[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 180 (Monday, November 28, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S7904-S7905]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
CUT ENERGY BILLS AT HOME ACT
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I rise to speak in support of the Cut
Energy Bills at Home Act, which Senator Snowe, Senator Bingaman and I
have introduced. It has been a pleasure to work again with Senators
Snowe and Bingaman on an important piece of energy legislation. We have
written this bill in a fully cooperative process, and my colleagues
have been especially accommodating of changes requested by California's
experts; I thank my colleagues for their efforts.
This legislation would put the construction industry back to work by
creating a homeowner tax credit for home renovations that increase the
energy efficiency of the home by at least 20 percent. The tax credit
would increase in size with every 5 percent in additional energy
efficiency improvement achieved. Homeowners who improved the efficiency
of their home by more than 50 percent will qualify for a maximum credit
of $5,000.
This legislation helps address the continued high unemployment in the
construction sector while making a long-term investment in America's
building infrastructure. The construction industry has the highest
unemployment rate of any sector nationally, according to the Bureau of
Labor Statistics.
The current residential building stock exceeds demand, making a rapid
recovery in new housing starts unlikely. According to the Census
Bureau, 14.3 percent of the housing units in the United States in the
second quarter of 2011 were vacant, even as prices continue to drop.
Thus the construction industry needs jobs, but artificially
stimulating construction of new homes would exacerbate a situation of
oversupply and depress home prices further.
Our Nation's buildings also need the upgrade. Buildings account for
about 40 percent of the U.S. energy appetite, as well as 40 percent of
its carbon dioxide
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emissions, according to the Department of Energy. However, the
consulting firm McKinsey and Company has found that improving building
energy efficiency is one of the most cost effective ways to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions.
Since 1974, California has used mandates, regulations and incentives
to hold its per capita energy consumption essentially constant, while
energy use per-person for the United States overall has jumped 50
percent.
This legislation provides a solution by stimulating the renovation of
existing homes.
This is a jobs bill that provides incentives to reward energy
efficient renovations that will create jobs in the construction sector,
avoid increasing the supply of housing beyond demand, decrease energy
use and reduce pollution, and expand the market for efficient
technology and products.
This bill would create the first tax incentive for energy efficiency
home renovation based on the energy performance of the home rather than
the cost of the equipment.
This concept, which Senator Snowe and I first proposed in 2007 as
part of the Extend Act, is recommended by most energy efficiency
experts.
Current policy allow homeowners to claim credits for the purchase of
energy efficient insulation, windows, doors, heaters, air conditioners
and water heaters. This approach is very expensive, largely due to
claims filed for windows.
By restructuring the credit to apply to whole-home energy renovations
that reward energy efficiency performance instead of the cost of
equipment, this proposal has the potential to increase effectiveness
while substantially lowering costs.
The legislation also includes provisions to ensure effectiveness and
prevent abuse. The work must be done by a contractor who must sign an
affidavit certifying the work was done and submit photographs of the
work. The contractor must use certified, computer-based energy
efficiency measurement tools. The credit would be limited to
renovations of primary residences that do not increase the size of the
home, and the credit would be capped at no more than 30 percent of the
cost of renovation, to prevent homeowners from making large claims for
relatively inexpensive renovations. As a tax credit, all claims would
also be subject to IRS audits.
The bill is supported by the California Energy Commission, the
Alliance to Save Energy, Efficiency First, the American Council for an
Energy Efficient Economy and the Natural Resource Defense Council.
By offering incentives for energy efficient renovations, this bill
helps create jobs in California's ailing construction sector while at
the same time decreasing energy use and pollution.
This sort of investment, putting Americans back to work while leaving
behind lasting improvements, is the type of legislation on which
Congress should be spending time.
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