Tester fighting for Montana’s wind industry

Senator joins bipartisan call for stable tax system to offer more certainty, create jobs

 

(U.S. SENATE) – Senator Jon Tester is pushing to extend the wind production tax credit to keep Montana’s wind industry growing and to create more jobs in the Big Sky State.

 

Montana’s wind power capacity was only a single megawatt in 2004, but now Montana wind energy companies generate nearly 400 megawatts of power. 

 

The wind industry’s recent growth, fueled in part by the tax credit, lowered the cost of wind power more than 90 percent.  Tester said extending the tax credit, which is set to expire at the end of the year, will enable wind companies to keep expanding and to make long-term business decisions. 

 

“The future of the American wind industry requires a stable tax environment in which to operate,” Tester wrote Senate leaders this week.  “Reauthorizing the wind production tax credit will provide the wind industry with the stability and predictability to plan for the future.”

 

The wind energy industry employs hundreds of Montanans, jobs that could be at risk if the credit expires.  According to the American Wind Energy Association, tens of thousands of Americans build wind turbines, wind towers, and other industry parts at 400 manufacturing facilities nationwide. 

 

“Failure to extend the production tax credit will weaken this growing manufacturing sector and destabilize an industry just before it completes its transformation to being cost competitive in the marketplace,” Tester wrote.

 

As President of the Montana State Senate, Tester was responsible for a state tax credit and a renewable portfolio standard that encouraged the development of wind energy in rural Montana and helped launch the state’s wind industry.

 

In November, Tester and Senator Jim Risch (R-Idaho), introduced a bipartisan bill that streamlines permitting for renewable energy projects on public lands.  The measure ensures that funds generated by energy development benefits states, counties, and various conservation efforts.

 

Tester’s bipartisan letter to Senate leadership is available online HERE.

 

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Contact:          Andrea Helling or Dan Malessa – (202) 228-0371

 

 

 

DAINES ANNOUNCES FILING DAY EVENTS

Kicks Off Filing Day in Conrad, Where Montana Roots Began

BOZEMAN, Mont.__ Congressional Candidate Steve Daines formally announced his filing day events today, for Tuesday February 28th.  The day starts with a 9:00am filing announcement in Conrad Montana, the town Steve’s great-great-grandmother homesteaded to as a widow with 7 children.
 

Filing Day Schedule
Tuesday February 28th

9:00am – Kick off
Home Cafe – Conrad
408 1/2 S Main Street
 
1:00pm – Official Filing
State Capitol – Helena
Fan Window Area
 
5:30pm – Filing Day Rally
Hilton Garden Inn – Bozeman
Room – Larkspur A
 
Press welcome at all events.
 

Tester calls for reevaluation of security clearance policy

Senator wants fair treatment for service members who seek sexual assault counseling

 

(U.S. SENATE) – Senator Jon Tester is pushing to reevaluate the national security clearance process to protect service members who sought counseling for sexual trauma.

 

To acquire a security clearance, applicants must list whether they have received mental health counseling and if so allow an investigator access to their health records.  But Tester says service members should not have to disclose professional counseling they seek to cope with sexual trauma.

 

Studies show that more than 20 percent of servicewomen are sexually assaulted while serving in the military. 

 

Tester says the current screening policy discourages qualified service members from applying for important national security positions and discourages them from getting the counseling they need.

 

“Seeking care does not constitute a valid security concern, and it is not something that should be discouraged by the very nation they fought to defend,” Tester wrote. 

 

As of 2008, national security clearance applicants no longer have to list counseling for combat trauma on the security questionnaire, known as the SF 86.  The change was made to help reduce the stigma that often prevents service members from seeking care for combat stress.  Tester wants the same, fair treatment for individuals who seek help for sexual trauma.

 

“The current policy is a violation of privacy and being a victim of sexual assault should not preclude a service member from gaining or maintaining a security clearance,” Tester added.  “We can do better.”

 

Tester first looked into the issue after a veteran contacted him last year about it.  He also heard about the lifelong effects of combat and sexual trauma at a women veterans’ roundtable earlier this month in Billings.

 

There were as many as 19,000 instances of sexual assault in the military in 2010.  While most assaults occur against women, men are affected as well.

 

Tester announced in December that the VA would improve the accuracy and consistency of their disability claims process related to Military Sexual Trauma.  The VA’s action comes after Tester and Senator Patty Murray (D-Wash.) told the VA further action was needed to improve the process.

 

Tester’s letter to Director of National Intelligence James Clapper and Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is available below and online HERE.

 

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February 23, 2012

 

 

The Honorable James R. Clapper, Jr.                                      The Honorable Leon Panetta

Director                                                                                   Secretary

National Intelligence                                                               Department of Defense

Office of the Director of National Intelligence                      1000 Defense Pentagon

Washington, DC 20511                                                          Washington, DC 20301-1000

 

Dear Director Clapper and Secretary Panetta:

 

Recently, Secretary Panetta expressed concern that as many as 19,000 instances of sexual assault occurred in the United States military last year.  Some studies have estimated that at least 20 percent of servicewomen and one percent of servicemen have been sexually assaulted while serving our country.  Undoubtedly, we must protect the survivors of these terrible crimes and do everything in our power to prevent such assaults from happening in the first place.  And we must be vigilant in ensuring our policies or practices do not unnecessarily further traumatize these men and women.

 

As you know, the Standard Form 86 (SF 86), Questionnaire for National Security Positions, is currently the document used by military personnel and government employees to apply for a Security Clearance.  Question 21 of that form asks whether applicants have consulted with a mental health professional or other health care provider about a mental health related condition.  If question 21 is answered in the affirmative, the applicant is directed to sign an authorization for release of medical information — allowing an investigator to get complete access to the individual’s file and to ask the survivor or relevant health care provider whatever questions he or she deems appropriate.

 

In 2008, combat trauma was excluded from such disclosure on question 21 of SF 86 to help remove the stigma of service members seeking mental health counseling.  Today, I strongly urge you to take steps to also exempt sexual assault-related mental health counseling because being a victim of sexual assault should not preclude a service member from gaining or maintaining a security clearance.  The current policy is a violation of privacy and creates a disincentive for service members to seek the mental health counseling they need.  We can do better.

 

I hope you take this request under consideration, and I look forward to finding resolution of this matter.  It would be a modest yet meaningful step for survivors of sexual assault.  At every opportunity, these survivors should be encouraged to seek the care and assistance they need.  Seeking this care does not constitute a valid security concern, and it is not something that should be discouraged by the very nation they fought to defend. 

 

Sincerely,

(s)

Jon Tester

Bullock: U.S. Supreme Court’s PPL Decision ‘Doesn’t Take Away’ Stream Access Rights

HELENA – Attorney General Steve Bullock released the following statement regarding Montana’s stream access laws in response to inquiries regarding the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision on riverbed ownership in PPL Montana LLC v. Montana.

“Montana has some of the strongest stream access laws in the nation, preserving the ability of all Montanans to hunt, fish, float and recreate on public streams and rivers. This decision by the U.S. Supreme Court, while disappointing, doesn’t take away or affect that right.

“The ability to access public lands and rivers is an integral part of our heritage as Montanans – and something that I want my three kids and the next generation of Montanans to inherit. But hunting, fishing and recreating on public lands is about more than just our heritage – it’s about the economic viability of rural communities and small businesses. I will always fight for them.”

As an assistant attorney general, Bullock wrote the landmark opinion in 2000 which established stream access from publicly owned bridges. While previous attempts to codify that opinion into law had failed, large bipartisan majorities passed HB 190 in 2009. That legislation was written by then-Rep. Kendall Van Dyk, D-Billings, and supported by Bullock.

The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in PPL Montana LLC v. Montana has no impact to Montana’s stream access law. Montana’s access law says the public can recreate on any natural stream — irrespective of who owns the bed and banks — as long as that stream is capable of supporting recreation and as long as those using the stream do not go above the normal high-water marks where the banks are owned by private interests.

The ruling, issued this week, applies to the riverbeds immediately under the PPL dams in question and whether the state can or cannot charge rent for their use.

 

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John Doran

Public Information Officer

Department of Justice

Office: (406) 444-9869

Cell: (406) 422-6894

jdoran@mt.gov

Rehberg Announces Call for Montana’s Young Artists to Submit Original Artwork for the 2012 Congressional Art Competition

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Montana’s Congressman, Denny Rehberg, today invited Montana high school students to submit their original artwork to Montana’s Congressional Art Competition for a chance to be displayed for a year in the halls of the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.

“Each year, the Congressional Art Competition presents a new opportunity for Montana’s young artists to be recognized and rewarded for their talents, which is important to an aspiring artist,” said Rehberg, Chairman of the Labor, House Heath and Human Services, and Education Appropriations Subcommittee. “There’s something inspiring about growing up and living in Montana, with our great outdoor opportunities and rural values. I look forward to viewing the artwork and showing my colleagues Montana’s talent.”

Each spring, the House of Representatives holds the Congressional Art Competition to recognize the outstanding artwork of high school students from each congressional district by displaying their work for one year in the Cannon Tunnel in the U.S. Capitol. The well-traveled Cannon Tunnel connects the U.S. Capitol Building with the House Cannon Office Building. It is used by members of Congress on their way to vote as well as thousands of tourists from around the world every year. The grand prize winner and a guest will also be invited to a Ribbon Cutting Ceremony and Reception in Washington, D.C. in June.

The competition is open to all students enrolled in a Montana high school or home-school equivalent. All submissions are due by Friday, April 27, 2012.

The first runner-up’s entry will be displayed for the public in Rehberg’s Washington, D.C. office. For the past several years, Rehberg has used his Facebook page as a way to involve Montanans in the judging.  The artwork will be posted and fans will have the opportunity to vote for the finalists.  Further information, including official rules, guidelines, and instructions for submission, can be found online at http://rehberg.house.govunder the Art Competition heading in the Services tab or by clicking here.

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