You are currently browsing the Good Thang Blog weblog archives for the day April 22, 2009.
April 22, 2009 by Robert.
Ouch! We need to protect small businesses in California! This particular story made me angry: others at Faces of Law Suit Abuse.org might make you cry. A seven year old boy sued over a minor skiing accident? Outrageous! A $47 million dollar suit over a pair of pants? The dry cleaner eventually won the suit, but only after years in court, after shutting-down 2 of their 3 businesses. What a tragedy!
From the U.S. Chamber Institute for Legal Reform (ILR): Small businesses pay $20 billion in tort liability costs out of their own pockets each year.
Small businesses are responsible for 60 to 80 percent of all new jobs created in the U.S economy. More jobs, higher wages, and better benefits could be provided if the average small business earning $1 million in revenue didn’t have to spend $20,000 each year on an out of control lawsuit system.
The growth in U.S. tort costs since 1950 has exceeded growth in GDP by an average of approximately two percentage points annually.
America’s civil justice system is the world’s most expensive, with a direct cost in 2007 of $252 billion, or 1.83 percent of the U.S. GDP.
Tort costs were $835 per U.S. citizen in 2007, meaning a family of four paid a “litigation tax” of more than $3,300 for the U.S. civil justice system, a cost driven up due to increased costs from lawsuits and other liability expenses that force businesses to raise the price of products and services.
The cost of the U.S. tort liability system as a percentage of GDP is more than double the average cost of any other industrialized nation.
Posted in stimulus, small business, finance, Linkedin, development, politics | No Comments »
April 22, 2009 by Robert.
In many school cases schools and other public entities have unique opportunities to help finance wind projects because they qualify for low interest loans, can issue bonds, have lower required rates of return, and generally can get longer financing terms. Pictured [right] are the Spirit Lake Community School District’s 250 kW and 750 kW wind turbines. The 750 kW wind turbine was financed through a zero interest loan from the Iowa Energy Center’s Alternative Energy Revolving Loan Program and a low interest loan approved by the Iowa Energy Bank. (Article and photo from the Windustry Community Wind Toolbox) Photo credit: Iowa Energy Center
Posted in community wind, finance, schools, stimulus, VCwind, Linkedin, development, politics, renewable energy, philanthropy, investing, nonprofit, wind | No Comments »