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9.28.2010

Re: Taste of St. Louis Recycling Volunteers Needed


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TASTE OF ST. LOUIS
VOLUNTEER CHALLENGE

St. Louis Earth Day has partnered with Taste of St. Louis in an effort to make this massive event (300,000 people over 3 days) more environmentally friendly and drastically reduce the environmental impact. All of the food vendors have committed to sourcing only compostable serviceware and all cups will also be compostable, resulting in 100% compostable attendee waste with very few exceptions. Recycling will be happening in the back end of the event.

St. Louis Earth Day is requesting your help to recruit 200 volunteers in 2 weeks. Yes, this is a challenge, but we believe there is enough passion in the community to make this happen. If successful, we can divert 70% or more of the total event waste (31 tons last year!) from the landfill as we educate attendees about recycling and composting.

As an incentive for your support, volunteers over the age of 21 who refer 3 or more volunteers will be entered into a drawing for 2 VIP tickets to Taste. Nine sets of tickets will be raffled off. All volunteers have to do is supervise waste stations to help people put their waste in the right container. A brief but thorough training will occur 30 min before the shift start.

The organizers of Taste of St. Louis are also offering booth space to organizations who are able to recruit 10-20 volunteers for one or more 3-hrs shifts. The exposure is excellent – 300,000 St. Louisans of all walks of life! Please pass this along to organizations who may benefit from this opportunity.

Taste of St. Louis is October 1-3. Please help us change the status quo and revolutionize the approach to events in the St. Louis area. Contact me or visit our website for more info and to register:
Taste of St. Louis Volunteer Challenge


I know we can make this happen with your support!
space What is Green?
Green, also known as sustainability, centers on creating new or revising existing products, services, and ways of living to minimally impact the environment. 'Going Green' benefits individual health, the local and global economy, and the environment.
space What is StLouisGreen?
StLouisGreen.com is your online source for everything Green in the St. Louis Area. StLouisGreen.com connects you to:
  • Green Companies and Products
  • Green Events and Activities
  • Green Jobs and Opportunities
  • Green Education and What If's




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Scott's Contracting
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Investigation: Tax auctions look 'like government-sponsored loan-sharking'

From the online desk

Tuesday, Sep. 28, 2010


Investigation: Tax auctions look 'like government-sponsored loan-sharking'

- News-Democrat

EDWARDSVILLE -- A group of Madison County Board members announced Monday they're launching an investigation into the county's property tax auctions.
The auctions were the subject of a News-Democrat investigation, which showed that former Madison County Treasurer Fred Bathon took in about $140,000 in campaign donations from investors who bought delinquent property tax debts. Those investors routinely were allowed to buy people's tax debts at an 18 percent penalty rate -- the highest allowed under state law. The investors took in up to $200,000 apiece in penalties for some years.


County Board members Jean Myers, of Troy, Mike Walters, of Godfrey, Bill Meyer, of Hamel, Hal Patton, of Edwardsville, Chris Wangard, of Troy, and Chris Slusser, of Wood River, all Republicans on the Democrat-controlled County Board, said they have started a fact-finding process. They also encouraged affected property owners to call a hotline set up to report complaints about the process. The number is 917-3705.
"It looks like government-sponsored loan-sharking. The end result of this corruption could be that residents lost their homes," Slusser said. "For those property owners who did not, they -- at a minimum -- paid outrageously high interest rates that were sanctioned by our county treasurer's office. It's despicable."


Myers said in Jarvis and Pin Oak townships alone, the two townships that make up the majority of her board district, 239 parcels were auctioned in the 2001-2003 tax sales for an average of 2.4 percent, followed by 278 parcels auctioned from 2004-2006 at the maximum 18 percent.


"One thing is clear: The officials placed in charge of the tax sale auction in Madison County have forfeited our trust and taken advantage of property owners all across the county," Myers said at a news conference.


"These constituents were preyed upon at a time when they were most vulnerable, most down on their luck. The public trust has been completely eroded, with nearly 10,000 affected property owners, making the scope of this misconduct staggering."


Matt Melucci, chairman of the Madison County Democratic Party, issued a statement saying the party welcomes any investigation of the tax sales. He also pointed out that some of the GOP board members at the news conference are members of a County Board committee that oversees the property tax process.


At the county's annual property tax auction, investors buy the right to pay citizens' unpaid property taxes. The investors make money by charging a penalty to the property owners. If the property owner doesn't eventually pay the taxes and the penalty, the investor can take the property.


In most counties, the tax bills are sold in a reverse auction, meaning the investor offering to take the lowest penalty rate is the winning bidder.


But witnesses say Bathon, a Democrat, conducted the tax sale like a bid opening, where investors were not allowed to undercut each other or "bid down" the penalty percentage. All the bidders would shout an opening bid; the one who shouted the lowest bid first was the winner. Often, though, a group of bidders would simultaneously shout bids of 18 percent, then Bathon's office would decide which bidder shouted first, and the bidding would be cut off at that point.


Current Madison County Treasurer Frank Miles, who took office in December, now allows bidders to submit "trailing" bids, where the bidders can undercut each other with subsequent bidding.


"As treasurer of Madison County, I not only welcome public scrutiny into how the 2010 delinquent property tax sale was conducted, but scrutiny regarding any facet of the treasurer's office," Miles said, noting the average penalty rate when he conducted the tax sale this year was 9 percent, down from 18 percent the previous year under Bathon. "Any issues related to tax sales prior to my assuming the position as Madison County treasurer should be directed to Mr. Bathon."


Miles' opponent in the November election, GOP candidate Kurt Prenzler, said Monday that Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan's office needs to intervene.


"The stench from this administration building can be smelled from Springfield to Chicago. Lawmakers and prosecutors have a duty to uncover what has happened and to find a way to make things right for the struggling property owners that were deceived."


The penalty rate compounds every six months, maxing out at 108 percent.
Myers said the average interest rate being paid by redeeming property owners has grown from 25 percent in calendar year 2007 to 36 percent in calendar year 2009.


Myers said she submitted a formal request Monday morning with the county clerk's office for a variety of records, including:
* Name, address, parcel number of each property redemption, plus tax, penalty and interest amounts
* E-mail records involving any of several tax buyers who have done business at the tax sales
* Phone records for the treasurer's office for the calendar years 2006-2010
* Videotapes, documents, memos, and records from the 2006-2009 tax sales.


Patton said, "The most amazing fact is that 30 tax buyers, as well as numerous county staff all attended these auctions, and not a single warning was issued to the County Board about the changes made that resulted in such high interest rates for the county residents at risk. The silence from the administration building is deafening."


Wangard said the GOP group's immediate focus "is to find answers for the 10,000 property owners that have paid -- or continue to face a future inflated payment -- for the simple privilege of continuing to live in their home. This scandal represents the next in a long line of scandals from Washington, D.C., to Springfield -- and now to Edwardsville. Property owners have been taken advantage of by our government and that deserves to see the light of day."


Myers said she welcomes bipartisan participation in the investigation, including from County Board Chairman Alan Dunstan, a Democrat.
Dunstan could not be reached for comment. Bathon has not returned calls seeking comment on the issue for several weeks.


Patton, who serves on a tax committee for the County Board, said the committee was never informed of the increase in penalty rates during Bathon's tenure.


"If that information had been brought to my committee, this investigation would have started a long time ago," Patton said.


Myers said, "I never attended a tax auction. Shame on me." But she added, "The treasurer's responsibility is to conduct that auction according to the statutes and in the best interest of the taxpayers. We were as caught off-guard by this information as anybody else was."


Melucci, who serves as circuit clerk in addition to being the Democratic Party chairman, said the party welcomes "a review of the process by a lawful authority and not by a group of self-appointed individuals, some of whom serve on the Real Estate Tax Cycle Committee. How can they claim ignorance of the process when they are charged with oversight of that very process?"


Board member Larry Trucano of Collinsville, a Democrat who serves as chairman of the tax committee, said Monday he's never been to the county's tax auction, and the subject is not discussed at committee meetings.


"We don't discuss that at the committee meetings. Never have, that I know of," Trucano said.
Contact reporter Brian Brueggemann at bbrueggemann@bnd.com or 239-2511.


Read more: http://www.bnd.com/2010/09/28/1416899/tax-auctions-catch-countys-eye.html#ixzz10pe0Of4w



Build Green
Scotty, Scotts Contracting
www.stlouisrenewableenergy.com
www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com



what happens to housing when greed and failed policy collide

Risk run amok: what happens to housing when greed and failed policy collide

Harvard's Joint Center for Housing Studies this morning releases a report for those who admit they don't know what they don't know about the meltdown. One of its authors, Eric S. Belsky, managing director at JCHS, says, "The combination of a glut of global liquidity, low interest rates, high leverage, and regulatory laxity in the context of initially tight and then overvalued housing markets triggered staggering risk taking. Capital markets supplied credit through Wall Street in large volumes for risky loans to risky borrowers and then multiplied these risks by issuing derivatives that exposed investors to risks in amounts much larger than the face amount of all the loans." A tad academic, but not moot. Continued Here: http://www.builderonline.com/builder-pulse/risk-run-amok-what-happens-to-housing-when-greed-and-failed-policy-collide.aspx?cid=NWBD100924002



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Scott's Contracting
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http://www.stlouisrenewableenergy.blogspot.com
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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

Mid-term Elections and Discussion of a Federal Renewable Portfolio Standard


Photobucket

Mid-term elections are here. Time for a quick poll. Suppose I'm running for Congress. Which campaign platform would you recommend? You can vote for me because I will fight to:

a) Protect women's reproductive rights, put honesty back into government, return power to the voters, and end tax-payer bailouts for the super-rich.

OR

b) Establish a federal renewable portfolio standard (RPS), even though it is fiercely opposed by the utilities who, in a deregulated environment have used their cozy relationships with the FERC-appointed quasi-governmental agencies to hide profits and create an environment in which only a fraction of clean energy is contracted for purchase at retail net metering rates, thus quietly but effectively removing incentive for capital formation in solar, wind, and other clean energy technologies.

If you picked a), you have what it takes for a career as a political speechwriter. If you picked b), I'd advise you to head in another direction.

Kidding aside, this is the exact situation in which we find ourselves at this point. Without a federal RPS, the states have the power to create an extremely anti-competitive environment for clean energy. In New Hampshire, to take an example, the state will let anyone with a power source under one megawatt connect to the grid with a minimum of hassle.

Sound good? Well, there's a catch.

The utilities don't have to buy anything over 100 kilowatts (90% of the project) at retail net metering rates, but rather at wholesale rates (less than 6 cents per kilowatt hour). Thus a project that appears to have a reasonably attractive 16% internal rate of return, actually comes in at a dismal 5.5%. Once they realized that, investors didn't walk away from those projects (that entrepreneurs had spent millions of their own dollars developing) – they ran.

All this garbage needs to go away. In the absence of a federal RPS, all this stuff is slowly going nowhere.

If you vote for me, I'll make that happen. I'll also protect women's reproductive rights, put honesty back into government, return power to the voters, and end tax-payer bailouts for the super-rich.

 

Craig Shields is editor of 2GreenEnergy.com, and author of Renewable Energy - Facts and Fantasies (published by Clean Energy Press - 2010)



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Spray-On Solar Window Unveiled


New technology developed at the University of Florida is said to turn windows into generators of solar electricity. The technology is not yet commercialized.
Published: September 21, 2010

Maryland and Florida, USA – Last week, New Energy Technologies Inc. showed its technology that enables glass to generate electricity through spray-on solar PV to investors and members of the media.

The technology, which is called the SolarWindow, aims to provide solar energy to building facades by spraying an electricity-generating coating on to glass.  During the demonstration, the researchers compared the cost of the SolarWindow technology to traditional rooftop solar systems saying that the SolarWindow technology provides up to three times more savings in electricity costs.

According to a press release, engineers modeled a 40-story building, similar to Tampa's landmark 100 North Tampa, as an example.  They estimated an annual cost-savings of $40,000 to $70,000 when installing New Energy's SolarWindow to exposed window facades, which they contrasted with a polycrystalline silicon module installation on the rooftop that would produce $20,000 in energy savings per year. 

"I'm eager to aggressively advance this technology towards commercial prototyping in preparation for eventual full-scale production to capitalize on our market of more than five million commercial buildings and 80 million detached homes in America," said president and CEO, John A. Conklin.

The company expects to publish comprehensive performance data in upcoming weeks, following independent, third-party measurement and engineering validation. 

The all-important numbers such as installed cost and efficiency were not discussed.



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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

East and West Coast Programs Offer Solar Energy Leases


SolarWorld and United Solar announced new programs this week that will help offset the initial capital cost of installing solar energy.
Published: September 23, 2010

California and Michigan, USA – In California and New Jersey, two solar companies are testing new solar energy leasing programs, recognizing that the upfront cost of installing solar energy is a real stumbling block to adoption.

In California, SolarWorld Americas announced that it has created a new program, SolarWorld Financial Solutions, to let potential customers access solar without putting money down.  SolarWorld says that its authorized dealers and their customers in select Western states can now lease its Sunkits solar systems or defer payment until state and federal incentives can be realized. Commercial customers and not-for-profit organizations can select among various leases or a power purchase agreements (PPAs).  Details about which banks are providing the capital were not disclosed but SolarWorld said that it hopes to have an announcement about at least one of the strategic partners involved with the program soon.

Michigan-based, United Solar announced a pilot program taking place on the east coast in which 30 New Jersey residents will be able to lease its BIPV products at low monthly rates.

Under the program, NJR Home Services (NJRHS), an unregulated subsidiary of New Jersey Resources, a home appliance installation and service company, will install Uni-Solar's integrated PV modules on about 30 residential homes as part of a solar lease program. NJRHS will cover the upfront installation and maintenance costs and then lease the solar panels to homeowners for $8.66 per kilowatt installed.

The average size system for the pilot program is expected to be three-kilowatts with a fixed monthly lease payment price of $26 over a 20-year period.

This pilot program is also the first time that customers will be able to install Uni-Solar's BIPV product called the PowerShingle or CertainTeed Corporation's product EnerGen that uses Uni-Solar's modules. Both the PowerShingle and EnerGen are Building-integrated PV products that install directly on the rooftop in some cases replacing traditional rooftop shingles with PV, requiring no rooftop penetrations.  Uni-Solar said in its press release that it will work with its partners to decide which new solar product, PowerShingle or EnerGen, will go on each roof.



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Scott's Contracting
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scotty@stlouisrenewableenergy.com

US Military's Two-pronged Renewable Energy Initiative

The US Military's Two-pronged Renewable Energy Initiative

The US military is one of the biggest supporters of renewable energy in the country.
Published: September 22, 2010
Nevada, USA -- Clean air mandates pushed the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) to start developing renewable energy technologies. But the benefits of energy security and independence are what finally converted many military leaders into believers.
"Renewable sources make us less vulnerable," said Joe Sikes, director of Facilities Energy for the Office of the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense. "Our goal is to take advantage of all available resources."

In combat zones, the Army is exploring mobile solar and wind generators to replace fuel trucks, which are frequent targets for insurgent attacks. More than 1,000 Americans have died while delivering fuel in Iraq and Afghanistan in recent years. The DoD hopes renewable energy can make military bases energy-independent and, ultimately, immune from threats to the utility grid.

Congress in 2007 gave the DoD marching orders to draw 25 percent of its energy from renewable sources by 2025. After President Obama called for 20 percent by 2020, the DoD established a Strategic Sustainability Performance Plan, which targets improvements in greenhouse gas emissions, waste management and energy efficiency.

Some say a federal Renewable Portfolio Standard would increase the likelihood of achieving these goals. Others want an energy bill that permits the Army and Air Force to secure Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) beyond the 10-year cap in the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) so more investors will consider utility-scale projects.

"To meet those goals and achieve energy security, this is the time for public officials to step up and make sure this fledgling market has long-term success," said Karen Butterfield, director of federal accounts for SunPower Corp., which has developed the largest utility-scale solar arrays on federal property.

As a policy matter, the military has officially embraced the idea of becoming the federal government's testing ground for renewable technology.

"The DoD can go on to serve as an early customer, thereby helping create a market, as it did with aircraft, electronics and the internet," Dorothy Robyn, Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Installations and Environment, said during a House Armed Services Committee in February.

The military is in various stages of planning for hundreds of megawatts of renewable energy projects, including a 15-MW solar PV array a Luke Air Force Base in Arizona. It will be the largest solar installation on federal property and supply 25 percent of power needs at the base.

An even larger 500-MW solar plant is planed for the Army's Ft. Irwin base in California. SunPower Corp. will develop the Luke AFB project near Glendale, Arizona. The company installed the previous record-holding array in 2007 with 14-MW at Nellis AFB near Las Vegas.

"There is definitely growing interest" by the military, said Monique Hanis, a Solar Energy Industries Association spokeswoman. "We're actively engaged with the military right now."

Karl Gawell, executive director of the Geothermal Energy Association, has also noticed an increase in military interest for utility-scale projects.

"It's a total shift in priorities. The Defense Department has made a fundamental shift in looking at renewable energy," Gawell said. "And it's not just because the commander in chief ordered it; they've decided how fundamental it is to achieving the military's own mission."

Air Force and Navy leaders say they are on target to meet Obama's 2020 goal, known as Executive Order 13514. The Air Force is negotiating contracts for about 500 MW of solar power within the next three years, up from a capacity of 70 MW in 2007.
"We've learned so much in just three years," said Ken Gray, Chief of the Renewables Branch of the Air Force Facility Energy Center. "What took us three to four years for Nellis is now taking 1 ½ years" for project development.
The Air Force is also developing the largest biomass power plants in the nation. Two wood waste plants with capacities of 15 MW to 25 MW are planned for Florida's Eglin Air Force Base and Georgia's Robins Air Force Base, respectively. The Florida project will incorporate sustainable forestry practices. Gray expects those projects to start in 2013 and 2014.
(Left: Buckley AFB, Colorado: Construction is nearly complete on a 1.2 MW solar project on 6 acres of land that will use more than 5,000 photovoltaic modules to help power the base. This project is expected to come on line in October 2010.)

The Navy, which pioneered the use of nuclear power on submarines, has long been an early adopter in use of renewable energy. The Navy is considering Small Modular Reactors, so-called "mini nukes" to power military bases. Since 1987, the Naval Air Weapons Center at China Lake in California has generated 270 MW of geothermal power. The power plant provides more than 100 percent of the base's power needs.

Tom Hicks, Deputy Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Energy, said the Navy plans to install three more geothermal plants in Arizona, California and Nevada in the next five years. The plants will have capacities of 10 MW to 50 MW each.

"Having that vision and support from the leadership has been a tremendous asset and really been reflected in the way the Navy and Marine Corps stepped up to meet those goals," Hicks said.

The Navy is particularly proud of its research in hydrokinetic energy projects that use ocean currents near Puget Sound and Hawaii, he said. The Navy also has established an ambitious goal for half of its facilities to become net-zero by 2025. Naval commanders are looking to accomplish the goals through a combination of energy efficiency initiatives and renewable energy projects. The Navy installed about 30,000 smart meters throughout its facilities last year.

Own the Assets or Purchase the Power?
The gradual greening of the armed forces has sparked some debate about the funding and effort needed to comply with mandates.

"I applaud the military's leadership, but some are asking, 'What exactly is the military's role here?'" said Les Shephard, director of the Institute for Conventional, Alternative and Renewable Energy (UTSA) at the University of Texas at San Antonio. "My personal observation is that they want to focus on things they do extraordinarily well, while (renewable energy) should be left up to experts."

Shephard, who worked for Sandia National Laboratory for 28 years before joining UTSA, said the military's foray into research, development and installation of renewable energy could detract from the military's core mission. He is among a group of experts who think the military could achieve its goals by purchasing renewable energy from local utility companies through innovative PPAs instead of actively procuring and developing projects.
The Air Force's Gray estimates that about 80 percent of USAF renewable projects would be funded privately through PPAs similar to the Nellis AFB array. Through a 20-year land lease and PPA with a fixed rate, the Air Force purchases power from the array investors, who also benefit from selling Renewable Energy Credits (RECs) to a Nevada utility company. For the Luke AFB project, SunPower will install the 15-MW plant on military property, the utility company will own it and the Air Force will purchase power from the utility at a fixed rate.

By taking an active role in the development of these unique utility-scale PPAs, the military is ensuring it moves closer toward its 2020 goals, said Sikes, the DoD's director of facilities energy.

"Obviously, we could eventually reach our goals by waiting for utility companies to develop renewable energy on their own," he said. "Our intention is to take advantage of opportunities because it helps improve security issues."

Robert Crowe is a technical writer and reporter based in San Antonio, Texas. He has written for Bloomberg, the Houston Chronicle, Boston Herald, StreetAuthority.com, San Antonio Express-News, Dallas Business Journal, and other publications. He covers renewable energy and sustainability for various publications. As a consultant, he works closely with companies to develop technical materials for renewable energy and sustainability strategies.


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