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Here are the five most-requested earmarks of 2009:
Textiles Research. Eight Congressmen requested from $3.5 million to $20 million for research at the National Textile Center and/or the Textile Clothing Technology Corp.
National Guard Help. Seven Congressmen requested either $1.6 million or $2 million for family assistance centers for members of the N.C. National Guard.
Rural Business. Six Congressmen requested $750,000 for a business financing program at the N.C. Rural Economic Development Center.
Contaminated Food. Five Congressmen requested $300,000 for a database of contaminants in the state's food supply through the N.C. Department of Agriculture.
Water Audits. Five Congressmen requested $2 million for audits of water supply systems through the Rural Economic Development Center.
In all, 75 earmark requests had more than one sponsor, 25 had three or more, and nine had four or more.
An earmark from six state Democrats would help rural businesses.
Reps. Heath Shuler of Waynesville, Brad Miller of Raleigh, Bob Etheridge of Lillington, Mike McIntyre of Lumberton, David Price of Chapel Hill and G.K. Butterfield of Wilson requested $750,000 in federal appropriations for the N.C. Rural Economic Development Center, a state-created nonprofit.
The money would provide "marketing, technical assistance and fellowships to help finance small business development and expansion" in "the most economically distressed counties" in North Carolina, Price wrote in his request.
It would also provide "low to moderate levels of capital" from $50,000 to $350,000 for start-up businesses and microenterprise loans of up to $25,000, Shuler noted.
"Especially in this economic downturn, the availability of credit is critical to create jobs and improve our communities," Etheridge wrote.
Tom Lambeth remembers the bad-old days of campaign finance.
As chief of staff to Rep. Richardson Preyer in the 1970s, he recalls the days before post-Watergate reforms when lobbyists would hand cash-filled envelopes to Congressmen.
During his tenure as head of the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation in Winston-Salem, he helped direct grant money and host conferences on campaign finance that indirectly led to the public financing of judicial campaigns and some Council of State races.
Now he's getting ready for an even bigger reform.
Gov.-elect Beverly Perdue has said she will appoint Lambeth to run an endowment that would providing public financing for gubernatorial candidates who pledge to run positive campaigns.
Lambeth, 73, says he spoke with Perdue about the endowment earlier this year and most recently about six weeks ago. He knows her from their work together on the N.C. Rural Economic Development Center and as a legislator.
More after the jump.
Sen. Walter Dalton is seeking more than $277 million in state spending.
The Democratic nominee for lieutenant governor has sponsored nine bills and co-sponsored 18 bills seeking appropriations in the upcoming state budget. A longtime state senator, he is serving an advisory role on the budget in the short session.
Dalton is the primary sponsor on bills totaling $208 million: $135 million for grants for local water and sewer projects, $20 million for the N.C. Rural Economic Development Center, $16 million for stem cell research, $14 million for the Cleveland Correctional Center, $10 million to provide services for the developmentally disabled, $5.8 million to help provide high-speed Internet access, $3 million for biotechnology training, $2.5 million for construction at historically black colleges and $2 million for small business entrepeneurship initiatives.
Among the larger appropriations bills he is cosponsoring: $44.7 million for Smart Start early childhood intiatives, $9.5 million for 4-H camps, $3 million for home foreclosure prevention, $3 million for loans for biotechnology start-ups, $1.6 million for a dropout prevention program in Durham and Vance counties, $1.4 million for water resource management and $1.25 million for biotechnology education.
He's also seeking a number of appropriations under $1 million: Teach for America, state GIS improvements, veterinary medicine teaching and research, a statewide infection control program, a literacy program, Kids Voting, a Teacher Cadet Program, an early chilhood initiative, a youth golfing program and a health information management study.
Previously: Sen. Kay Hagan seeks $48 million in state spending.