[Abel-tasman] Savings Alert: Power Bill Reductions with Solar

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Tue Oct 15 21:31:48 CEST 2013


Savings Alert: New Incentives Pay you to go solar

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tino vote nationwide last year.Closer to home, no Republican represents 
any majority Hispanic district in the Legislature, even though the GOP holds 
sizable majorities in the House and Senate. The only Hispanic ever elected 
to the U.S. Senate from Texas, Ted Cruz, is a Republican whose 
father was born in Cuba. Many top GOP leaders are counting on 
him and Bush to remake the party's image with Hispanics.Gilberto Hinojosa, 
chairman of the Texas Democratic Party, scoffs at that."How is it," he 
asked, "that these people think that if they're fortunate to be born 
to a Hispanic mother and are of Hispanic heritage, that gives them 
the right to have the support of the Hispanic community?"Bush said Hispanics 
"don't vote in a monolith." He sidestepped questions about national issues 
such as immigration, choosing to focus on the responsibilities of the land 
commissioner. The office oversees vast oil and mineral rights which help 
fund public education. It also administers benefits to military veterans."This 
is an office I've had my heart on for years," Bush said. 
"I'm a former educator, a veteran and I have a strong energy 
and asset background. This is kind of what I'm excited about."Born in 
Houston, Bush grew up in Florida, where his father was governor from 
1998 until 2007. He graduated from and played baseball for Rice University 
in Houston before teaching school in inner-city Miami and working on George 
W. Bush's presidential campaign.He earned 
FILE: July 19, 2013: House Speaker John Boehner walks to the chamber 
floor on Capitol Hill, in Washington, D.C.APHouse Republicans say their 
goal is to repeal President Obama's health care law, not to present 
an alternative plan."I don't think it's a matter of what we put 
on the floor right now," said Rep. Greg Walden of Oregon, who 
heads the party's campaign committee. He added that what is important is 
"trying to delay Obamacare."His remarks are in response to criticism that 
the Republican-led House have voted more than three dozen times over the 
past several years to repeal the law in part or in whole.Officially, 
the effort to craft an alternative plan is a work "in progress" 
and has been since Jan. 19, 2011, according to GOP.gov, a leadership-run 
website.But internal divisions, disagreement about political tactics and 
Obama's 2012 re-election have resulted in uncertainty about whether Republicans 
will vote on a plan of their own before the 2014 elections, 
or if not by then, perhaps before the president leaves office, more 
than six years after the original promise.Rep. Fred Upton of Michigan, who 
leads a committee with jurisdiction over health care, said, "If we are 
successful in ultimately repealing this legislation, then yes, we will have 
a replacement bill ready to come back with."Divisions were evident earlier 
this year, when legislation to make it easier for high-risk individuals 
to purchase coverage died without a vote. It was 
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