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Rising demand on the world market for crude oil has seen record high’s in recent months. On June 3, this equates to average fuel oil rates that are $4.54 for places like Machias and Eastport in downeast Maine, while the greater Portland area is looking at an average of $4.23/gal. On June 4, the average price of gasoline in Maine has breached $4/gallon. When it comes to oil price spikes, the state of Maine is the most vulnerable state in the union, where 8 out of 10 residential homes rely on burning oil to stay warm through the winter months. While federal and state efforts to provide heating assistance to low income Mainers, such as LIHEAP funding, are well intentioned and have served an important role in helping those most in need, such funds are having less and less of an impact as the price of oil rises steadily. Furthermore, they don’t help solve the real problem - the ‘need’ for oil. With the limited funds the State of Maine does have access to, it’s done a good job in establishing Weatherization Assistance Programs, such as ‘Keep ME Warm’ and the ‘Home Energy Loan Program (HELP) ‘ in addition to a variety of energy efficiency measures. State government knows full well the risk we face as exhibited by the pre-emergency plans initiated under the governor’s executive order last November. However, this problem goes beyond the State of Maine’s border. We need the federal government to step up to the plate and increase its current financial commitments to the State of Maine, leverage experience gained in DOE weatherization programs, and provide access to the necessary financing that can take the good work already being done in both Maine and other states to the next level. With a single push we can, WE MUST mitigate this threat to the economic security of Maine people. Immediately, we need to dramatically expand our initiatives if we are to meet the needs of the coming winter, or, by using the experience gained through current programs we must initiate new emergency measures to help Mainers and other northern states greatly reduce their need to actually burn oil or other fossil fuels in the first place. Strengthening our communities by aiding residential homeowners and small business owners, regardless of income level, with capital investments for energy efficiency measures is a crucial task. These measures must be strong, effective, and dedicated to using the technologies and methods that exist now which can lower one’s annual heating fuel consumption by up to 50% or more. Once we make this investment in our buildings, we’ll be able to count on large reductions in operating expenses over their lifespan. This measure needs to be bold, effective, and it needs to happen now. The federal government can come to the aid of its citizens and the states by allowing proper funding mechanisms; such as long term, low interest loans that the home or small business owner can pay back at half the value of their annual oil savings, or other manageable fixed payment. A well designed financing mechanism would provide the needed capital investments NOW, while easing the financial burden that would be imposed by traditional private financing. While it would require heavy involvement on the part of the government, it would be a short term program that would lead to a net savings for individuals and businesses in a short time. Last year we consumed over 10 million barrels of fuel oil in the state of Maine to heat our homes. At a current price of $125 per barrel of crude oil and climing, we get a sense of how much these capital investments are really worth. It is not unreasonable for a typical home to require roughly $15,000-$30,000 in weatherization improvements, compared to the price of fuel over a few winters this is a bargain! Killing the demand for oil through greater efficiency is the best way to quickly reduce the price of heating fuels, pushing the savings even further, while helping limit market fears or speculation. Even if the price of oil falls on it’s own, which is highly unlikely, we still win. Annually we send over a billion dollars out of state for heating oil. Rather, we should be making billions of dollars of investments into our own infrastructure here at home. The threat of over reliance on fossil fuels to state security has never been more evident. We also cannot underestimate the psychological effect oil price volatility is having on Maine people and the local economy. Maine people are worried. While paying over $4.50 per gallon for heating oil might seem daunting, there is also the mental stress of not knowing where these prices are going to go. Fear of the unknown is high. Will it be $5 per gallon in December? What about February of 2009? What new threat to the already shaky oil supply chain will really make prices soar and hurt people who are already just getting by? This unnecessary stress has untold consequences on our well-being as a state. If we don’t even feel secure in our own homes, it’s a clear sign that we need to empower people with the right tools and measures such that they take action against this unnecessary security risk. |
Tom's Journal
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Maine State Democratic Convention Augusta, Maine May 31st, 2008 (as prepared) My name is Tom Ledue and I am a candidate for the US Senate. If any of you get confused with all of these Tom’s running around, just remember that I am the Tom with the French last name, French mother, French wife, and French kids. It is an honor to be here with you today. Before I talk about myself and our future, I would like to recognize my family: My wife Claire, and daughters Natalie, Catherine, Annie and Rachel as well as all of the family and friends gathered here today. Thanks to each of you for your amazing support. I also want to take a minute to talk about all of you gathered here today. Thanks to everyone from our seasoned professionals –such as John and Margarett Kneutsen, John Hennessy, Arden Manning and the whole crew - to the many pages attending their first convention - for helping to make this a great event. I ask you to take a look at the people gathered around you. Take a good look. What do you see? I see commitment. I see that each of you gathered has made a critical decision; each of you has chosen to make sacrifices to serve your party, your State and your country. You have given up other opportunities to pursue opportunity for all. I see a foundation for change and I see partnership that will build a better future. Our country is the home of the free and the brave. Now is the time when our country needs its brave ones - and this hall is full of such souls. I see a great beacon of hope because collectively we will change the world. The answers to all of our problems are within us. All of us have vital contributions to make. The level of service and amazing intelligence represented here reflects the commitment, tenacity and genius of Maine. And I know in my heart that as Maine goes, so goes the nation! Thanks for all you have done and will do as we MARCH TOWARD A VICTORY FOR ALL AMERICANS IN THE FALL. I will be talking to you about who I am, why I am running and the principles and platform that will guide a Ledue Senate Team. I am running for the United States Senate to help set a new course for our State and for our Nation by leading toward a vision of the possible, a future that fulfils the great promise of our county, the promise of our ideals, the promise of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for all people. Such a future is within our reach, even as challenges mount at our doorstep. I am a Mainer. I have been blessed by living here nearly my entire life. Claire and I have chosen to make our home here and to raise our four daughters in Springvale. Our roots in Maine go deep with personal history and extended family anchored from Hollis to Madawaska. From the bottom of my heart I love our State and her amazing people. I am an uncommon candidate. I have not journeyed to this podium today through the usual paths. While I have not climbed a political ladder, I have climbed a ladder of service. I am a family man, a husband, a father and an educator with 25 years experience in the trenches, as an administrator, a teacher, a coach and a guide. I am a worker, a thinker and a leader who will rock the boat for the common good. My leadership experience is extensive and has been built upon: clear vision that always has seen great possibilities, relentless commitment to pursue that vision, collaboration that calls upon the genius of all stakeholders, strength to stay the course, innovation to overcome obstacles, And common sense to focus my work where it will make the most difference. All of these qualities have been essential in my life and they have been the foundation of my leadership in educational reform here in Maine for the last two decades. Across the many varied often intense demands of every day as an educator, I have never lost sight of my vision and responsibility. At Noble High School, I challenged inequity and helped to develop our school into a nationally recognized progressive model for its vision of serving all students well, innovation and results. In my work with students from paddling the Allagash to processing the Federalist Papers I have continually inspired them to reach for the greatness within themselves. Across my career, I have led teams of leaders. Together we have successfully worked through complex issues from stewarding our community through tragedy to dealing with large budget cuts. We all know that change in the world begins with each individual. I lead people to envision the future they want for themselves and to move in that direction at all times. And in my most important role as a proud husband and father, Claire and I guide our family in the ways of love, teamwork, respect and compassion. I know that all of these qualities and ways of getting things done will serve Maine and the Nation very well in Washington. I know that we live in one of the best places in the world and that our children hold within them all of the promise and wonder of the human race. I know and I have seen countless times that we are all more than we know. Our future should be bright. And yet, while our country has much to be proud of – as is apparent here today - it is clear that we are off course. Things have been tough. They have been extremely difficult for many and even harsh for some. We seem a little lost as a people. Poverty –poverty of means and poverty of thought – is ever present across our society. Even those who are comfortable are hungry for something. We all hunger for a better country, a better vision of what will be. In 2008, in the wealthiest country in the world, the legacy that we are leaving our children is completely unacceptable. An unchecked imperial presidency, Global Warming, Unfair trade, Over Dependence on Fossil Fuels, Inadequate educational opportunity, one-hundred million Americans living in or on the edge of poverty, forty-seven million without healthcare, and Endless War. Washington is failing US. Our nation’s moral compass has become clouded. Too often, the problems that we face are accepted as necessary, “just the way things are” or “too expensive to fix”. If we had the chance, how could we justify these realities and attitudes to the Founders of our country and their families? WE COULD NOT! The realities of the struggles that we face do not reflect the promise of our great nation, - nor are they burdens that we must bear. We are limited in solving our problems only by our lack of political will. We must create the future that we intend and not stumble into the misdirected consequences of yesterday. We must set a new course for Maine and the Nation. To this end, we must renew our vision of what is possible. We MUST ASK OURSELVES HERE TODAY, “WHAT KIND OF A COUNTRY DO WE WANT TO BECOME? And then we must commit ourselves to that vision that best protects the promise of our ideals for all people. AND WE MUST ALSO TAKE HEART for the answers to all of our challenges are already within us - as I have clearly heard in talking with so many of you around the state these past months. We can recommit to the promise of America, and decide together that we want to be a nation that holds the common good of its people as our first priority. And together we can change course. As monumental as the problems at our doorstep are, they each can be overcome with our collective action. Individual decisions can and do make monumental differences. Consider this. On a journey of 1,000 miles, if we change course just 3 degrees, - a change that is barely perceptible at first, we change our destination at the end of that 1000 mile journey by 5 2 m i l e s. New ways of doing things can have exponential results. Imagine if we redirect 2.5% of all military spending, approximately $25 billion dollars per year, to create zero interest loans and block grants for our communities to become more energy efficient and to purchase their own clean energy generational capacity through solar, wind, geo-thermal and sea based hydro power. We could jump start a national commitment to lead a green revolution, create hundreds of thousands of new jobs and ultimately make ourselves more secure in our homes. Imagine if every student who wanted to could afford to go on to college or other post secondary schooling because of a National Service to School Program that awarded two years of in state tuition for one year of National Service. Modest changes made possible by collective will, innovation and bold leadership will change our future. But some may ask, “Can we afford to invest in our people? Can we afford to strengthen our communities?” I say we cannot afford our current course. We must remember that fiscal discipline requires social justice. They are partners in the same equation for national and economic strength. Investing in our people and strengthening our communities is ultimately the best business plan for Maine and the Nation. The most ethical decisions, those that best support our common humanity, are also the most financially profitable investments for society. Our grandparents knew that it was far better to invest in cutting wood in the spring than it was to be burning the attic floor boards in the midst of winter. In our current state of reacting to problems rather than proactively leading to fix them we fail to invest in a sustainable future. Consider, Clean and renewable energy vs. global warming and pollution; Ethical business vs. the price of profit at all cost; True economic opportunity vs. despair;Education vs. ignorance; Health vs. preventable illness; and Negotiation and dialogue vs. war… Given how we currently spend our tax dollars, we are investing in our own demise. Imagine what will happen when we invest in our own living! My hope and my vision reside within the collective heart and genius of everyone. Together, we will create a future of clarity and promise. Investing to intentionally create the future we want will ultimately create a brighter future for all. BUT How? How can this be done? Our world is increasingly complex.The rate of change that we are experiencing is exponential. These conditions demand that we look upon policy differently. The days of applying band aids on a succession of problems, as if policy areas were unrelated to each other must end. Instead, policy must be organized to be complimentary and proactive. Because of this, my campaign platform is carefully built upon four broad interrelated goals, to face every challenge and reap the rewards of the opportunities of each. I believe, I know, that if we create conditions to empower our people, invest to strengthen our communities, show foresight to create a stable and sustainable economy, and all the while lead in partnership with the international community, that we can reclaim the promise of America, the promise of our ideals, and govern toward a world that harbors less and less suffering for all humanity. We have all seen Maine and many states like us fight for the scraps off of the federal table, leaving our state with too few resources and impossible choices. What happens when there are too few resources and too little leadership? What is happening is that the very foundation of our society is being worn thin. This must change. WE MUST CREATE CONDITIONS TO EMPOWER OUR PEOPLE! And what are we doing by investing BILLIONS OF our tax dollars into already over rich oil companies, the industrial mega farms of the Midwest or large corporations that off shore our jobs? We are weakening our personal security and weakening the communities that we call home. This makes no sense! Instead - WE MUST STREGTHEN OUR COMMUNITIES. THINKING LOCALLY MUST BECOME A NATIONAL STRATEGY! We must shift our national subsidy priorities toward local, small businesses that are the lifeblood of local economies. In doing so we can support local solutions for critical national problems especially through the support of community based agriculture, local clean energy production, and local industry that adds value to local resources. Such a change of financial priorities would revitalize communities across Maine and the Nation by keeping our money local, creating quality jobs and increasing our food, energy and financial security. What are we thinking when half of our national budget is military related, when we act as if there is no energy crisis, and when we outsource jobs in the name of increased profit only to exploit foreign labor and the global environment? We need to think differently! WE CAN AND WE MUST BUILD A STABLE, SUSTAINABLE ECONOMY. We must reprioritize federal spending away from the military industrial complex to better address the needs of all citizens. We must invest our tax dollars in a way that makes sense - to build a foundation for our economy that supports all of us. We must build an energy stable economy based upon clean, renewable energy and lead the world in a green technology revolution. We must practice fair trade by implementing fair labor and green certification requirements for all imports. This will safeguard American jobs while protecting foreign workers and the global environment. How can we be effective leaders in the world when we export our military might rather than the light of our ideals and when we deny the need for international cooperation? We cannot be! Instead, WE MUST PARTNER WITH THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY through foreign policy based upon Partnership, Mutual respect, Human rights and environmental stewardship. To these ends we must, WE MUST make a national commitment to lead the world to avert the global warming crisis. AND WE MUST Lead by example by cutting our own carbon emissions 80% by 2050, on pace for 10% in three years. WE MUST Leave Iraq quickly, responsibly and with honor through partnership with the international community. By working to implement these ideas, we will create conditions in which all can prosper. By looking squarely at the challenges we face and seizing the opportunity that each provides our country will be brought into balance and we will create a future that reflects our true greatness. My candidacy is about reaching beyond politics as usual, to bridge the gap between people and their government so that both may partner together to reclaim the promise of America. I offer a different kind of experience, rooted in the current lives of Maine people, bold, courageous leadership that understands the urgency of this moment, renewed progressive vision and commitment to the constitution, and a clear framework of thought that will help us create the future that we want for our children and for ourselves. We stand at an unprecedented point in history. The stakes have never been higher. We have no time for half measures or political caution. We must reach past politics as usual and reach forward with assertive, substantive solutions to meet the needs of our people. I believe that such change begins with each of us here. It begins with me, and it begins with you. I want to take the genius and the wisdom of Maine people to Washington DC as your next Senator. Together we can set a new course. To that end - I ask for your vote on June 10th. I AM TOM LEDUE. A vote for me is a vote for powerful, progressive change and a relentless, tenacious commitment to work every day for you and for all of our children in The United States Senate. God Bless You ALL. |
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My name is Tom Ledue and I am a candidate for the US Senate.Thanks to Helyne and Mothers Acting Up for their work to put this event together. And thanks to all of you for gathering here today in support of peace and a better future. It is an honor to be here with you today. It is also very fitting as my family has deep roots to Portland and Deering Oaks. My grandmothers raised their families not far from here on Gilman and Valley streets. Their children played here during the depression. My parents courted here in the early 1950’s and began their married life together just up the hill at sacred heart church.My four siblings and I were raised in Portland and I had the good fortune of meeting my wife Claire here.Each of our children was born here. I welcome my family members here with me today, especially my mother Doris and my wife Claire, mother of our four children. Natalie, Catherine, Annie and Rachel. As you can see, I am surrounded by the power and wonder of women. They keep me in balance, continually remind me of the sacred nature of life and the sacred feminine therein. Certainly, I am a blessed man. I want to become your next Senator first and foremost because I see the future that we are creating for our children puts them at great risk. Our country is on the wrong course and feels increasingly like a corporation focused on empire, rather than a democracy focused on the well being of those most vulnerable in our society. We have become a nation at war with itself with the federal government spending $275 million dollars a day in Iraq while Maine and other states fight for scraps off the federal table and one out of four Maine children under five live in poverty.We need a new kind of experience in Washington, experience rooted in the everyday lives of Mainers, experience that understands that there is no more important task than to secure a future for our children and the children of the world built upon the promise of the ideals of our nation. We need leadership that is impatient with our current realities.We need bold, transformative change. We and our children do not have time for the status quo. My candidacy is aimed at these ends and is based upon four broad policy goals: To empower our people.To Strength our communities. To Build a stable and sustainable economy and To Lead in partnership with the world. These goals are intended bringing balance back into our policy discussions and direction as a people. To achieve that balance we need to embrace the power, perspective and wisdom of women and motherhood in all policy matters. When we do so our thought becomes more expansive and complete. A great man once said to me, ” In every face of a child we see the power of a woman. In every good thing on the planet we see the power of women.” We cannot create the future that we want, a future that claims and makes manifest the greatness of our country without this balance, just as a family cannot reach its potential without a complimentary relationship between the masculine and the feminine. The hands of a woman often carry compassion and restraint. Consider the thought of Shuar People of the Amazon as quoted from John Perkins:”(Shuar women) have the very important job of telling men when it is time to stop. The Shuar explain that men hunt animals and cut trees even when there is enough meat and wood, unless women rein them in.” When members of the Shuar visited the United States they were shocked by the way nature had been destroyed and paved over with highways, cities, and shopping malls. “What happened to the women?” They asked. “Why haven’t they stopped the men?We need to embrace the power, perspective and wisdom of women and motherhood to bring greater balance and efficacy into our national policies.If we can view policy through the lens of parenthood, of what we want for our children and all children, it becomes easy to commit to and fight for a progressive agenda that invests in creating a stable and secure future for all. Through such a lens that recognizes and incorporates the power of women and motherhood, we can see the environment as stewards and caretakers. We can see trade that protects all children, respects the rights of all workers and safeguards the environment; an economy rearranged to invest in our communities, especially in local agriculture for greater food security, local clean energy development for greater energy security and by adding value to local resources for greater job security; an education system that guarantees quality opportunities to learn from preschool through college, as we all want for our children…Poverty reduced by 50% in 5 years…Universal Healthcare that removes the bonds of fear and uncertainty from scores of millions of our fellow citizens…Defense that is truly defensive…An end to the war in Iraq that brings our troops home soon, honors the self-determination of the Iraqi people and engages the international community in peace…Foreign policy that seeks to sow the seeds of partnership, peace and true security throughout the international community. And we can see a new DEPARTMENT OF PEACE that works to protect our common humanity. In looking at policy with balance that embraces the power, wisdom, and perspective of women we can create a future that is reflective of our ideals as a nation. It is toward these ends that I seek to lead as your senator.I ask you to go to tomledue.com to explore my candidacy and to offer any support that you can.Happy Mothers Day to all of the mom’s here. |
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U.S. Senate candidate Tom Ledue on energyThe time has come to look at the energy crisis before us and seize the opportunities within it. If we simply have the political will to invest in collective energy independence, we can take great steps toward creating a stable and sustainable economic future for America. Our people need alternative options that will end dependency on fossil fuels. Shortsighted ideas like the gas tax holiday or producing fuel from food are not answers, they only provide a false sense of relief. The United States should invest in and lead a green technology revolution. We must push now for the production of clean energy technologies such as solar, wind, geothermal and sea-based hydro, that are ready to be implemented. We also can move forward decisively to redirect subsidies intended for large energy producers and 2.5% of our military spending to fund block grants and zero interest loans. Both would empower individual citizens and our communities to invest in greater energy efficiency and generate exponential amounts of their own clean, renewable power. In addition, we should follow the common sense of many generations of Mainers and prepare immediately for the next winter season by federally funding an incentive program to better insulate the homes of Maine residents and other states heavily dependent on oil for heat. This would reduce the need for oil and relieve the pressure on diesel prices, in turn helping truckers on our highways. By investing in our people and communities, we can create a future that reclaims the promise of our ideals for all. |
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BANGOR — Democratic U.S. Senate Candidate Tom Ledue attended the trial in Bangor on Tuesday of six individuals who chose to stand trial for the charge of trespassing in Senator Susan Collins’ office.The “Bangor 6″ said that their cause was to bring light to Collins’ unwillingness to talk to peace activists about the war in Iraq - a war that weighs heavy on our collective conscience, a war that failed any sort of justification. “The ‘Bangor 6′ are citizens like you and I. They acted in civil resistance to express their frustrations with our governmental failings and our Federal Government has many of these failings to explain,” said Ledue. “I am in the race to give voice to all citizens. I have talked with people of various economic situations from the well-off to those who struggle to survive and across the board there exists a palpable frustration. There is a looming sense that our country is off course in many areas and that we are not leading in accordance with our ideals. We need to get back to defining what we want our country to be. We need to recall the greatness and promise of our ideals. There is no excuse for not striving to support our people and our communities. “I applaud the ‘Bangor 6′ for their courage and commitment to search for ways to make peace,” he said. “I promise that in my journey to Washington, I will maintain openness to the people’s voice and transparency in my decision-making and actions while I work to represent the greatness of our ideals.” |
