President Obama and Vice President Biden today released a plan to create or save more than 600,000 jobs over the next 100 days by accelerating implementation of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The Roadmap to Recovery plan includes a Department of Health and Human Services project to enable 1,129 health centers to expand access to primary and preventive care services, and a Department of Veterans Affairs project to improve 90 VA medical centers. Details on specific projects and their funding should be available on each department’s Web site in the next few days, Biden said. According to the administration, the ARRA has created or saved 150,000 jobs since it was enacted in February. “We’ve laid a good foundation in the first 100 days of the Recovery Act and in the next 100 we plan to build on that foundation and accelerate our efforts so we can accomplish even more,” Biden said.
News and updates
Secretary of Education Calls for Measurable School Reforms
FOR RELEASE:
June 8, 2009
Contact: John White, Press Secretary
(202) 401-1576
U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said today that school reforms should be monitored and judged by results that can be backed up by research proving their effectiveness.
Speaking at the fourth annual conference of the Institute of Education Sciences, Duncan told an audience of education researchers that supporting states’ efforts to build warehouses of data on student achievement is one of his top priorities.
“Education reform is not about sweeping mandates or grand gestures,” Duncan told the group of researchers who conduct research for IES, which is an independent section of the Education Department. “It’s about systematically examining and learning, building on what we’ve done right, and scrapping what hasn’t worked for kids.”
Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, states must make assurances that they are making progress in four key areas of school reform:
- Adopting rigorous standards that prepare students for success in college and the workforce;
- Recruiting and retaining effective teachers, especially in classrooms where they’re needed most;
- Turning around low-performing schools; and
- Building data systems to track student achievement and teacher effectiveness.
States must report their progress toward completing these assurances in their applications to receive money under the $48.6 billion State Fiscal Stabilization Fund. The Department of Education will evaluate states’ success in meeting the four assurances when considering states’ applications for competitive grants under the $4.35 billion Race to the Top Fund.
Duncan told the researchers today that the data systems should inform education policies that will improve practices. He urged them to work on improving accountability models based on the growth of student test scores and developing fair models of compensating teachers and other school staff based on the achievement of their students. Ultimately, he added, the data should be used to ensure that students are on track to graduation and success in college.
“Hopefully some day we can track kids from pre-school to high-school and from high school to college and college to career,” Duncan said. “Hopefully we can track good kids to good teachers and good teachers to good colleges of education.”
Duncan’s speech is the first in a series over four weeks in which the secretary will detail the Department of Education’s policies on each of the four assurances.
Week at a Glance June 8-12
Monday, June 8th
· Senate resumes consideration of HR 1256, Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act. A cloture vote on a substitute amendment to the bill is expected.
· The House will take up several measures under suspension of the rules.
HR 1736 — International Science and Technology Cooperation
Act of 2009
HR 1709 — STEM Education Coordination Act of 2009
H Res 492 — A resolution supporting the goals and ideals of High-Performance Building Week.
Tuesday, June 9th
· The House considers measures under suspension of the rules.
· The Senate Appropriations subcommittees (Financial Services and General Government Labor; HHS; Education) hearings on proposed FY10 appropriations.
· Subcommittee of the Senate Commerce, Science & Transportation Committee hearing on the “Future Economic Role of Oceans.”
· Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources markup of the Comprehensive Energy Policy.
· House Appropriations markup of FY10 appropriations for Commerce, Justice, Science, and 302(B).
· House Committee on Energy and Commerce subcommittee hearing on “Allowance Allocation Policies in Climate Change Legislation” and on “Green Marketing Practices.”
Wednesday, June 10th
· House is expected to consider HR 2410 that would authorize the State Department and other diplomatic programs in FY10.
Thursday, June 11th
· House is expected to consider HR 1886, the Pakistan Enduring Assistance and Cooperation Enhancement (PEACE) Act.
· Senate Appropriations subcommittees (Military Construction, Veterans; Transportation-HUD) hearings on proposed FY10 appropriations.
· Subcommittee of Senate Commerce, Science & Transportation hearing on the 2010 NOAA budget.
· Senate Committee on Indian Affairs hearing on Indian health care
· House Agriculture Committee hearing on climate change.
· House Appropriations Subcommittee markup of FY10 proposed funding for Interior.
Friday, June 12th
· The House will reconvene at 9 a.m. and continue legislative business from the previous day.
Senator Feingold Introduces Bill to Help Displaced Workers
Senator Feingold on Helping Displaced Workers Find Health Care Jobs
Wednesday, June 3, 2009
Washington, D.C. – U.S. Senator Russ Feingold introduced legislation today to help displaced workers in communities hit hard by the tough economy retrain for high-demand health care jobs. Feingold’s Community-Based Health Care Retraining Act specifically targets communities that have suffered job loss in a variety of industry sectors including manufacturing, construction and service sectors. The legislation would allow communities to apply for grants that would fund retraining efforts led by local workforce development boards. In April, the unemployment rate in Wisconsin was 8.8 percent according to the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development.
“In this tough economy, communities throughout Wisconsin have lost manufacturing jobs both at large factories and small manufacturing businesses,” Feingold said. My bill is designed to give hard-hit communities the opportunity to help retrain their citizens for good, in-demand jobs in the health care field. This bill will help get people back on their feet and remain in their communities while strengthening our health care industry.” Continue reading “Senator Feingold Introduces Bill to Help Displaced Workers”
DOE Issues Grant Solicitation for Wind Energy Consortia between Universities and Industry
June 02, 2009
DOE has issued a Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA) entitled, “Recovery Act: Wind Energy Consortia between Institutions of Higher Learning and Industry.” This funding was originally announced by Secretary Chu on April 29. The FOA provides $24 million for the development of consortia between universities and industry to focus on critical wind energy challenges. The FOA and can be found at FedConnect by searching for the Reference Number DE-FOA-0000090.
This $24 million program initiative will fund consortia between institutions of higher learning and industry that will perform focused research on critical wind energy challenges. DOE intends to award 2-3 grants. The maximum range of a DOE award will be between $8-12 million. Applicants must provide at least a 10% cost share of total project costs including at least 20% for R&D. DOE funds will be provided under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 to preserve and create jobs, promote economic recovery, and provide investments needed to increase wind energy R&D. Continue reading “DOE Issues Grant Solicitation for Wind Energy Consortia between Universities and Industry”