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WAYNESBORO — A solar farm project planned for Stuarts Draft and Lyndhurst would include more than 1,000 acres of panels on parcel owned by 13 landowners, if approved.

Augusta County officials say the proposed locations stretch from behind Broadmoor Plaza in Stuarts Draft to Shalom Road to Lyndhurst. Landowners leasing their land would receive annual lease payments over a 35-year period.

The project has drawn questions and criticism from Augusta County landowners who would live adjacent to the eight-foot-high panels, and from some members of the board of supervisors, who question such an ambitious project just a couple of months after the county approved a solar ordinance. The ordinance was approved in June by supervisors by a narrow 4-3 vote. The ordinance sets up the parameters for solar operations in the county, including zoning requirements, setbacks and buffering.

The 125-megawatt project would provide energy to a large and unnamed corporate buyer.

A public hearing and consideration of the special use permit for the project is planned before the Augusta County Board of Supervisors on Sept. 26 at the Augusta County Government Center in Verona.

And prior to that, South River District Supervisor Carolyn Bragg will meet with her constituents in a series of listening sessions regarding the project, including a meeting Tuesday night at 6 at the Stuarts Draft Library Station. The library station is located in Broadmoor Plaza.

The company applying for the project, Community Energy Solar of Pennsylvania, has spearheaded projects in Virginia and 12 other states since 1999.

Extensive buffering would be required, with panels no taller than eight feet. The panels would be fenced in with six-foot high black or green vinyl coded fencing. With construction time factored in, the operation of the project would not start until mid to late 2020.

The project has drawn the attention of landowners who are near the proposed solar panels.

Jerry Hite, a resident of Canada Court in Stuarts Draft, said he lives adjacent to an area where panels would be constructed. He questions why the county would allow a solar project in the Stuarts Draft area, an area with abundant infrastructure such as water and sewer for both residential and industrial development.

“This is not what the town was designed for with the sewer, water and all the infrastructure in place,” Hite said. He said Augusta County needs more residents and more workers in communities like Stuarts Draft. He also is concerned that his property value will decrease. “I bought property to go up, not down. I’m pretty upset,” he said.

Bragg said she needs to hear from citizens before she makes a decision to vote on the special use permit. “I want to hear the people impacted by it. This is our community. They drive there and live there,” she said.

Stuarts Draft is one of three areas in Augusta County designed for development as urban service areas. The other two areas are Fishersville and Weyers Cave. And Bragg said Augusta County has invested millions in the local wastewater treatment plant to handle future growth.

“No one is opposed to solar on the board,” she said. “We get it. But this is such a large project with a long impact. It needs to be vetted out. We need to listen to people and the impact on individual lives.”

Among the landowners who would receive lease payments is James Kindig, a Charolais cattle farmer who lives just off U.S. 340 coming into Stuarts Draft.

Kindig said the 80 to 100 acres of his farm that would have solar panels is used for both pasture and hay production. He said with the lease payments on his land, he could triple the revenue per acre per year.

“It’s a win-win situation for us and our neighbors,” Kindig said. He said the lease revenue offers the opportunity for him to diversify the revenue on his farm. And he is confident of Community Energy Solar’s work.

“The developer has done two other projects in Virginia and they have been very successful,” Kindig said.

Hite maintains the project is not a good fit.  “If we don’t do something right now Stuarts Draft will be the solar capital of Virginia,” he said. He said Augusta County should stick to the comprehensive plan for development and bring more industry and residential development to Stuarts Draft.

South River District Supervisor Carolyn Bragg will hold listening sessions regarding the potential solar farm project in Stuarts Draft and Lyndhurst. All of the sessions will be held at The Stuarts Draft Library Station. The dates and times:

Tuesday, Aug. 28, 6 p.m. – 7 p.m.

Tuesday, Sept. 4, 1 p.m. – 2p.m.

Thursday, Sept. 13, 6 p.m. – 7 p.m.

Saturday, Sept. 22, 11 a.m. – 12 p.m.



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We appreciate the calls and emails from folks offering their ideas for energy efficiency in response to the recent Aspen Times article reporting on the growth of funds held in the Renewable Energy Mitigation Program (REMP).

We wanted to provide the public with history on REMP itself and some insight into how the funds are used. This groundbreaking program was adopted by the city of Aspen and Pitkin County in 1999 to disincentivize highly consumptive uses of energy. Homeowners and commercial property owners who wish to consume additional energy for snowmelt, outdoor pools, spas and houses larger than 5,000 square feet in Pitkin County have the option of installing a renewable energy system on site or making a mitigation payment in lieu to REMP. Those payments become the pool for rebates and grants distributed by CORE, with city and county oversight. The funds generated must be used to reduce carbon emissions within the Roaring Fork Valley and are restricted in that expenditures must offset two times the amount of carbon generated by the new development.

CORE, as the administrator of this fund, has been able to eliminate on average as much as 6 units of energy for each unit of energy paid for. To put that in context, in one year we helped eliminate emissions equivalent to taking 342 homes off the grid or sequestered carbon from 3,000 acres of forest.

Using the funds, CORE offers cash-back rebates to homeowners, renters and businesses in the Roaring Fork Valley. We also have a robust grant program that funds innovative work for local government agencies, nonprofits, schools and businesses — work that might not get done otherwise. The funds administered by CORE have been instrumental in various projects, such as putting solar panels on schools like Ross Montessori in Carbondale and government buildings like the Pitkin County Public Works. REMP funds also leverage investments in energy efficiency and renewable energy. CORE encourages the use of local contractors to complete this work, strengthening the valley’s economy. In 2016, $500,000 was invested in APCHA owned rental housing that resulted in a 17 percent gain in energy efficiency.

The City Council’s and the county commissioners’ strong support of our mission and programs enable us to increase our capacity and reduce even more carbon. Historically, 30 percent of the REMP balance has been used annually and as it increases we increase our program offerings. CORE is careful to use the funds thoughtfully as this fee is subject to the ebbs and flows of development. As more people respond to the incentive structure and choose to use renewable energy and reduce energy use on site, the money flowing into REMP will decrease. Until then we continue to seek projects and ideas that reduce carbon in a meaningful way.

Climate change is not far off into the future. We can smell it and see it all around us in the form of wildfires and drought. Everyone’s involvement is needed to help the community reduce our carbon emissions. There are mountains of work to do, and we know that.

Recommended Stories For You

Ultimately, CORE’s mission is to help you save energy, and we’ve been working at it since 1994 by serving over 5,000 customers. Together we can advance our “CORE” values: clean air, stable climate, strong economy, healthy communities and sustainable energy.

Please contact us at http://www.aspen core.org, call 970-925-9775, or stop by one of our offices in Aspen or Carbondale to learn more and share ideas.

Mona Newton is the executive director of CORE.



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View services and certifications of Freedom Solar Energy, LLC, your local Enphase solar system installer. Request a quote, view testimonials and …

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Which of the following best explains why wind and solar power
have been slow to replace coal- and gas-based energy
production?

A. Wind and solar energy availability is subject to large
fluctuations because of the inability to store the power.

B. Governments have heavily subsidized coal and gas energy
plants, but have not subsidized wind and solar.

C. Energy production with coal and gas generates less
pollution.

D. Consumers are largely unwilling to buy power generated from
wind and solar.

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The National University of Singapore (NUS) has conducted Asia’s first solar-powered quadcopter flight above 32.8 feet (10 meters) of altitude last week, according to the NUS press release

The vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) drone
was developed by engineering students in the Innovation and Design Program (IDP). Its carbon fiber body netted a final weight of a mere 5.73 pounds (2.6kg), and it’s comprised of 148 unique silicon solar cells, four rotors, and a surface area of 43 square feet (four square meters). 

“Our aircraft is extremely lightweight for its size, and it can fly as long as there is sunlight, even for hours,” said Associate Professor Aaron Danner from the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering. “Unlike conventional quadcopter drones, our aircraft does not rely on on-board batteries and hence it is not limited by flight time. Its ability to land on any flat surface and fly out of the ground effect in a controlled way also makes it suitable for practical implementation.”

The NUS, and the city-state as a whole, has been at the forefront of unmanned aerial vehicle technology for quite some time now. Earlier this year, the NUS’ partnership with Airbus resulted in the country’s first parcel delivery. Intel celebrated the country’s 52nd birthday with a 300-drone light show last year, and most recently, the government has given the Future Flight Consortium the go-ahead to refine and implement a wide array of urban drone applications in Singapore. 

Let’s take a closer look at what the NUS has achieved here, shall we?



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Are fewer Utahns choosing to take the clean energy plunge or did new rule changes prompt a spike in the volume of new solar households in the Beehive State?

SALT LAKE CITY — Are fewer Utahns choosing to take the clean energy plunge or did new rule changes prompt a spike in the volume of new solar households in the Beehive State?

A report from the Utah Public Service Commission indicated a 23 percent decline in the number of customers installing rooftop solar at their homes this year. While some observers think the decrease was the result of lower demand for rooftop solar systems, at least one analyst believes it may have been clean energy proponents taking advantage of existing standards in order to beat an impending November 2017 deadline.

According to Public Service Commission Administrator Gary Widenburg, customers who installed rooftop solar prior to the fall 2017 deadline would be “grandfathered” under existing laws allowing them to receive some benefits that offset the cost of installation.

“Some people rushed to get their installations done,” he said. “Now, several months later, things have settled down a little bit. Once that November date, passed, people who were going to have systems installed early did so and others are just planning accordingly.”

He said the decline seemed to be more because of the deadline rather than decreasing overall demand for rooftop solar.

“I think there was an increase in applications and (installation) activity,” he added. “People who were thinking about doing it and were in a position to do so took advantage of that ‘grandfather date’ and jumped in.”

Under net metering, utilities paid solar producers the market rate for any excess energy they sent to the grid. Also, those customers were allowed to use those credits to lower their power bill when they weren’t generating as much solar energy.

Utah Clean Energy estimated the number of Rocky Mountain Power customers with rooftop solar participating in the net-metering program at approximately 30,000.

Previously, expiring net-metering credits had their value rolled over to Rocky Mountain Power, giving those households significant savings on their monthly bill, explained Brandi Smith with Utah Clean Energy. Now those credits expire annually, she noted.

“Having your net-metering credits expire every year has never been very popular with many rooftop solar customers,” she said.

The director of the state Office of Consumer Services said the initial decision to use the credits for energy programs to promote solar energy among low-income customers did not adequately attend to the needs of those households. However, Michele Beck, along with Utah Clean Energy, voiced strong support for initiatives aimed at helping Utah families who live in inefficient homes and are unable to afford the weatherization services to update their properties.


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“We didn’t object to having (credits) offset the costs of the low-income rate program,” she said. But the effort did not have as great an impact as it could have, she said.

“Weatherization creates incremental value for low-income customers, which is more consistent with the intent of those who supported that legislation,” Beck said. “(The expiring credits) will help more customers by going to weatherization than by going to a solar pilot (program).”

When contacted about the decline in rooftop solar and use of expiring credits, Rocky Mountain Power declined to comment.



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The AmeriCorps/VISTA program has been around since 1965, empowering the nation’s citizens to dedicate a year in service to communities across the country. The VISTAS serve courtesy of the Initiative Foundation, which has long supported community projects throughout central Minnesota and has partnered with RREAL since 2006 to bring volunteers to area communities.

Rachel Juritsch, from Pennsylvania, will focus on the Solar for Schools Project. Her role is supporting the integration of solar energy into learning opportunities for all students, regardless of income.

Juritsch graduated from the State University of New York: College of Environmental Science and Forestry with a bachelor of science in sustainable energy management. She enjoys fishing, kayaking and exploring the outdoors.

Peter Gebauer, from Florida, will serve as a research and development assistant for the Community Solar for Community Action program. He is passionate about community ownership, environmental justice and sustainable living.

To learn more about these projects and RREAL’s work, visit www.rreal.org or call 218-587-4753.

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By Elodie Reed, Banner correspondent

BENNINGTON — Even with the crosses lining the the bustling lunchroom, the collar tucked beneath Rev. Mark Blank’s rainbow-painted face and the steeple rising above the bat, tick and polar bear displays, it was easy to walk around last weekend’s Sun and Fun Festival and forget it was at a church.

Blank, who arrived at the Bennington’s Second Congregational Church in January after graduating from the Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, said that’s kind of the point.

“It’s important that church be a real community,” he said. “It’s a place of intersection.”

All kinds came together for Saturday’s free event. At one end of the building, Southern Vermont Natural History Museum assistant director Michael Clough held aloft a barred owl and explained the raptor’s hyper-sensitive eyes and ears.

“If my eyes were this size, they would be the size of grapefruits,” Clough said. He added that the owl’s ear holes, on a human scale, would be big enough to stick a fist into.

“It would be gross, yes, but you could do it,” he pointed out.

Just down the hall, Jen Clarkson-Smith taught a “parachute yoga” class. In between ruffling up a multi-colored, nylon circle, participants imitated with their bodies various animals, structures and natural features: cat, cobra, down dog, river, rock.

Other nearby rooms offered seminars on things like permaculture, solar panel financing, wind power, energy efficiency and bees.

Outside in the church’s grassy front yard, participants could meander a triangular path and check out a couple dozen tents. They could watch crayfish and mayflies swim around a bucket at the Battenkill Conservancy’s “picky bug table,” look inside a Rubbermaid bin full of composting worms, and compare the tight grain of old wood planks to the looser grain of newer lumber at Jane Radoccia’s “Building to the Weather” display.

Anyone who wandered behind the church building could ride inside the bike-like, lime green, pod-shaped Organic Transit ELF – a solar and pedal powered electric vehicle.

In the middle of everything was the “kids zone.” Young people could run through a curtain of rainbow streamers and jump into hula-hooping, bubble-blowing and the “Pie Face,” a whipped-cream-smacked-on-your-nose-machine.

The Sun and Fun Festival has grown in size since its debut four years ago. The church originally put on the event to celebrate its new 72-panel solar array, which was installed in 2015 with the help of a matching grant program.

Solar Pro company owner Karen Lee said Green Mountain Power opened up the grant in 2014 to non-profit institutions. This was a special opportunity, Lee said, since tax-exempt organizations like churches and schools aren’t incentivized by solar power’s tax-credit benefits like businesses or individuals.

“Coincidentally, the Second Congregational Church was looking for a partner — a solar power contractor,” Lee said. “The church was already involved in energy efficiency and sustainability efforts.”

The church is considered a “Green Justice” congregation by the United Church of Christ denomination. In addition to using solar panels for power, the church recycles, promotes practices like cleaning with non-toxic products and runs an environmental activism group called Eaarth Advocates.

Similarly, Sun and Fun Festival chairperson Kathy Shaw said the event has evolved over the years to emphasize nature and the environment.

“We try to do as many green things as we can,” Shaw said. This year, Bennington’s Second Congregational Church was nationally recognized as a “Cool Congregation” by Interfaith Power and Light, a religious group focused on global warming.

Shaw, who has lived and worked in Bennington for more than a decade as a veterinarian, said that she joined the church five years ago for its various efforts on social issues, including climate change.

“This church attracted me because they’re involved in the community,” she said.

Blank, who is 40, said he sees community outreach as a way to revitalize church for younger generations interested in social justice.

“We need to be relevant,” he said. “It is the great issue of our time — we have to do something about climate change. The church has to be speaking to that.”

Blank added, “These are things that bring people together.”

If you’d like to leave a comment (or a tip or a question) about this story with the editors, please
email us. We also welcome letters to the editor for publication; you can do that by
filling out our letters form and submitting it to the newsroom.



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Sportsmen pay most for wildlife conservation

I’m always amused by the holier-than-thou attitude of vegans and vegetarians when they write letters to the editor. Let’s look at that.

What do they think was on the land before their farms? There were woods. But don’t worry about all the trees and underbrush that was cleared for farming, killing or displacing birds, animals and insects, because I’m a good guy, I don’t kill animals, I’m a vegetarian.

Then every year when it is time for the new planting the field has to be mowed, chopped and plowed for the new crop. Don’t worry about the quail, rabbits and baby deer being chopped and killed during this process because I’m a good person, I don’t kill animals, I’m a vegetarian.

Then when the crop is coming up it has to be sprayed for insects. Don’t even think about the birds that eat the poisoned insects and might die, because I’m a good person, I don’t kill animals, I’m a vegetarian.

Then you have the organic crops with no insect control, which takes even more land because more crops have to be planted to make up for the loss from insects. So, more animals are killed, but I’m a good person, I don’t kill animals, I’m a vegetarian.

Please, don’t get me wrong; I love my vegetables too. Animals’ rights groups contribute two things: violence and controversy. They do nothing else. Sportsmen are the ones who pay for the vast majority of wildlife conservation programs. Don’t believe me? Google the Pittman-Robertson Act of 1937.

The bottom line: We are all in this together.

Bucky Flowers, Naples

 

Overly sensitive

The escalation of racial oversensitivity continues unabated and now seems to want to disallow people from even voicing their opinion, regardless of its outward harmlessness.

In People in the News, in the Naples Daily News on Aug. 15, Page 2A, an item says British singer Sam Smith, whoever he is, apparently lost the privilege to offer his opinion when fellow musician Adam Lambert, whoever he is, recorded Smith on video saying that he didn’t like Michael Jackson (egad!), but that the song by Jackson they were listening to was good.

Lambert posted the video of this conversation on the internet, then retracted it soon afterward. No matter. The internet trolls quickly reposted it, evidently to Smith’s detriment. You see, nothing ever goes away once it’s on the internet, especially expressing dislike of a person of color, and really especially if said person is none other than pop star and Pepsi pitchman Michael Jackson. That is the nature of the instant notification- and even quicker repudiation-driven society we live in today.

Stephanie Mills, whom the article cited, was a Grammy winner and had been in “The Wiz,” otherwise I would have asked who she was, offered the snappy retort that Smith should wish he had sold as many records as Jackson has. Presumably, Smith hasn’t. In any event, it is also presumed, and certainly hoped, that Smith does not also wish to match some of Jackson’s other endeavors, such as catching his hair on fire, dangling babies over balcony railings or dying from an overdose of Propofol.

Howard M. Nulse, Naples

 

Proposed tax can’t compensate for poor decisions

Last week I received a “Notice to Property Owner” announcing a Sept. 6 public hearing on the subject of stormwater service fees/assessments.

I am what is typically called a “snowbird.” Though now in Naples only about six months a year, I still pay a full year of property taxes, the majority going to schools I never have — and will never — use. Like so many others, I have quite a light footprint at my condo. I pay assessments for Florida vendors, and make routine purchases of entertainment, meals and local goods and services, with all being taxed. Retirees such as me also typically have health insurance and, overall, rarely make demands on public entitlement programs.

So now comes yet another proposed tax on we golden geese. This one to cover stormwater, which must be managed owing to rampant new construction creating a loss of drainage area and referred to by the county as “impervious areas.” It is therefore difficult to understand how Collier, despite this problem, continues to approve new construction at an alarming rate. This raises a further question: the water department reports that Naples water needs already exceed projected capacity. 

Naples’ future may be in question. The Collier County commissioners’ focus on additional taxes is a futile attempt to deal with their own shortsightedness. Consider just one example, their recent focus on dedicating now open land to affordable housing.

The drainage problems and unchecked proliferation of impervious areas are the direct results of years of Collier County’s ongoing approval of countless new construction projects. This new tax, indeed no added tax, can compensate for their poor decisions.

I oppose this latest proposed tax and urge the commissioners to focus on a comprehensive, long-term plan for managing our community growth.

J.W. Holcomb, Naples

 

Security clearance not a right

Like many readers, I find myself appalled, shocked and dismayed at the revocation of John Brennan’s security clearance.

Shocked. Why? Why did this former CIA director still have a security clearance? His clearance should have been revoked a long time ago based on cause for saying that the president of the United States committed treason.

Why does any former official keep their security clearance when leaving their position? Sure, someone will say, to allow communication within the government concerning national security matters. But allowing them to keep it automatically without some review process?

When you leave an employer you give up your access to everything from internal emails to the washroom keys. Yet many officials that have openly opposed President Donald Trump keep their clearance thinking that it is their right. No, it’s a privilege, not to be abused.

Jeffrey Brown, Bonita Springs

 

Disgraceful statement

I was stunned, to say the least, to hear Andrew Cuomo, governor of New York, say, “We’re not going to make America great again because it was never that great.”

Who does this privileged snot nose think he is? He has enjoyed the freedoms and luxuries that have been handed to him by his capitalist, wealthy family, while people from around the world are trying so desperately to cross our borders to get a fraction of what has been handed to him from birth. Shame on him. I cannot see him succeeding in the future after this disgraceful quote.

I can’t begin to tell you how angry I and many others are. Regardless of all the problems that we have, we are still the country that allows people like Cuomo to say the thing he says. Please write to him in his lavish New York office and tell him how you feel. I will.

Judy Branch, Naples

 

FPL statements misleading

I am writing in response to several untrue statements made by a Florida Power & Light spokesperson in your Aug. 9 article about solar energy (“Florida cities embracing solar power, but Naples isn’t one of them yet”). Taken together, these comments hide the fact that rooftop solar is a viable economic option across the state.

The spokesperson claims that Floridians aren’t rushing to go solar. This simply is not true. Florida is one of the fastest growing markets for solar. The number of installed systems doubled between 2016 and 2017. Also false is her statement that an investment in solar is too long for homeowners to see a return. A presentation by the University of Central Florida’s respected Solar Energy Center finds that Florida homeowners who go solar can find themselves cash-flow positive in as little as a year.

Lastly, her claim that condo associations are blocking people from going solar is also wrong. Florida law prohibits homeowner associations from forbidding homeowners from installing solar.

Sadly, this deception is par for the course from utilities like FPL. They are worried that homeowners going solar threaten their monopoly. It’s why FPL and others spent millions of dollars in 2016 on the misleading Amendment 1. Dressed up as a “pro-solar” initiative, had it passed it would have significantly strengthened their ability to block our right to go solar, something they even admitted in a secret recording.

Going solar empowers homeowners to save money and take control of where their energy comes from with a clean source of energy. It’s a shame that rather than trying to compete on a level playing field, FPL would instead mislead its customers.

Patricia Forkan, Naples

Environment Committee chairwoman,

Collier County League of Women Voters

 

No comparison

It is safe to say that columnist Cal Thomas’s views and mine are usually diametrically opposed, but I usually read his column to see what the right is thinking. However, I found his recent column in which he argued that the Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas disagreement was Act 1 with the Omarosa Manigault Newman-Trump mess as Act 2 to be particularly offensive. 

Hill is a lawyer and distinguished professor at Brandeis University, while Newman was a reality TV star who helped make Donald Trump a household name by appearing on “The Apprentice.” Hill is famous for her accomplishments; Newman is famous for being famous.

If Hill were to make the same charges that she made against Thomas in 1991 in today’s #MeToo world, it is highly unlikely that Thomas’ nomination to the Supreme Court would be confirmed. Note that in 1991, several other women besides Hill came forward to speak about harassment by Thomas, but the Senate declined to hear their testimony, so Thomas’ nomination was confirmed. 

Thomas is, in my humble opinion, the least qualified justice to sit on the Supreme Court in my lifetime. The fact that he occupies the seat once held by the late, great Justice Thurgood Marshall is especially annoying.

David Goldstein, Naples

 

Explanation sought

While some white football players kneel for the national anthem, it seems to be more of a black issue. I don’t understand why only football players have a problem with this issue. I also don’t know why baseball and basketball players are not protesting the issue.

Can anyone explain this to me?

Peter Fraser, Bonita Springs

 

Will flip-flop for greatness

I’ve lost my political certainty. I’ve always maintained a socially progressive bent, but I was certain that given all the variables, conservatism would win the day. 

Then came President George W. Bush. In his eight years, Bush never saw a spending bill he wouldn’t sign. Bush saw weapons of mass destruction in Iraq where there were none. And did I mention Bush left office spending more than any president before him, a lot more? 

After that, President Barack Obama accomplished two things. He passed Obamacare, but in a country where 39 percent of the population can’t come up with $1,000 in an emergency (https://protect-us.mimecast.com/s/3KtyC4xv1RfvqvDXsOc03U?domain=money.cnn.com), how would they come up with $4,800 health care deductible? Who suffers from this? The least among us (https://protect-us.mimecast.com/s/sdEYC5yw29hD2DXBCOMQ8k?domain=money.cnn.com). 

Obama also accomplished spending more than Bush ever thought possible and when President Donald Trump took office, America had a $20 trillion deficit.

Were Bush and Obama alike? Obama inherited Bush’s war and financial meltdown and Trump inherited Obama’s health care and unbelievable deficits as a direct result of the Bush/Obama excellent failure to further America’s greatness over a 16-year span. Lots of lecturing, posing, and, yes, offending: Remember “people hiding behind their guns and religion”? OMG!

Going forward, I will support politics that “make America great” for all Americans. Don’t misunderstand this political-campaign catchphrase; I’m talking about positive achievements, period, regardless of who furthers greatness: prosperity, rule of law, equal opportunity, reasonably priced education, comprehensive immigration solutions, actual affordable health care and a healthy respect for opposing points of view. 

Do I sound like a proverbial flip-flopper? Indeed, I will flip-flop for greatness any day.

I’ve regained a better place in my clarity, and of that, I am once again “certain!” 

Michael Padworski, Bonita Springs

Read or Share this story: https://www.naplesnews.com/story/opinion/readers/2018/08/26/letters-editor-monday-aug-27-2018/1076732002/

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WILLOW— There’s a new farm in Willow and the fruit it bears comes from the sky above. Soon, the Renewable Energy IPP team’s harvest will started yielding sunlight, coursing energy through their hand-made solar farm.

“It’s been cool to actually see it come together,” Jenn Miller, founding partner of RIPP said as her team was finishing some of the last touches.

Four partners, Miller, Sam Dennis, Chris Colbert, and Grant Smith formed RIPP to explore common interests, solar energy and good-old fashioned engineering and design. That team and an electrician were out working on the farm on Aug. 18 installing the electrical wires to the panels and MEA’s towers. They recently finished installing 408 heavy panels with heavy machinery and a lot of patience.

“That was actually super rewarding because the foundation was just a real bear to complete,” Miller laughed.

Miller, Colbert and Dennis installed custom-built solar panels on their houses last summer as a “do it yourself project.” Miller and co. eventually asked themselves: “how do we do more solar?”

“We starting kicking around a couple ideas and we were like, ‘well, you know, let’s just do one big system,’” Miller laughed.

This project is more of a passion of love and an intriguing puzzle to crack, according to Miller, with more to come down the road. She’s enjoyed the various overcoming road blocks and challenge, thriving from the mental sweat broke and real sweat accumulated after digging trenches and placing support beams in unexpected places like in the path of a natural stream on the lot.

“We’ve spent a lot of weekends out here!” She said.

There’s a meter poised to start rolling and keeping track of how much energy they can gather from the panels. Miller said there was about 10 percent of work left to do, with all of the most challenging aspects- like installing those panels- behind them. She said each stick of drill pipe was about 300 pounds.

“Sam and I were out here most days, dragging pipe around,” Colbert said.

The solar farm should be complete in couple weeks, according to Miller. She said that they plan on expanding after they get their 100-kilowatt hour solar system up and running. Once it’s fully operational, they will start selling electricity to Matanuska Electric Association. Miller said that MEA is an avid supporter of their project and have been rather encouraging the whole way.

“They met with us several times. We had this brainchild and we were like, ‘well, well we’re thinking about buying 17 acres of land and what do you think?’ Talking through the whole project with us.”

After the meter starts running, the RIPP team will begin brainstorming their next steps, which would likely include expanding their operation on this 17-acre property.

“The cool thing is: when you put solar on your house, they do what’s called net metering, so whatever you pay the retail price- let’s say it’s 18 cents a kilowatt hour- that’s what you get from MEA but we’re actually doing what’s called a wholesale model. That’s where whatever it costs MEA to produce power, that’s what they pay us, so we get like eight and half to nine cents a kilowatt hour. That actually helps when we do bigger project we would do a negotiated rate and it could help suppress energy prices long term [for everyone].” Miller said.

We all use electricity while performing out everyday tasks like heating our homes or cooking with an electrical stove. MEA Electricity is measured and charged by kilowatt hour (kWh). It’s quite similar to how gasoline is measured and charged by the gallon. One kWh is equal to the power consumption of one thousand watts for one hour. What does that mean? Well, for example, with one kilowatt hour, one could: brew 90 cups of coffee, surf the web for five hours, iron 11 shirts, blow dry your hair three times, or bake one birthday cake, according to data from the Ontario, Canada’s government website, related to their long term energy plan from 2013.

The mission for this pilot project was to test building at scale solar and evaluate the costs involved and if they could maintain the solar farm. They also aim to build solar their development skills, test large scale solar array design, and establish relationships with local utility and suppliers as they weigh out the array of possibilities.

Miller’s personal unit is 100th of the size compared to this huge solar farm. Naturally, a project of this scale required a lot of and a lot of leg work brainwork for this rag tag group of what Miller described as “Engineers and desk jockeys by trade.” Miller laughed and said it was more labor than she was used to.

Initially, Miller was a bit worried about what the surrounding neighbors might think about this gigantic, electrical endeavor, fearing they wouldn’t like it. To the contrary, they were met with a surprising amount of support after a warm welcome.

“It’s exciting, we’re on the home stretch now,” Colbert said.

Located at Mile 64.7 on the Parks Highway, anyone driving by simply can’t misses the solar farm on the on the side of the road. For more information about the solar farm and RIPP, visit their website at: www.renewableIPP.com.

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