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Builders Commend Proposed Energy Efficiency Incentives
When President Barack Obama announced a proposed home energy efficiency initiative recently in South Carolina, he was joined on the stage by Hilton Head builder Howard Feldman.
Feldman, co-founder of Coastal Green Building Solutions, said he told the President before the event that the home building industry has “a good supply of ready and willing skilled workers, innovative manufacturers and knowledgeable suppliers.”
Feldman, the 2010 secretary/treasurer of the Hilton Head Area Home Builders Association, is a HERS (Home Energy Rating System) rater and an EarthCraft technical advisor. He is a founder and current chairman of the HBA’s green building council.
“Weatherization and energy efficiency retrofits is an emerging industry,” Feldman said. “The Administration’s initiative fits right into that. It provides opportunities for workers and manufacturers. It helps people save on energy costs. It makes for healthier places to live. And at a national level it improves energy independence.”
Speaking on March 2 in Savannah, Ga., President Obama outlined a $6 billion proposal to provide cash rebates to home owners who make energy-saving home improvements.
"This has the potential to be a real shot in the arm for the home building industry," said NAHB Chairman Bob Jones. "It would help put America back to work and it will help families save on monthly energy bills."
NAHB economists estimate that every $1 billion in remodeling and home improvement activity generates 11,000 jobs, $527 million in wages and salaries and $300 million in business income.
Administration officials estimate that up to four million households could benefit from the program, officially known as Homestar, but dubbed "Cash for Caulkers" by many in Congress and the media.
"Making the existing housing stock more energy-efficient is one of the most effective ways to achieve national energy conservation goals," Jones added. "In the long run this can be an important step in reducing the nation's dependence on foreign energy supplies."
A program managed by the Builders Association of Minnesota (BAM) could serve as a model for the President's proposed initiative, Jones said. That program — Project ReEnergize — has served as the conduit for federal stimulus program funds provided to the state for its energy-efficiency programs. The association has trained 1,000 remodelers and other residential contractors and funneled the money to 1,400 Minnesota home owners to help them make needed improvements.
Minnesota home owners received extra incentives for choosing projects like attic insulation, which some consumers don't undertake because its benefits are not immediately apparent, but when combined with incentives can bring a payback on utility bills within a year or two, depending on the climate.
"The President and Congress should look to the Minnesota program as an excellent example of how the proposal could work nationally," Jones said.
While NAHB supports the President's residential retrofitting initiative, there are concerns about some of the details proposed in various legislative drafts to implement the program.
"For this effort to be successful, the opportunities must be equally accessible to everyone," Jones said. "We need to make sure that Congress does not put up barriers that would keep this program from reaching its full potential."
For more information, e-mail Calli Schmidt at NAHB, or call her at 800-368-5242 x8132.
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