Full and part time.
Candidates may be asked to give a demo of your skills. Posting ID: 3624418539
Posted: 2013-02-17, 2:29PM PSTEdited: 2013-02-17, 6:12PM PSTemail to a friendFull and part time.
Candidates may be asked to give a demo of your skills. Posting ID: 3624418539
Posted: 2013-02-17, 2:29PM PSTEdited: 2013-02-17, 6:12PM PSTemail to a friendFeatures: Gross $55,000 per year / $1050 weekly
Monday - Fridays with weekends off
running area is: 300 mile radius of Swanton, VT
Qualifications:
Valid Class A CDL
Minimum 6 months of recent Class A driving experience
Must live within 40 miles of Swanton, VT
**Apply today and have an interview within 24 hours**
ZipRecruiter - 23 hours ago - save job - block
This is a Regional truck driver position were you will making dedicated deliveries to store locations
Features:
Great pay $925 weekly. 48,000 yearly
Home time: 5 days on/ 2 days off
Operating area: KY, TN, Northern AL, Northern GA, Southern IL, Southern IN, Southern OH, Western VA and Western WV .
Qualifications:
Valid Class A CDL
Minimum 6 month of recent Class A driving experience
Must live within 50 miles of BIG STONE GAP, VA
**Apply today and have an interview within 24 hours**
ZipRecruiter - 23 hours ago - save job - block
The Interior Department unveiled details for the nation’s first-ever federal sale of offshore wind energy leases on Tuesday, even as Republican lawmakers complain the approach is misguided.
Federal officials had already announced plans to sell wind leases off the Atlantic Coast this year, but the sale package released Tuesday firmly schedules the auction for July 31 and sheds more light on the terms of those leases.
Interior Secretary Sally Jewell said the sale could be a harbinger of things to come.
“We’re optimistic with this lease sale we’ll see some action,” Jewell told reporters on an unrelated conference call on Monday. “If there is good interest in this one, then I think you will have this happening on a consistent basis.”
Kite power: Google makes big bet on airborne wind turbines
Jewell’s optimism is borne in part from her experience in the private sector. Jewell was CEO of Recreational Equipment Inc., while the chain of retail stores made deals to buy renewable energy to offset its carbon emissions. “We actively pursued the purchase of wind energy and solar energy as well,” Jewell said. “There is demand out there for companies that are looking to reduce their carbon footprint.”
But Jewell stopped short of predicting her potentially four-year tenure at Interior will see commercial offshore wind developments, which face financial as well as structural hurdles. The projects are massive, expensive and tough to finance.
“It will really be up to industry to decide the time frame under which they choose to develop wind energy resources,” Jewell said. “What we’re really doing at the Department of Interior is giving people an opportunity to use these resources. We certainly don’t want to be a roadblock to them being in production in four years, if it makes sense to the community.”
“The market will dictate,” she added. “We certainly won’t get in the way.”
Cost competitive: States turn against renewable energy as natural gas price plunges
But Republicans say that approach stands in sharp contrast to the Obama administration’s handling of traditional energy development in other coastal areas.
A five-year plan for selling offshore oil and gas leases around the U.S. does not include any auctions along the East Coast, including an area off Virginia where an auction was previously planned. That Virginia lease sale was canceled after the Deepwater Horizon disaster in 2010, with Interior officials citing Defense Department concerns about interfering with operations in the area as a major factor.
Legislation pending in the House would force the the Obama administration to sell offshore drilling leases off the coast of Virginia. And on Thursday, the House Natural Resources Committee is set to hold a hearing on legislation by Rep. Doc Hastings, R-Wash., that would force the Interior Department to redo its five-year oil and gas lease sale schedule, to include Atlantic areas.
Wildlife: Wind farms getting a pass on eagle deaths
Sen. David Vitter, R-La., on Tuesday renewed his request for economic data about the potential revenue from a wind lease sale, compared to the value of leasing similar acreage for oil and gas development. He and Sen. Lamar Alexander, R-Tenn., previously asked Interior for the information seven months ago.
Vitter accused the administration of “picking energy industry winners and losers” by blessing the offshore wind sale while forestalling oil and gas development in the same Atlantic waters.
“While they do everything they can to advantage renewable energy production, they ignore the benefits that traditional energy provides,” Vitter said in a news release. “The federal government receives significant revenue from royalties for offshore oil and gas production in the form of rents, royalties, bonus bids and taxes. Can the same be said for any potential offshore wind project?”
The federal offshore wind sale comes years after the federal government inked the first offshore wind lease for a controversial project that will be built in Massachusetts’ Nantucket Sound.
The Interior and Energy departments devised a coordinated plan to accelerate the development of offshore wind resources in February 2011.
During the July auction, wind developers will have the chance to bid on 164,750 acres about 9 miles south of the Rhode Island coastline — the same area identified for potential wind leasing in a federal notice last December. A Department of Energy report suggests that the area has the potential for some 3,400 megawatts of installed capacity, enough electricity to power more than 1 million homes.
The Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, which also conducts oil and gas lease sales, is taking a similar approach to the wind auction. The bureau said Tuesday it will evaluate both non-monetary agreements and cash bids. Non-monetary factors could include bidders who hold joint development or power purchase agreements.
Paving the way for the sale and the issuance of commercial wind leases in the area near Rhode Island and Massachusetts, the ocean enerby bureau concluded that the activity would have no significant impact on the environment. Bureau director Tommy Beaudreau said the conclusion followed “extensive collaboration” with “key stakeholders, including industry, commercial fishers and environmental organizations.”
Rep. Ed Markey, D-Mass., praised the development as “a win for American jobs, for American energy security, and for our environment.”
Markey noted that the first offshore wind leases would be in “low-conflict areas” identified by the Interior Department and local stakeholders.
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Google makes big bet on ‘kite power’
Features: Gross $52,000 per year / $1000 weekly
Daily home time- 5 on 2 off
running area is: Deliver in all 5 NYC burroughs (including Manhattan), NY State, NJ, PA, CT, RI, MA, VT, NH, ME
Qualifications:
Valid Class A CDL
Minimum 6 months of recent Class A driving experience
Must live within 50 miles of FLANDERS , NJ
**Apply today and have an interview within 24 hours**
ZipRecruiter - 23 hours ago - save job - block
*Experience in presentation necessary; fly-by's, animations, textured renderings.
*Need to have a sense of graphic design, materials and scale.
*Skills in take-offs necessary and materials procurement helpful.
*Helpful to have a familiarity with residential construction documents for submittal.
*Having your own Mac / VectorWorks program a plus.
*Hands on construction experience a plus.
*Fast, thorough, independent worker and good communicator.
*Bi-lingual (English/Spanish) a plus.
Perfect for someone who's interested in learning about hillside residential construction with someone who's got over 35 years of experience in high end artistic residential projects. Please submit resume, work history, education, skill set, and availability.
Thank you. Posting ID: 3624304248
EU trade commissioner, Karel De Gucht, proposes a reduction for two months in the tariffs imposed on imports of Chinese solar panels
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Use your own vehicle to pick up packages from our clients Monday through Friday and some Saturdays. Hours are from 1 to 5 p.m. You will be driving on average 45 miles per day. Monthly income is approximately $1200.
- Sales and customer service friendly
- Insured vehicle that can transport small to medium sized packages (large sedan, SUV, or minivan)
- Ability/strength to stand up and lift up to 50 lbs.
- Mileage reimbursement 35 cents per mile
- $8 per hour for customer service work.
- Part time from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. or as needed, Monday through Friday
- Students encouraged to apply
Please send resumes to Jimmiehan[at]hotmail.com with driver in subject title. We will contact potential candidates this week!
Posting ID: 3624474237
Bank is accused of ignoring a state law designed to encourage banks and homeowners to resolve foreclosure cases and avoid rising costs
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