May 21, 2008
Tracey Brooks Picks Up All Local Endorsements In Town of Coeymans and Village of Ravena
Brooks Gets Full Hometown Support
Congressional
candidate Tracey Brooks today announced that she has been endorsed by
the supervisor and entire board in the Town of Coeymans, as well as, by
the mayor and all trustees in the Village of Ravena. "I'm
proud to stand with all of my colleagues to enthusiastically support
and endorse our friend, our neighbor, and hometown Congressional
candidate Tracey Brooks," said Coeymans Supervisor Ronald K. Hotaling,
Jr. "Tracey Brooks has demonstrated a commitment to
improving the quality of life for ordinary citizens and has worked hard
to secure investments in our community and in local communities
throughout the Capital Region," Hotaling continued. "Tracey Brooks can
relate to the struggles of hard working middle-class families trying to
pay for college, get quality health care, or earn a living wage because
that's the type of family and community she comes from – a place where
'everyone knows your name' and where people matter." "It's
an honor to have unanimous support from my hometown leaders in Coeymans
and Ravena," said Brooks. "With the help of our dedicated, local
supporters from Coeymans to Colonie, from Ravena to Rotterdam to
Amsterdam, I look forward to engaging voters as a leader with a
different kind of experience, a clear vision for our future, and a
focus on the right priorities to make real change happen for our
families and local communities." The following ten elected officials have all endorsed Tracey Brooks: Town of Coeymans Ronald K. Hotaling, Jr. –Supervisor Dawn Rogers- Council Thomas A. Boehm- Council James C. Youmans-Council Richard N. Touchette-Council Village of Ravena John T. Bruno-Mayor Bill Bailey-Village Trustee Martin R. Case-Village Trustee Rocco Persico-Village Trustee Bruce E. Roberts- Village Trustee Tracey
Brooks has received numerous local endorsements throughout the 21st
Congressional District including Albany Mayor Jerry Jennings, Green
Island Mayor Ellen McNulty Ryan, former Green Island Mayor Jack McNulty
and Cohoes Mayor John McDonald. Brooks also has
strong labor backing, receiving the most major union endorsements,
including support from the Bricklayers & Allied Craftworkers (BAC)
Union Local #2 NYS, IBEW #97, Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU), and
Laborers – LIUNA Local 190. Brooks has received
endorsements from EMILY's List, the nation's largest political action
committee and financial resource for women running for elected office;
Women Under Forty Political Action Committee (WUFPAC), a nonpartisan
political action committee that supports women forty years of age and
under running for federal public office; and the Women's Campaign Forum
(WCF), non-partisan pro-choice, national membership organization
dedicated to ensuring women become leaders in public life.
As
a lifelong resident of the Albany area and the Capital Region Director
for Senator Hillary Clinton for the last three years, Brooks enters the
race with working knowledge of the problems facing the region and
experience in finding solutions to them.
May 19, 2008
Tracey Brooks Radio Interview: AM1570, WVTL, Amsterdam
Tracey
chats with Bob Cudmore about the success of her Congressional campaign,
the issues and priorities that matter to people in the Capital Region,
and the support she is receiving from throughout the district.
To download the interview click here.
May 8, 2008
Congressional Candidate
Tracey Brooks Proposes Seven-Point Plan To Address Record Gas
Prices
Brooks and Local Gas Station Owner Ask: “Where is
all the gas money going?”
Congressional Candidate Tracey Brooks today proposed a
seven-point plan to combat skyrocketing gas prices that are crushing
middle-class families, hurting small businesses and forcing our nation into a
recession. Brooks called for an end to the big oil company price gouging
that has led to record-breaking profits paid for on the backs of hard-working
Americans.
“The Bush Administration’s failed energy, economic and
foreign policies have led to gas prices jumping over 250 percent in less than
eight years and doubling this year alone, with big oil profits nearly mirroring
those huge price increases,” said Brooks, standing with local gas
station/mini-mart owner Mac Brownson. “After years of the same failed ideas, a
lack of any real energy plan, and an inability to pass meaningful legislation,
we need a new kind a leadership that can create real change through meaningful
solutions.”
Brooks continued: “As gas prices continue to rise
towards $4.00 a gallon, we need to ask where all the additional money is going.
It’s not going to local retailers and small business owners like Mac Brownson.
It’s not staying here in the Capital Region to support our local economy and
it’s not even staying in New York State. And if State or Federal leaders impose a tax
holiday, it won't go towards meeting our budget gaps or providing services
either. Actually, it’s nearly all going -- and will continue to go -- towards
big oil's record-breaking profits and we need to do something about it.”
“We need leaders in Congress like Tracey Brooks who
truly understand our problems in the Capital Region and understand that when
big oil companies jack up their prices it hurts all of us,” said Brownson, in
front of his station on Central Ave in Albany. “I don’t control gas prices and Tracey Brooks gets
it. She’s asking the right questions and has good solutions to finally
change the direction we’re heading in.”
Brooks added that “we can no longer have a government
that puts the profits of oil companies ahead of the needs of the people and
that’s why I’m proposing a plan that addresses the real causes of the
problem.”
The Brooks Plan:
1. Bring our troops home from Iraq
and reinvest the war's $12 billion monthly price tag here at home.
2. End tax loopholes for big
oil companies and invest that money in alternative fuels and renewable energy.
3. Continue
to push the auto industry to increase gas mileage.
4. Create higher tax
deductions for purchasing hybrid
vehicles.
5. End the eight-year
practice of unnecessary price-gouging on the part of big oil companies by creating federal and
state anti-gouging regulations that appropriately focus on the big oil companies.
6. Create federal and state
energy plans that have been promised for years but never delivered.
7. Invest more in renewable
energy businesses that will bring jobs and better wages to our region.
Brooks’ plan hits on key structural problems in our
policies and noted that the Iraq War has contributed significantly to the pain
at the pump with average gas prices jumping from $1.57 at the start of the war
to recent local prices reaching $4.00.
“I have been bringing our message of change to all
seven counties of the district, meeting with families, listening to their
concerns about gas prices and talking about the need for new priorities in Washington and new leaders who can make real change happen here
in the Capital Region,” Brooks concluded.
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Congressional
Candidate Tracey Brooks Blasts the Bush Administration and Big Oil
Companies for Record Gas Prices and Record Profits Brooks Discussed Failed Policies of the Past and Proposed Solutions for the Future Congressional
Candidate Tracey Brooks today laid out her commitment to help
middle-class families deal with crushing gas and related food prices,
by proposing short-term conservation and long-term alternative energy
solutions. Brooks blasted the Bush Administration’s failed
policies which have resulted in high prices at the pump and big oil
companies’ record-breaking profits.
“After another
record-breaking quarter of big oil profits, today’s Siena poll showing
that 70 percent of us are paying more for gas and food, and with local
gas prices already touching $4.00, it’s clear that we need change in
Washington and help here in the Capital Region,” said Brooks standing
in front of an Exxon station on Central Avenue in Albany.
“The
Bush Administration’s failed energy, economic and foreign policies have
led to a weakening economy with stagnant wages, continued job loss and
a looming recession,” continued Brooks. “Republicans in Washington and
Albany continue to fight for the status quo. After thirty years
of the same failed ideas, a lack of any real energy plan, and an
inability to pass meaningful legislation they should have learned their
lesson. We need a new kind a leadership that will be effective
and make real change to keep gas prices in check.”
Brooks’
proposals hit on key structural problems in the U.S. energy and foreign
policy, as well as, touched on ways individuals can weather the
economic storm. “We can start with short-term conservation practices
like providing tax incentives for fuel efficient cars, maintaining air
pressure in our tires, and walking or car-pooling more but we really
need to address the long-term fundamental issues.”
“We
need to start by bringing our troops home from Iraq and reinvesting the
war’s $12 billion monthly price tag right back here at home. We must
end tax loopholes for oil companies and instead invest in alternative
fuels and renewable energy. We must continue to push the auto industry
to increase gas mileage and we absolutely must end this eight-year
practice of unnecessary price-gouging on the part of big oil companies.”
Brooks’
long-term energy solution also includes both federal and state energy
plans and more investment in renewable energy businesses that will also
bring more jobs and better wages to the region.
“I’m
committed to helping solve this problem by fighting to reduce our
dependence on oil, calling for smart investments in renewable
energy and energy-efficiency technology that will create green
jobs here in the Capital Region,” said Brooks. “We can no longer have a
government that puts the profits of oil companies ahead of the needs of
the people.”
Brooks pointed out that Exxon Mobil
today announced that their first-quarter net income rose 17 percent to
$10.89 billion and profits increased by 10 percent. Shell and BP's
combined first-quarter profits topped $17 billion. Meanwhile, the price
of gas has recently jumped in the Capital Region to nearly $4.00 a
gallon with prices ranging as high as $3.79 to $3.99, well ahead of the
expected summer increases. The price of crude oil is at an all-time
high, reaching over $120 a barrel. Brooks noted that the Iraq War
has contributed significantly to the pain at the pump with average gas
prices jumping from $1.57 at the start of the war to recent averages
topping $3.61.
As a lifelong resident of the Albany area
and the Capital Region Director for Senator Hillary Clinton for the
last three years, Brooks enters the race with working knowledge of the
problems facing the region and experience in finding solutions to
them.
“I have been bringing our message of change to
all seven counties of the district, meeting with families, listening to
their concerns, and talking about the need for new priorities in
Washington and new leaders, to make real change happen here in the
Capital Region,” Brooks concluded.
To learn more about Tracey Brooks, please visit www.traceybrooks.com.
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