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Tails
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2682 Posts

Posted - 02/13/2009 :  10:58:27 AM  Show Profile Send Tails a Private Message  Reply with Quote
You must be logged in to see this link.

If I'm reading the report correctly, it looks as if Everett's wish list is only requesting monies for the new charter school?

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just wondering
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387 Posts

Posted - 02/13/2009 :  12:18:14 PM  Show Profile Send just wondering a Private Message  Reply with Quote
Thanks Bob

Everett's original wish list had multiple projects listed on it.....a state task force then reviewed all projects state wide and reduced the list under consideration for funding.
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Tails
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2682 Posts

Posted - 02/13/2009 :  2:46:42 PM  Show Profile Send Tails a Private Message  Reply with Quote
"that's Robert to you"
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Tails
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2682 Posts

Posted - 03/02/2009 :  10:03:37 PM  Show Profile Send Tails a Private Message  Reply with Quote
I know Sal Sachetta has been asking about a wind turbine, and someone mentioned solar panels in the past. I cant remember what happened with the Solar Panels piece.

Has the city asked about these from the stimulus package? They want cities to go green, don't they? I cant imagine it would get denied.

Associated Press
Solar, wind projects vie for Mass. stimulus funds
By STEVE LeBLANC , 03.01.09, 03:27 PM EST


When Steve Williams went looking for projects to add to his federal stimulus wish list, the Belchertown public works director decided to toss in two ideas that had been kicking around his desk - solar panels for the town's wastewater treatment facility and highway garage.

"We looked at a few sites with high power demand and good exposure to the sun," Williams said of the projects, with a combined price tag of nearly $1.2 million. "We are trying to get the word out that Belchertown is serious about going green."
Williams isn't alone.

Wish lists submitted by cities, towns and state agencies for a share of Massachusetts's federal stimulus funds include hundreds of renewable energy projects, from a multi-community push to place solar panels on the roofs of public buildings across Cape Cod to a major wind farm in the Berkshires.

Interspersed are dozens of smaller projects, from micro wind turbines to solar panels on schools to a "biomass boiler" at the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth that relies on biomass like wood chips instead of oil or gas.
There's even a proposal to put solar panels on portions of the Statehouse.

Under the $787 billion federal stimulus plan signed by President Obama, Massachusetts is expected to receive $1-2 billion for infrastructure projects. That means only a tiny fraction of wish list projects will see any money.

Still, Gov. Deval Patrick is hoping the funds will help jumpstart his goal of dramatically increasing Massachusetts' production of renewable energy.

For solar energy, that goal is the ability to generate 250 megawatts of energy from solar panels by the year 2017. There are now about 7 megawatts of solar panels installed across Massachusetts.
The goal for wind power is even more dramatic.

The state has just nine major wind turbines pumping out about 7 megawatts of power. By 2020, Patrick wants the state to be producing 2,000 megawatts of wind energy. While the goal is ambitious, it may be attainable. The proposal by Cape Wind Associates to build 130 windmills across 25 miles of federal waters in Nantucket Sound, for instance, would generate up to 420 megawatts of power.
State Environmental Affairs Secretary Ian Bowles said the stimulus dollars will help push the state closer to its goals.

"We see the stimulus as providing a very important impetus to maintain and expand the momentum we have built for renewable energy over the last two years," Bowles said.
The Cape Light Compact is one of those groups hoping to turn stimulus dollars into renewable energy.

The group ultimately wants to generate 14 megawatts of energy by installing solar panels on public buildings up and down the Cape, from fire stations and town halls to schools and DPW buildings.
The group has requested $10 million in stimulus funds - enough to install 3 megawatts worth of solar panels on more than a dozen sites according to Maggie Downey, the group's administrator. That would produce enough electricity to cover about 20 percent of the entire municipal load on the Cape, she said.

Downey said the project has an added economic benefit for the state. Not only will it boost production of clean energy, but the panels will be purchased from a local company - Evergreen Solar (nasdaq: ESLR - news - people ) based in Devens.
"Not only are we hiring local people to install these, but for Massachusetts we get a double-bang because we help the local manufacturers too," she said.
The Berkshire Wind Power Cooperative Corp. has an even more ambitious project - the creation of a 10-turbine wind power farm on Brodie Mountain in Hancock, Mass.

The group, formed by 14 municipal power companies and the Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Company, is on the verge of signing the contract to purchase the turbines and will resume construction on the foundations for the turbines in the spring. It's hoping for $47 million in stimulus funds. When completed, the project is expected to produce 15 megawatts of power.

"It's the kind of initiative that's needed to advance the development of renewable energy projects in Massachusetts," said David Tuohey, spokesman for Massachusetts Municipal Wholesale Electric Company. "We are definitely shovel-ready."

Being "shovel-ready" - defined as able to begin construction within 180-days - is critical. The stimulus money is intended for projects that can quickly help boost the economy.
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tetris
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2040 Posts

Posted - 03/02/2009 :  10:11:48 PM  Show Profile Send tetris a Private Message  Reply with Quote
As I recall, I thought that they were supposed to do a solar panel pilot program at the City Services building with one of the utilities (National Grid?). Don't know whatever may have happened to that.

Edited by - tetris on 03/02/2009 10:12:59 PM
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