20 Reasons To Vote Green In 2022

DarinRobbins

New member
By Howie Hawkins and Gloria Mattera

The Democrats rule New York as a one-party state with veto-proof supermajorities in both chambers of the state legislature. But once again this year they failed to use their power to enact popular progressive reforms affecting health care, climate, housing, criminal justice, and abortion rights.

The Democrats’ disposal of the following 20 bills are 20 reasons to vote for the Green Party gubernatorial ticket of Howie Hawkins and Gloria Mattera on November 8.

1. The New York Health Act would have created a state-level Medicare-for-All program for all New York residents. Versions of it have passed the Assembly since the early 1990s. But the bill has not got out of committee in either chamber since the Democrats regained control of the state Senate in 2018.

More climate legislation is needed to implement to clean energy and environmental justice goals of the 2019 Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA). While the Green Party regards these goals in CLCPA as too weak, the Greens did support the climate bills pushed by the Climate Can’t Wait coalition to support the CLCPA’s clean energy and environmental justice goals. But these climate bills were not adopted by the legislature:

2. The Build Public Renewables Act would have enabled the New York Power Authority (NYPA) to build affordable renewable energy and to retrofit public buildings with energy efficiency and electric heat pumps.

3. The All Electric Buildings Act would have ended fossil-fueled heating and cooling systems in new residential or commercial buildings for buildings up six floors by 2024 and all buildings by 2027

4. The CLCPA Implementation and Funding Act would have provided $15 billion in the 2022 budget to help fund the clean energy transition.

5. The Clean Futures Act would have banned new fossil-fueled electric power generation.

6. The Climate and Community Investment Act would have enacted a progressive carbon tax with rebates to help fund the clean energy transition.

7. The Fossil Fuel Subsidy Elimination Act would have cut over $330 million in New York tax exemptions to the fossil fuel industry.

8. The Green New Deal for New York Act would have taxed the rich for over $10 billion a year to help fund the clean energy transition

9. The Renewable Capitol Act would have required that the State Capitol and Empire State Plaza be powered by renewable energy.

10. The Teachers’ Fossil Fuel Divestment Act would have required the New York State Teachers’ Retirement System to divest from fossil fuel holdings.

11. The Energy Efficiency, Equity and Jobs Act would have required that Public Service Commission programs provide job training funds and set hiring targets for disadvantaged communities.

12. The Cryptocurrency Mining Act did pass. It provides for a two-year moratorium on fossil-fueled cryptocurrency mining. But it grandfathers in the on-site fracked gas powered electricity at Greenidge Generation’s Bitcoin mining plant in Dresden on Seneca Lake. Whether Governor Kathy Hochul will sign it into law is far from certain. The original bill called for a three-year moratorium. The Green Party supports a ban. Cryptocurrency mining is a waste of energy. Even when cryptocurrency is mined with renewable electricity, that is clean electricity that is needed immediately to decarbonize buildings, transportation, and manufacturing.

The affordable housing crisis in New York has become acute since the Covid eviction moratorium expired in January. In New York City, rents rose 33 percent in 2021, almost double the national rate and the highest increase among the 100 largest U.S. cities. Evictions are accelerating.

13. The Prohibition of Eviction Without Good Cause Act would have required landlords to have “good cause” to evict tenants and prevented landlords from kicking out tenants just to drastically raise rents. It also would have capped rent increases at 3%, or 1.5 times the annual percent change in the Consumer Price Index, whichever is higher.

Despite the Black Lives Matter demonstrations after the police murder of George Floyd in May 2020 that were the largest protest movement in US history, their demands for an end to police and criminal justice system abuses have stalled in New York. These five police and criminal justice reform bills failed:

14. The Clean Slate Act would have cleared a person's criminal record after completion of their sentence in order to remove barriers to employment, housing, and education for 2.3 million New Yorkers.

15. The Fair and Timely Parole Act would have required the state Parole Board to evaluate inmates for parole based on current merit and behavior.

16. The Elder Parole Act would have required that inmates over 55 years old who served 15 or more years be considered for parole.

17. The Challenging Wrongful Convictions Act would have enabled people wrongfully convicted to clear their names and their records

18. End Qualified Immunity Act would have ended the US Supreme Court invented doctrine that shields government officials from liability in civil cases and in particular police and correctional officers from culpability for civil rights violations.

While the state legislature did not see fit to divest the teacher’s pension fund from fossil fuel companies, it did see fit amid a flood of campaign cash from the financial industry to funnel public employee pension funds into high-risk Wall Street “alternative investment” schemes.

19. The High-Risk Public Employee Pensions Investment Act (our name for A9668A/S8532) will raise from 25% to 35% the portion of state public employee pension funds that can be invested in high-risk “alternative investments" such as hedge funds, private equity, and real estate, sending as much as $54 billion more in retiree savings to risky Wall Street investment stratagems.

In the wake of the leaked US Supreme Court draft decision to overturn abortion rights, New York Democrats proclaimed they would enshrine abortion rights as well as gender equality in the New York state constitution. Then they failed to pass the proposed Equality Amendment to do so.

20. The Equality Amendment would have started the process of enacting a state constitutional amendment to prohibit discrimination based on a person’s race, ethnicity, national origin, disability, and sex — including pregnancy and pregnancy outcomes, access to reproductive care including abortion, sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression.
 
Jill stein sat a a table with Mike Flynn and partied in Russia



The party chose very badly who was going to lead them


And Russia ended up with the entire party structure infiltrated by Russia



The Democratic Party “rules” because more Americans trust my proud party and its members


This is a democracy


And trashing a party because more Americans belong to it proves how fucked up the Green Partys soul of democracy is
 
By Howie Hawkins and Gloria Mattera

The Democrats rule New York as a one-party state with veto-proof supermajorities in both chambers of the state legislature. But once again this year they failed to use their power to enact popular progressive reforms affecting health care, climate, housing, criminal justice, and abortion rights.

The Democrats’ disposal of the following 20 bills are 20 reasons to vote for the Green Party gubernatorial ticket of Howie Hawkins and Gloria Mattera on November 8.

1. The New York Health Act would have created a state-level Medicare-for-All program for all New York residents. Versions of it have passed the Assembly since the early 1990s. But the bill has not got out of committee in either chamber since the Democrats regained control of the state Senate in 2018.

What does this have to do with "going Green?"

More climate legislation is needed to implement to clean energy and environmental justice goals of the 2019 Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act (CLCPA). While the Green Party regards these goals in CLCPA as too weak, the Greens did support the climate bills pushed by the Climate Can’t Wait coalition to support the CLCPA’s clean energy and environmental justice goals. But these climate bills were not adopted by the legislature:

2. The Build Public Renewables Act would have enabled the New York Power Authority (NYPA) to build affordable renewable energy and to retrofit public buildings with energy efficiency and electric heat pumps.

It is prohibitively expensive to heat a home or building in a cold climate area, like New York in winter, with electricity. Electric heating is horribly inefficient. Heat pumps won't work below -4 F and efficiency falls off dramatically below about 40 F. That requires the addition of gas packs or electric heating strips to make up for that inefficiency, and that makes using them in cold climates cost prohibitive.

3. The All Electric Buildings Act would have ended fossil-fueled heating and cooling systems in new residential or commercial buildings for buildings up six floors by 2024 and all buildings by 2027

This will raise many building's HVAC costs yearly by double to triple current costs.

4. The CLCPA Implementation and Funding Act would have provided $15 billion in the 2022 budget to help fund the clean energy transition.

So, the government will use bribes of OPM to get people to do it then screw them with the increased cost of operation.

5. The Clean Futures Act would have banned new fossil-fueled electric power generation.

So, what are we going to use instead? Wind and solar cannot supply our energy needs, and it's likely nuclear is out of this plan as well. What will be used to provide cheap, reliable energy?

6. The Climate and Community Investment Act would have enacted a progressive carbon tax with rebates to help fund the clean energy transition.

More government bribes

7. The Fossil Fuel Subsidy Elimination Act would have cut over $330 million in New York tax exemptions to the fossil fuel industry.

So, the energy companies leave the state and New York suffers the resulting loss of jobs, employers, and tax revenue.

8. The Green New Deal for New York Act would have taxed the rich for over $10 billion a year to help fund the clean energy transition

The Rich would leave the state so the effective tax revenue would be closer to zero.

9. The Renewable Capitol Act would have required that the State Capitol and Empire State Plaza be powered by renewable energy.

A token, meaningless gesture.

10. The Teachers’ Fossil Fuel Divestment Act would have required the New York State Teachers’ Retirement System to divest from fossil fuel holdings.

ESC investment rarely works or has the desired effect.

11. The Energy Efficiency, Equity and Jobs Act would have required that Public Service Commission programs provide job training funds and set hiring targets for disadvantaged communities.

How is this a "Green" thing?

12. The Cryptocurrency Mining Act did pass. It provides for a two-year moratorium on fossil-fueled cryptocurrency mining. But it grandfathers in the on-site fracked gas powered electricity at Greenidge Generation’s Bitcoin mining plant in Dresden on Seneca Lake. Whether Governor Kathy Hochul will sign it into law is far from certain. The original bill called for a three-year moratorium. The Green Party supports a ban. Cryptocurrency mining is a waste of energy. Even when cryptocurrency is mined with renewable electricity, that is clean electricity that is needed immediately to decarbonize buildings, transportation, and manufacturing.

Yea, sure... Like New York can control global cryptocurrency or where it is mined. So the mining operations leave New York. That's New York's loss...

The affordable housing crisis in New York has become acute since the Covid eviction moratorium expired in January. In New York City, rents rose 33 percent in 2021, almost double the national rate and the highest increase among the 100 largest U.S. cities. Evictions are accelerating.

Much of that is on government over-regulation of the housing market.

13. The Prohibition of Eviction Without Good Cause Act would have required landlords to have “good cause” to evict tenants and prevented landlords from kicking out tenants just to drastically raise rents. It also would have capped rent increases at 3%, or 1.5 times the annual percent change in the Consumer Price Index, whichever is higher.

That just means that landlords will spend more effort vetting renters and refusing to rent to those with credit issues of any sort. Or, landlords will divest their rental properties or convert them and sell them off. Renters lose either way.

Despite the Black Lives Matter demonstrations after the police murder of George Floyd in May 2020 that were the largest protest movement in US history, their demands for an end to police and criminal justice system abuses have stalled in New York. These five police and criminal justice reform bills failed:

What does this have to do with anything "Green?"

14. The Clean Slate Act would have cleared a person's criminal record after completion of their sentence in order to remove barriers to employment, housing, and education for 2.3 million New Yorkers.

Same thing, not a "Green" issue.

15. The Fair and Timely Parole Act would have required the state Parole Board to evaluate inmates for parole based on current merit and behavior.

Not a "Green" issue.

16. The Elder Parole Act would have required that inmates over 55 years old who served 15 or more years be considered for parole.

17. The Challenging Wrongful Convictions Act would have enabled people wrongfully convicted to clear their names and their records

18. End Qualified Immunity Act would have ended the US Supreme Court invented doctrine that shields government officials from liability in civil cases and in particular police and correctional officers from culpability for civil rights violations.

More not "Green" issues.

While the state legislature did not see fit to divest the teacher’s pension fund from fossil fuel companies, it did see fit amid a flood of campaign cash from the financial industry to funnel public employee pension funds into high-risk Wall Street “alternative investment” schemes.

19. The High-Risk Public Employee Pensions Investment Act (our name for A9668A/S8532) will raise from 25% to 35% the portion of state public employee pension funds that can be invested in high-risk “alternative investments" such as hedge funds, private equity, and real estate, sending as much as $54 billion more in retiree savings to risky Wall Street investment stratagems.

In the wake of the leaked US Supreme Court draft decision to overturn abortion rights, New York Democrats proclaimed they would enshrine abortion rights as well as gender equality in the New York state constitution. Then they failed to pass the proposed Equality Amendment to do so.

20. The Equality Amendment would have started the process of enacting a state constitutional amendment to prohibit discrimination based on a person’s race, ethnicity, national origin, disability, and sex — including pregnancy and pregnancy outcomes, access to reproductive care including abortion, sexual orientation, gender identity, and gender expression.

And yet, more not "Green" issues.
 
As for my background, I've been a registered Green since 2000. I have run for City Council and mayor as a Green candidate in my hometown of Corning, New York. I am currently treasurer of the Steuben County Green Party, a member of the State Committee of the Green Party Of New York, and co-chair of the Campaign Committee of the Green Party Of New York. These posts are part of our outreach efforts this year.
 
As for my background, I've been a registered Green since 2000. I have run for City Council and mayor as a Green candidate in my hometown of Corning, New York. I am currently treasurer of the Steuben County Green Party, a member of the State Committee of the Green Party Of New York, and co-chair of the Campaign Committee of the Green Party Of New York. These posts are part of our outreach efforts this year.

Here is a question for you: would you vote Green in Georgia? Would you vote Green in a state where it could cause the Republicans to win?
 
You got it reversed. Heat pumps cost several times less every year, but about twice as much to install.

Wrong. As temperatures fall below about 40 F, heat pumps on their own become less and less efficient. Down around 30 F they run continuously and will never fully heat a home on their own, unless you like your house in the 50's... You have add a gas pack or electric heat strips to make up for the inefficiency. The later will grossly increase your electric bill, while the former uses natural gas so they're out with New York's plan.
 
As temperatures fall below about 40 F, heat pumps on their own become less and less efficient.

You used to be correct, but these days it is closer to 20 degrees. At that point, electric resistance heating takes over, and you still save money over the year.
 
You used to be correct, but these days it is closer to 20 degrees. At that point, electric resistance heating takes over, and you still save money over the year.

In Germany, where the Greentards have already done this shit, the go-to for home heating has become the wood pellet stove. This is the most absurd stupidity you can think of. Whole forests are ground into sawdust, then thousands of tons of VOC's including volatile aldehydes, cyanides, CO, CO2 are released during the drying process at the factory, and last more CO and CO2 (among other things) are released when they are burned for heating. It's as if Germany regressed 300 years into the past and is burning wood again to keep warm.

Germans can't afford electric heating where their electricity bill could easily reach the equivalent of $1000 a month to keep their home warm. People in New York are going to face the same thing and the likely solution for many, even most, will be to move to places like Florida.
 
In Germany, where the Greentards have already done this shit, the go-to for home heating has become the wood pellet stove. This is the most absurd stupidity you can think of. Whole forests are ground into sawdust, then thousands of tons of VOC's including volatile aldehydes, cyanides, CO, CO2 are released during the drying process at the factory, and last more CO and CO2 (among other things) are released when they are burned for heating. It's as if Germany regressed 300 years into the past and is burning wood again to keep warm.

Germans can't afford electric heating where their electricity bill could easily reach the equivalent of $1000 a month to keep their home warm. People in New York are going to face the same thing and the likely solution for many, even most, will be to move to places like Florida.

Heat pumps do not involve wood pellets. You have confused two very different heating options.

Heat pumps cost more in initial setup money, but save money over time. It is hard not to reduce pollution by using them.
 
Heat pumps do not involve wood pellets. You have confused two very different heating options.

Heat pumps cost more in initial setup money, but save money over time. It is hard not to reduce pollution by using them.

Heat pumps don't work in cold climates, and without natural gas, the only viable alternative was the wood pellet.

Heat pumps are remarkably efficient home heating systems. As more and more homeowners become aware of this option for heating their homes, heat pumps are rising in popularity. While they are excellent systems in many ways, however, heat pumps do have areas where they struggle. One of those areas is that of extremely cold weather. Here, we’ll cover what to do if your heat pump begins to struggle in the cold weather.
https://www.spsmechanical.com/blog/... struggle,one area to another to heat a space.

Unlike furnaces, heat pumps do not create heat, they pull it out of the outside air and then transfer the heat inside your house.
But what will happen to a heat pump, if it gets freezing cold outside? There certainly isn’t enough heat in the winter air, or is there?
In a nutshell, your heat pump would be able to extract heat from the air, even when the temperatures drop to 25 F or below.
However, the system would require more energy to keep your house nice and warm. This, in its turn, makes the unit less efficient.
The majority of the heat pumps work best when it’s above 40 F.
Another important thing that you should bear in mind is that heat pumps can freeze up in winter.

When this happens, the unit switches to the defrost mode. This means that for a certain period the heat pump will be operating in cooling mode as only in such a case it is able to send hot refrigerant to the outdoor unit to melt the ice on it.
https://hvac-boss.com/faq/heat-pump-effectiveness-in-cold-weather/

THE AIR COMING OUT OF YOUR VENTS IS COLD
A blast of lukewarm air on a chilly day is little comfort when you’re trying to warm up next to the heating vents. But this is the way a heat pump works. It picks up the heat from the outdoors and expels it inside. When the weather is cold, the air coming in may not be much warmer than the ambient air temperature. If you’re looking for a steady stream of warm air, you’re better off with a furnace.

IT TAKES FOREVER FOR YOUR HOUSE TO WARM UP
Remember, your heat pump is taking air from the outdoors and using it to heat your home. This is an efficient and inexpensive system – as long as temperatures are relatively mild. The colder it is outside, the longer it’s going to take to warm up your home. This does not mean that your heat pump is broken! It’s just one of the few heat pump problems in cold weather that you have to adjust to. If you’re having a hard time dealing with it, use your programmable thermostat to start increasing the temperature a little earlier in the mornings, especially on cold nights. Hopefully, by the time you’re ready to rise and shine, the house will be a bit toastier!

YOUR HEATING BILLS HAVE GONE UP
One of the most popular types of systems is hybrid heat. These systems are great for southern states, where winters are usually mild. A hybrid heat system uses the heat pump to draw in any available heat from outside sources. The heat pump is the primary source of heat as long as it is more efficient than ‘strip heating.’ Your heat pump has heat strips, or wires, that are heated via electricity. If the temperature outside gets below about 20° Fahrenheit, the strip heating kicks in. At that point, your hybrid heat pump will use strip heating to heat your home – and your electric bills will increase.
https://www.newcombandcompany.com/resources/heat-pump-problems-cold-weather
 
Heat pumps don't work in cold climates, and without natural gas, the only viable alternative was the wood pellet.

Heat pumps have problems working around 20 degrees or so, but would normally use electric heating at that point. They still save money over the year, even in cold climates. There are more alternatives to heating than wood pellets and natural gas.
 
The short answer is yes I would vote Green because I want Greens to be elected. Green candidates are not just running against Democrats but also Republicans. The fact that we don't take corporate money helps to insure that we will always be the consistent opposition to the rightwing agenda. For example, when I ran for City Council and mayor I was the only challenger to the Republican incumbents in those elections. Since you mention Georgia, it should be noted that until recently it was one of the hardest states for a third party or independent candidate to get on the ballot. Now New York is the toughest and Georgia is around second place.
 
Heat pumps have problems working around 20 degrees or so, but would normally use electric heating at that point. They still save money over the year, even in cold climates. There are more alternatives to heating than wood pellets and natural gas.

comparison-of-heating-fuel-prices.jpg


That's the typical comparison graph for fuel types. Nobody except the filthy rich can afford electric heating when they live in a cold climate location.
 
Back
Top