degree for these jobs, but you should expect extensive on-the-job training and classroom instruction as well as licensing exams, according to the BLS.

Industrial Machinery Mechanic
9 percent projected growth
$42,350 median annual income

Someone’s got to install the solar panels and repair wind turbines, and industrial machinery mechanics are often the ones who get the jobs. In solar, Tioga Energy’s Executive Vice President Preston Roper said the biggest demand is for solar installers.

Both Roper and Real de Azua said local community colleges are the places to go to get the training necessary for the jobs. Many are offering specialized training in solar or wind repair work.

Skilled Trade Workers
Electricians: 7 percent projected growth
$44,780 median annual income

Line Workers: 7 percent projected growth
$52,570 median annual income

Welders: 5 percent projected growth
$32,270 median annual income

These workers repair the lines that bring power to your home and build and repair power plant structures. Want one of these jobs? Usually you don’t need post-high school education, but you will need an apprenticeship through a union or other skilled trade group. The programs usually take about four years.

Source: Yahoo HotJobs

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Food Stamps Buy Less; Families Are Hit Hard

June 22nd, 2008 by christie breedlove

Making ends meet on food stamps has never been easy for Cassandra Johnson, but since food prices began their steep climb earlier this year, she has had to develop new survival strategies.

She hunts for items that are on the shelf beyond their expiration dates because their prices are often reduced, a practice she once avoided.

Ms. Johnson, 44, who works in customer service for a medical firm, knows that buying food this way is not healthy, but she sees no other choice if she wants to feed herself and her 1-year-old niece Ammni Harris and 2-year-old nephew Tramier Harris, who live with her.

“I live paycheck to paycheck,” said Ms. Johnson, as she walked out of a market near her home in Hackensack, N.J., pushing both Ammni and the week’s groceries in a shopping cart. “And we’re not coping.”

The sharp rise in food prices is being felt acutely by poor families on food stamps, the federal food assistance program.

In the past year, the cost of food for what the government considers a minimum nutritional diet has risen 7.2 percent nationwide. It is on track to become the largest increase since 1989, according to April data, the most recent numbers, from the United States Department of Agriculture. The prices of certain staples have risen even more. The cost of eggs, for example, has increased nearly 20 percent, and the price of milk and other dairy products has risen 10 percent.

But food stamp allocations, intended to cover only minimum needs, have not changed since last fall and will not rise again until October, when an increase linked to inflation will take effect. The percentage, equal to the annual rise in prices for the minimum nutritional food basket as measured each June, is usually announced by early August.

Some advocates and politicians say that this relief will not come soon enough and will probably not be adequate to keep pace with inflation.

Stacy Dean, the director of food assistance for the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, a Washington social issues research and advocacy organization, estimates that the rising food prices have resulted in two fewer bags of groceries a month for the families most reliant on the program.

“We know food stamps are falling short $34 a month” of the monthly $576 that the government says it costs a family of four to eat nutritional meals, she said. “The sudden price increases on top of everything else like soaring fuel and health care have meant squeeze and strain that is unprecedented since the late 1970s.”

The declining buying power of food stamps has not gone unrecognized in Washington. In May, Congress passed a farm bill that would raise the minimum amount of food stamps that families receive, starting in October. The bill, which was passed over President Bush’s veto, will also raise for the first time since 1996 the amount of income that families of fewer than four can keep for costs like housing or fuel without having their benefits reduced.

This month, a coalition led by Representative Jesse Jackson Jr. called on Congress to immediately enact a temporary 20 percent increase in food stamps. Officials at the Agriculture Department, which administers the program, say there is no precedent for such an action. Families on food stamps have been hit hard across the nation, but perhaps not as hard as families in New York, where food costs are substantially higher than prices almost everywhere else, including other urban areas, according to the Food Research and Action Center, a research and advocacy group in Washington.

The more than one million New Yorkers on food stamps receive on average $107 a month in assistance, which is slightly higher than the average for the rest of the country. But it is not enough to close the gap in food costs, experts say.

Poor families interviewed in the New York area say that they are not going hungry — thanks in large part to the city’s strong network of 1,200 soup kitchens and food pantries — but that they have really felt the pinch. To cope, many say, they are doing without the basics.

June Jacobs-Cuffee of Brooklyn shares $120 a month in food stamps with her 19-year-old epileptic son. She says that even after her once-a-month trip to the food pantry at St. John’s Bread & Life in Brooklyn, she has had to give up red meat and is also cutting back on buying fresh fruits and sticking instead with canned goods and fruit cocktail.

“It is not a question of running out, yet,” she said. “But it does require very careful budgeting.”

The most recent census data showed that from 2003 to 2006 an average of 1.3 million New Yorkers identified themselves as “food insecure,” meaning that they were worried about being able to buy enough food to keep their families adequately fed. City officials are concerned that the food price increase has caused that number to increase significantly.

“I am much more worried about the state of hunger in New York City than I was 6 or 12 months ago,” said Christine C. Quinn, the City Council speaker. Ms. Quinn said that food pantries were increasingly complaining about being tapped out. She added, “What we are hearing from constituents is that they are having to make tougher and tougher decisions like to water down milk for kids or not purchase medication to keep money for food.”

Yessenia Villar, who lives in Washington Heights and works tutoring children in Spanish and English, knows about tough choices. She says it is getting harder to stretch her monthly $190 in food stamps to cover food for herself, her mother and her 5-year-old daughter. At the end of the month, she runs out of oil, rice and, most painful of all, plantains, which have gone from five for $1 to two for $1, she says.

She says she has stopped buying extras like summer sandals for herself, and has also given up treats like cookies and ice cream for her daughter. “I used to make all my groceries for $150 a month and then have a little extra,” she said. “Now it is, like, crazy.”

Nate Schweber contributed reporting.


Source: NY Times

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It’s Lucrative Being Green

May 28th, 2008 by christie breedlove

Christina Couch, ClassesUSA

When architectural intern Jennifer Downey moved from Richmond, Virginia, to New York City last year, it took more than a college degree to land her current job with the design firm Marble Fairbanks.

Prior to moving, Jennifer obtained her Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design, or LEED, accreditation, a credential issued by the U.S. Green Building Council for architects specializing in environmentally conscious building practices. She attributes her current professional success to her knowledge of both architecture and the Earth.

“It’s not enough to be an architect anymore,” Downey says. “You’ve got to know how to do it in the most responsible way possible.”

Architects aren’t the only builders required to go green these days. The American Solar Energy Society, a nonprofit organization set on increasing the use of sustainable technologies, reports that 8.5 million Americans currently hold “green collar” jobs in renewable energy or energy efficient industries; however, that number could grow to up to 40 million by 2030 due to increased demand in alternative energy sources. To get a slice of the pie, here are five of the hottest earth-friendly fields.

Wind/Turbine Technician

Though wind energy currently accounts for just one percent of all energy used in the United States, the American Wind Energy Association reports that the wind industry grew by 45 percent last year alone. Those with a background in turbine manufacturing, operation, and repair will easily find work in states like California and New Mexico that have vowed to pull 20 percent of their energy expenditure from renewable sources by 2020. While renewable energy degree programs are offered on the bachelor’s degree level, those with traditional manufacturing experience also can give their career a greener slant by taking a one- to two-year wind technology degree program at a community college.

Auto Retrofitters

The switch from gas-guzzling SUVs to energy-efficient alternative vehicles will require some serious manpower. While the Bureau of Labor Statistics projects that the automotive technician industry will expand just 14 percent by 2016, Green For All, an Oakland, California-based nonprofit specializing in green collar workforce training, says there will be a crucial need for workers who can upgrade existing vehicles to new environmental standards. As the bio fuel industry grows an astounding 50 percent per year, according to one study, technicians who can replace traditional engines with flex-fuel and diesel engines will have an advantage to finding work. Mechanics with a soft spot for Mother Earth can learn engine conversion at their local community college.

Sustainable Architects

With New York, California, and Wisconsin mandating that all new public construction be LEED-certified and other states soon to follow, the need for environmentally-minded architects will inevitably increase. The U.S. Green Building Council reports that the domestic green building industry increased net sales by more than $5 billion dollars in the last two years and currently sits at a walloping $12 billion. In addition to a four- or five-year degree in architecture, sustainable designers may also choose to take an additional one to two-day preparation course to get ready for the LEED Accredited Professional Exam.

Energy Systems Manager

Building new earth-friendly structures is only part of the battle. Greening up existing ones is the other. According to Green For All, between 1990 and 2003, U.S. energy companies spent $12 to $16 billion retrofitting municipalities, universities, schools, and hospitals to be less wasteful. Dedicated to insuring indoor air quality and creating energy reduction initiatives, future energy systems managers can start their career at either the two- or four-year college level.

Environmental Engineer

With increased attention on bio fuels, solar-paneled buildings, electric vehicles, and geothermal electronics, the need for environmental engineers is greater than ever. The BLS estimates environmental engineers will see 7-25 percent more jobs added to their field between now and 2016. While the highest 10 percent of salary for an environmental engineer currently tops $100,000 annually, expect to invest some of that money first. A bachelor’s — and often master’s — degree is required to land a job in the field; however, students can find environmental engineering programs in nearly every corner of the United States.

Source: Yahoo HotJobs

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Who won and lost?

May 24th, 2008 by christie breedlove

by: MICK HINTON and BARBARA HOBEROCK World Capitol Bureau
5/24/2008 

A handful of winners and losers emerged from the most recent session of the Oklahoma Legislature. Bills that focused on abortion and physical education in schools grabbed headlines and led to new legislation. On the other hand, several measures failed to move forward — leaving nonsmokers, teachers and state employees wanting more. Some of the winners and losers from the 2008 legislative session are summarized below.

Bills approved

Road funding
Advocates for roads and bridges succeeded in passing a $300 million bond package that secures the state’s eight-year plan for improvements.

Money for dams
Tulsa County residents will benefit from $25 million worth of bonds to construct low-water dams along the Arkansas River corridor.

Endowed chairs
Universities benefited from a commitment of $100 million for bonds to secure endowed professorships.

Pre-abortion ultrasounds
Abortion opponents were successful in gaining passage of Senate Bill 1878, which requires women seeking abortions to have ultrasounds within one hour of the procedure and requiring medical personnel to provide an explanation of the ultrasound. The Legislature overrode a veto by Gov. Brad Henry, who said it made no exceptions for victims of rape and incest.

More physical activity in schools
Sen. Mary Easley, D-Tulsa, was successful in passing Senate Bill 1186, which doubles the amount of physical activity for full-day kindergartners through fifth-graders to 120 minutes from 60 minutes in an effort to increase learning and reduce childhood obesity.

Bills derailed

Smoking ban not extended
Nonsmokers lost with the failure of Senate Bill 1875, which would have banned smoking in all public places, including restaurants, taverns, bars and hotels.

No official language, voter ID, added term limits
Republicans lost efforts to make English the state’s official language, require voter identification at the polls and put a 12-year term limit on statewide office holders.

No raises
State workers and teachers will not be getting raises this year because of a standstill budget.

Reduced property tax cap dies
Property owners saw an effort to cap annual increases at 3 percent, down from 5 percent, fail in a House committee.

Insurance coverage for autism fails
Patients and parents didn’t get bills passed requiring coverage for clinical trials and autism.

No guns on campus
Gun supporters were thwarted in passing a law that would have allowed some students to carry weapons on campus. The proposal alarmed college administrators, who convinced Senate leaders to snuff out the measure.


Source: Tulsa World

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