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Half of New Yorkers Want Cuomo to Stay Despite Scandals

Half of New Yorkers Want Cuomo to Stay Despite Scandals Bloomberg 3/16/2021 Stacie Sherman and Shelly Banjo (Bloomberg) A new poll out Monday said half of New York voters don’t think Andrew Cuomo should resign, emboldening him and his supporters as the scandal-ridden, three term governor faces an impeachment investigation and calls to step down from dozens of lawmakers in his own party. The Democratic governor’s approval rating has sunk to its lowest point in the Siena College poll since taking office in 2011, with only 43% of New York registered voters having a favorable view of him, however. That’s down from 56% in February and a high of 77% reached last year during the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, according to the poll.

Governor Cuomo Announces Construction Start of $530 Million Major Transmission Project in Hudson Valley

Share Rensselaer to Dutchess County Transmission Line Upgrades to Advance New York s Nation-Leading Clean Energy Goals and Create Jobs Project Part of $2 Billion in Transmission Investments to Accelerate Integration of Renewable Energy Resources As Proposed in the Governor s 2021 State of the State, Transmission Projects Across the State Will Add 250 Miles of Planned Investments To Maximize Renewable Energy Use    WYSIWYG Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced construction began on New York Energy Solution, a $530 million project to upgrade energy transmission from Rensselaer County to Dutchess County with a new 345-kilovolt transmission line across 54.5 miles. The project - announced in the Governor s 2021 State of the State address - is designed to increase transmission capacity and help deliver more renewable energy to higher demand areas across the state. The project will stimulate the local and regional economies by creating and supporting c

Green banks, explained

(Next City ) March 4, 2021 Solar panels are among the projects green banks could fund. Image by Jose G. Ortega Castro on Unsplash A version of this article first appeared in Next City. If you’ve ever looked at an electrical bill in New York or Connecticut, you may have noticed the vague-sounding “system benefit charge.” Right now in New York, it’s 0.5238 cents per kilowatt-hour for a $60 electric bill, all other taxes and fees included, the system benefit charge comes out to 77 cents. In Connecticut it hovers between $7-$10 a year per household. Some, if not most, of those dollars end up in the state’s green bank. Only a few states and localities have a green bank, and not all of them are funded the same way. They’re not banks in the depository sense they don’t offer checking or savings accounts. Instead, they’re state-sponsored entities that use their dedicated funding sources to make loans, provide credit enhancements or use other financial mechanisms to

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