CONCORD, N.H. (AP) —
A commission created to provide jobs and boost the economy in the
northern reaches of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and New York is
getting $1.5 million under a measure signed into law by President
Barack Obama.
The funding for the Northern Border Regional
Commission is the first awarded to the fledgling panel, created in
2007. The amount was part of an appropriations package Obama signed
Wednesday.
The commission is based on other federal-state
partnerships formed throughout the country, such as the Appalachian
Regional Commission created in 1965, the Denali Commission in Alaska in
1998 and the Delta Regional Authority in 2000. Other newly formed
commissions are in the Southeast, Southwest and Northern Great Plains.
The
funding for the Northern Border Regional Commission will support grants
to create jobs in a 36-county area by investing in a number of critical
areas including infrastructure improvements, high-speed Internet
access, health care and renewable energy production.
"I am
grateful that the initial funding will soon reach our communities,"
said Rep. Paul Hodes, D-N.H., who introduced the bill to create the
commission.
Earlier this year, the governors from the four states
sought $30 million from the federal government for the commission,
requesting the investment to support sustainable forestry, economic
development and land conservation in the northern forest region of
their states.
Each commission is made up of a federal co-chair,
appointed by the president, and representatives from each state. Hodes
has asked Obama for the appointment.