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Bush Energy Plan "Breaks New Ground"
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The new Bush/Cheney energy proposal is chock-full of ideas about how we can keep our SUV's humming along. In fact, there are so many ideas in the 170-page report that some of the best and the brightest have yet to receive the attention they deserve. Seven new power plants a month, more oil, more gas, more coal, more nukes -- and that's just the part of the energy plan that has seen the light of day. Here are a few of the bright ideas that are still under wraps:
All Hands on Deck
The White House recently announced a bold new energy savings plan, in which federally funded programs will be asked to slash energy usage in exchange for government money. Head Start, the thirty-five year old child development program that serves 850,000 low-income children across the country, was one of the first to be tapped by the Bush administration for participation in a pilot version of the plan. Charlene Exley-Smith, a spokeswoman for the organization, said that Head Start is taking the new mandate to conserve energy very seriously.
"For a small group like ours, wringing additional savings out of the budget isn't easy. So we took a hard look at the services we provide and asked ourselves which of them could be done without natural gas or electricity. It was pretty obvious: the 'meals in schools' program," said Exley-Smith. Next month, the group will replace the hot breakfasts that it serves in thousands of public schools with cold cereal. "Saving energy is a worthy goal," said Exley-Smith, "and by no longer cooking eggs and toasting bread, we're putting a substantial amount of electricity and natural gas back into the nation's pot."
Gentlemen, Start Your Engines
White House energy experts, including Vice President Dick Cheney, are cheering the release of a new study regarding gasoline usage by American consumers. The study, by the Energy Research Institute, concludes that 40 percent of all gasoline consumed in this country is burned when Americans start their engines. By letting cars and sport utility vehicles run continuously, says the study's author, Dr. Robert B. Brantley, Americans will actually be saving gas. The study also identifies 'speed bumps,' placed at the entrances of schools, shopping malls, and intersection, as a major energy waster. "An engine that's running at full throttle is a productive, efficient engine," explained Brantley. "Anything that slows it down is basically a net energy waster."
According to White House spokesman Ari Fleisher, the Bush Administration plans to implement the study's recommendations later this summer, requiring users of the Capitol Hill Parking Garage adjacent to the US Congress to leave their vehicles running while Congress is in session. "This is just one of the proposals that the President hopes will ease our nation's short-term energy demands," said Fleisher.
Fun for the Kids, Too
Looking for something for the kids to do this summer? If the Bush administration has its way, hundreds of boys and girls will spend their vacations helping the US slake its thirst for fuel. Working with youth groups including the Boy Scouts of America, the White House is developing a Junior Explorer program. Kids aged eight and above who enroll in the program will visit off-shore oil rigs, extract coal from a mine, and even help to build a mini-pipeline.
"We think it's just a great idea," said Boy Scout spokesman and former Eagle Scout Bradley Sloane. "Scouting encourages boys to be good citizens. The Junior Explorer program actually gives kids a way to practice good citizenship by helping to ease our energy crisis," said Sloane, noting that Webelos Scouts, fourth and fifth grade boys, will soon be eligible to earn 'Power Patches' in addition to standard merit badges. "What could be more satisfying to a boy than pitching in and helping to build a pipeline?"
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