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who do I contact to find out if a grant is real or a scam ?

I recieved a letter from Zenith Security ,Inc. P.O. box 1408, New York N.Y. 10036. the letter said I qualified for a home improvement grant. There was a check inclosed to pay the taxes. who do I contact to find out if this is a scam or legit ?


Federal Trade Commission

And what you got is a scam. Tear that letter and do not believe anything it says. That scam has been around awhile and many folks even here at YA have been scammed by that

You may also want to read the warnings FTC has issued against these "grant" companies:

http://www.ftc.gov/opa/2004/03/grantreso urces.htm
http://www.ftc.gov/bcp/edu/pubs/consumer /alerts/alt134.htm

Here is also one of the warnings issued by the Better Business Bureau http://www.concord.bbb.org/tips_timeshar escams.html

If you want information on government grants, -- you can go to the Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) http://www.cfda.gov and Grants.gov http://www.grants.gov - these are two FREE sites created by the federal government to provide transparency and information on grants. Browse through the listings and see if you can find any grant that would support your purposes.

Even if you buy books on "how to get grants" or list that supposedly has information on grants -- all of them are mere rehash of what CFDA has, albeit packaged differently.

Congressman Higgins - Announces Federal Grant for CHRIC - 2009-10-12


Congressman Brian Higgins (NY-27) is joined by Chautauqua Home Rehabiitation & Improvement Corporation Executive Director John Murphy and ...

Is it really st patricks day?

Though St. Patrick's Day has become identified with Irish nationalism and Roman Catholic observance, its origins in America were Protestant, and British.

The ritual of the St. Patrick’s Day parade, what later became a manifestation of Irish nationalism and Roman Catholic observance, was actually established in the American colonies by Protestant Irish from Ulster, among whom were British soldiers.

The first St. Patrick’s Day celebration in what would be the future United States was held in Boston, March 17, 1737. This was the same year philosopher George Berkeley, contemporary of Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift, remarked in his “The Queriest”, a publication devoted to the economic and social improvement of Ireland, “Whose fault is it if Ireland still continues poor?”

At that time, perhaps having had their fill of such earnest, if seemingly only rhetorical, questions, Ulster Presbyterians had emigrated to Boston and New England. They arrived both for the economic opportunity presented in the colonies, (Berkeley himself came to live in Rhode Island for a time, before returning home to Ireland, eventually ordained an Anglican bishop there) as well as religious and political freedom in an era when the Penal Laws affected them along with disenfranchised Roman Catholics. These Ulstermen established the Irish Charitable Society in that year to aide fellow Irish immigrants. It is today the oldest Irish organization in North America.

Their first meeting and dinner to honor St. Patrick was an expression of their Protestant faith as well as their intention to bond with fellow Irish émigrés. Their 1775 meeting included British soldiers of Irish extraction. All proceeded, or marched, to the King’s Chapel to hear a sermon devoted to the occasion, and then continued on to a dinner in King Street.

No meetings by the Irish Charitable Society were held after this meeting in 1775 until 1883, because of the interruption of the Revolutionary War. One may guess on the popularity of British soldiers appearing in American St. Patrick’s Day parades after this event.

British soldiers were still the big show of the first St. Patrick’s Day parade in New York City in 1762. The first celebration in New York City was in 1756, at the Crown and Thistle tavern. Philadelphia held its first St. Patrick’s Day parade in 1771.

General George Washington issued a proclamation during the Revolutionary War, declaring March 17, 1780 a holiday for the Continental Army, then stationed in Morristown, New Jersey, in honor of the many soldiers of Irish ancestry and those born in Ireland. It was reported that this was the first holiday granted the troops in two years. Washington’s remark that the proclamation was “as an act of solidarity with the Irish in their fight for independence,” was possibly the origins of St. Patrick’s Day in America as an expression of Irish nationalism as much as Irish heritage or of honoring a Christian saint.

Within 50 years, Irish emigration to the United States exploded, spurred by the Great Famine in which millions in Ireland starved. The Irish-American resentment against the British, which may have been born during the American War of Independence from that nation, deepened with the anger of the new Irish immigrants, predominantly Roman Catholic, who celebrated St. Patrick’s Day in their new country with more freedom and certainly more fervor than they did in Ireland.

Today, there are 33.7 million Americans of Irish ancestry, Catholic and Protestant together, nine times the population of Ireland at 3.8 million.


your fishing seen it in sfs

Is st patricks day everything it seems to be?

Though St. Patrick's Day has become identified with Irish nationalism and Roman Catholic observance, its origins in America were Protestant, and British.

The ritual of the St. Patrick’s Day parade, what later became a manifestation of Irish nationalism and Roman Catholic observance, was actually established in the American colonies by Protestant Irish from Ulster, among whom were British soldiers.

The first St. Patrick’s Day celebration in what would be the future United States was held in Boston, March 17, 1737. This was the same year philosopher George Berkeley, contemporary of Alexander Pope and Jonathan Swift, remarked in his “The Queriest”, a publication devoted to the economic and social improvement of Ireland, “Whose fault is it if Ireland still continues poor?”

At that time, perhaps having had their fill of such earnest, if seemingly only rhetorical, questions, Ulster Presbyterians had emigrated to Boston and New England. They arrived both for the economic opportunity presented in the colonies, (Berkeley himself came to live in Rhode Island for a time, before returning home to Ireland, eventually ordained an Anglican bishop there) as well as religious and political freedom in an era when the Penal Laws affected them along with disenfranchised Roman Catholics. These Ulstermen established the Irish Charitable Society in that year to aide fellow Irish immigrants. It is today the oldest Irish organization in North America.

Their first meeting and dinner to honor St. Patrick was an expression of their Protestant faith as well as their intention to bond with fellow Irish émigrés. Their 1775 meeting included British soldiers of Irish extraction. All proceeded, or marched, to the King’s Chapel to hear a sermon devoted to the occasion, and then continued on to a dinner in King Street.

No meetings by the Irish Charitable Society were held after this meeting in 1775 until 1883, because of the interruption of the Revolutionary War. One may guess on the popularity of British soldiers appearing in American St. Patrick’s Day parades after this event.

British soldiers were still the big show of the first St. Patrick’s Day parade in New York City in 1762. The first celebration in New York City was in 1756, at the Crown and Thistle tavern. Philadelphia held its first St. Patrick’s Day parade in 1771.

General George Washington issued a proclamation during the Revolutionary War, declaring March 17, 1780 a holiday for the Continental Army, then stationed in Morristown, New Jersey, in honor of the many soldiers of Irish ancestry and those born in Ireland. It was reported that this was the first holiday granted the troops in two years. Washington’s remark that the proclamation was “as an act of solidarity with the Irish in their fight for independence,” was possibly the origins of St. Patrick’s Day in America as an expression of Irish nationalism as much as Irish heritage or of honoring a Christian saint.

Within 50 years, Irish emigration to the United States exploded, spurred by the Great Famine in which millions in Ireland starved. The Irish-American resentment against the British, which may have been born during the American War of Independence from that nation, deepened with the anger of the new Irish immigrants, predominantly Roman Catholic, who celebrated St. Patrick’s Day in their new country with more freedom and certainly more fervor than they did in Ireland.

Today, there are 33.7 million Americans of Irish ancestry, Catholic and Protestant together, nine times the population of Ireland at 3.8 million


you`v a big fish here mi thinks lol


New Star Energy Services Announces Partnership with ENERGY STAR?

New York, NY (PRWEB) May 21, 2009

New Star Energy Services today announced its fundamental commitment to protecting the environment by becoming an ENERGY STAR Partner. New Star Energy Services’ voluntary partnership with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s ENERGY STAR means that they will be working together to help clients improve the energy efficiency and performance of their facilities. Along with the EPA, New Star Energy Services believes that active, organization-wide energy management will enhance clients’ financial health and aid in preserving the environment for future generations.

“New Star Energy Services is committed to reducing the energy consumption of information technology by its actions and by driving awareness and development of energy-efficient technologies among customers. By working with ENERGY STAR, New Star Energy Services is helping to lead the movement toward a cleaner and more sustainable future,” said Jason Smithwick, president and founder of New Star Energy Services.

...

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