What is with men and math?
Their standards are way too high.
lol - they should be doing taxes for appointees - I certainly shouldn't!
t.
What is with men and math?
Their standards are way too high.
Nebraska wants a mere 380,000,000, but there are apparently only two cities in the entire state.peacock2121 wrote:I looked over the list. My town would be getting nada.silvercamaro wrote:Here is a site that will let you find out what is proposed for your state or town.
http://www.stimuluswatch.org/project/by_state
This is the piggiest pork bill ever. In addition to larger multimillion-dollar projects, my town includes a request of less than $72,000 for sidewalks. WTF? My town can afford to build and repair its own sidewalks without federal help. They don't all have to be done the same week.
I did find the state breakdowns of interest. (I rounded)
California - $23,200,000,000
Texas - $10.800,000,000
Pennsylvania - $4,500,000,000
NY - $1,300,000,000
Colorado - $2,500,000,000
Massachusetts - $1,100,000,000
Montana - $250,000,000
Wyoming - $150,600,000
I did not look at all of the states.
If you accept the premise that a valid purpose of the stimulus is to get people back to work, then the unemployment rate, especially in the sectors in which the stimulus is likely to help, is more important than the overall population of a city or state.Sisyphean Fan wrote: It also seems that Florida, Ohio and Connecticut have a disproportionate number of projects for their relative size.
I was looking at some of the projects and they seem to lump some municipalities together. For instance, Muncie, IN is the only city listed near where I grew up but there are projects listed under Muncie that are in small towns near Muncie. I'm not sure why it says Muncie when it is not in Muncie.Sisyphean Fan wrote:Nebraska wants a mere 380,000,000, but there are apparently only two cities in the entire state.peacock2121 wrote:I looked over the list. My town would be getting nada.silvercamaro wrote:Here is a site that will let you find out what is proposed for your state or town.
http://www.stimuluswatch.org/project/by_state
This is the piggiest pork bill ever. In addition to larger multimillion-dollar projects, my town includes a request of less than $72,000 for sidewalks. WTF? My town can afford to build and repair its own sidewalks without federal help. They don't all have to be done the same week.
I did find the state breakdowns of interest. (I rounded)
California - $23,200,000,000
Texas - $10.800,000,000
Pennsylvania - $4,500,000,000
NY - $1,300,000,000
Colorado - $2,500,000,000
Massachusetts - $1,100,000,000
Montana - $250,000,000
Wyoming - $150,600,000
I did not look at all of the states.
It also seems that Florida, Ohio and Connecticut have a disproportionate number of projects for their relative size.
silvercamaro wrote:Here is a site that will let you find out what is proposed for your state or town.
http://www.stimuluswatch.org/project/by_state
This is the piggiest pork bill ever. In addition to larger multimillion-dollar projects, my town includes a request of less than $72,000 for sidewalks. WTF? My town can afford to build and repair its own sidewalks without federal help. They don't all have to be done the same week.
Norfolk has a bunch, but I only saw three that I considered iffy. The soundwalls, Bay Oak Parks, and landscaping for the light rail that hasn't been built yet are dispensible. But mostly they're looking to do something to keep the downtown from flooding all the time, which is very necessary. You can't get in or out after a rain storm, then the roads crack and the pipes break and it floods all over again. The city is so old they have a cannonball embedded in the wall of one of the buildings in the court complex and if the electrical systems are anything like what was in my apartment building, they really need to upgrade.wintergreen48 wrote:silvercamaro wrote:Here is a site that will let you find out what is proposed for your state or town.
http://www.stimuluswatch.org/project/by_state
This is the piggiest pork bill ever. In addition to larger multimillion-dollar projects, my town includes a request of less than $72,000 for sidewalks. WTF? My town can afford to build and repair its own sidewalks without federal help. They don't all have to be done the same week.
Jeepers, 400 projects in the Commonwealth of Virginia, and not ONE in Richmond or in any of the surrounding Counties. As our Misfortune 500 companies keep going belly up (used to have about 14 of them, but about half of them are now dead or dying), we sure could use some of that there money for some jobs.
There must be despair in Rochester, NY.earendel wrote:FWIW I heard this morning that the subsidy for motion picture studios to purchase film has been removed from the stimulus bill. Surely a triumph of good sense.
Is COF getting any bailout money?wintergreen48 wrote:silvercamaro wrote:Here is a site that will let you find out what is proposed for your state or town.
http://www.stimuluswatch.org/project/by_state
This is the piggiest pork bill ever. In addition to larger multimillion-dollar projects, my town includes a request of less than $72,000 for sidewalks. WTF? My town can afford to build and repair its own sidewalks without federal help. They don't all have to be done the same week.
Jeepers, 400 projects in the Commonwealth of Virginia, and not ONE in Richmond or in any of the surrounding Counties. As our Misfortune 500 companies keep going belly up (used to have about 14 of them, but about half of them are now dead or dying), we sure could use some of that there money for some jobs.
By that statement, you are saying that a project for a city of 10 people where 5 are unemployed is more important than a project for a city of a million people with a 5% unemployment rate.silverscreenselect wrote:If you accept the premise that a valid purpose of the stimulus is to get people back to work, then the unemployment rate, especially in the sectors in which the stimulus is likely to help, is more important than the overall population of a city or state.Sisyphean Fan wrote: It also seems that Florida, Ohio and Connecticut have a disproportionate number of projects for their relative size.
No, but a somewhat smaller city or state, that has a somewhat larger unemployment rate, especially in those sectors that the project is likely to help would receive more benefit from a stimulus package, and that should be taken into account.Estonut wrote:By that statement, you are saying that a project for a city of 10 people where 5 are unemployed is more important than a project for a city of a million people with a 5% unemployment rate.silverscreenselect wrote:If you accept the premise that a valid purpose of the stimulus is to get people back to work, then the unemployment rate, especially in the sectors in which the stimulus is likely to help, is more important than the overall population of a city or state.Sisyphean Fan wrote: It also seems that Florida, Ohio and Connecticut have a disproportionate number of projects for their relative size.
Bob Juch wrote:Is COF getting any bailout money?wintergreen48 wrote:silvercamaro wrote:Here is a site that will let you find out what is proposed for your state or town.
http://www.stimuluswatch.org/project/by_state
This is the piggiest pork bill ever. In addition to larger multimillion-dollar projects, my town includes a request of less than $72,000 for sidewalks. WTF? My town can afford to build and repair its own sidewalks without federal help. They don't all have to be done the same week.
Jeepers, 400 projects in the Commonwealth of Virginia, and not ONE in Richmond or in any of the surrounding Counties. As our Misfortune 500 companies keep going belly up (used to have about 14 of them, but about half of them are now dead or dying), we sure could use some of that there money for some jobs.