(TRENTON) - Legislation sponsored by Assembly
Democrats Troy Singleton, Herb Conaway, Jr., M.D., Paul D. Moriarty, Jerry Green
and Pamela Lampitt to provide loans to small businesses to cover costs recently
passed the full Assembly 74-4. The measure will now head to the Senate for
further consideration.
"For
small businesses, finding ways to keep costs down is important in today’s
economy,” said Singleton (D-Burlington). “Ensuring that small business owners
are afforded the tools to conserve energy where they can is a good investment of
State resources."
“In this economy, small business
owners are looking for options to 'go green' but can't always finance the first
step,” said Conaway (D-Burlington). “This bill would help business owners who
are looking to improve their business and lower energy costs make that a
reality.”
“Energy efficiency is just one way to
trim the costs of running a business,” said Moriarty. “The program under this
bill would serve as a vehicle for small businesses to find out what needs to be
done to achieve energy efficiency and also to help get it
done.”
“Small businesses are the backbone of
New Jersey’s economy,” said Green (D-Middlesex
Somerset and Union). “This bill would help
these businesses manage their energy costs more effectively and become more
environmentally friendly.”
“Many small businesses are very
interested in learning how they can reduce their carbon footprint and become
more environmentally conscious,” said Lampitt (D-Camden, Burlington). “It is often
the initial costs of performing an energy audit that often deters businesses
from “going green” right away. With a loan program, small businesses would be
able to get started and become more energy efficient sooner rather than
later.”
The bill (A-2270) requires the New
Jersey Economic Development Authority, in consultation with the Board of Public
Utilities and the Department of Community Affairs, to establish and administer a
program that makes one or more low-interest loans available to an eligible small
business for 100 percent of any otherwise unreimbursed costs for (1) an energy
audit of any of the business’s buildings conducted by a contractor licensed by
the board, and (2) the purchase and installation of all energy efficiency or
conservation equipment at any of those buildings as a result of the energy
audit.
The program in this bill is modeled
after the Burlington County Bridge Commission’s “Greenbacks to Go Green”
program, which uses shared services to encourage local governments to identify
and implement cost-effective energy conservation measures to save taxpayer
dollars.
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