Minnesota is slated to land an unprecedented $132 million in federal stimulus dollars in the months ahead to weatherize homes for elderly and other lower-income residents. That's a 13-fold increase over previous years.
The first big injection, coming in early July, is expected to create nearly 1,000 jobs and weatherize up to 22,000 homes. It's sparked an explosion in demand for weatherization job training and for energy workers across the state.
"Everyone is getting ready to go," said Cindy Webster, energy program director for Community Action Partnership of Ramsey and Washington counties, one of the 28 community action agencies overseeing the work in Minnesota.
"We're hiring people, buying equipment, getting people in place to do auditing and insulation. We've got a lot of decisions and the timelines are short."
The Minnesota Department of Commerce, which administers the program, is cranking up its own staffing to make sure the money is used as intended. A 2007 legislative audit report of the department's oversight of weatherization efforts recommended tighter monitoring and auditing.
"When you get this much money in such a short amount of time, that's our concern," said department spokesman Bill Walsh. "And all the money has to be spent in 18 to 24 months. That adds to the pressure."
Until this year, the Weatherization Assistance Program was a modest $10 million-a-year operation, plugging attic and window leaks in about 3,500 Minnesota homes and/or apartment units. It was launched in 1976 in response to the national energy crisis.
The Obama administration calls the now $6.2 billion national effort "the largest weatherization program in history."