HomeMy WebLinkAbout2009-0203 Documents Submitted at Meeting
\ (1/28/2009) Barbara christensen- con:tment to C~uncil reo Siskiyou Safety Committeerecc's
Page 1 I
From:
To:
Date:
Subject:
steve ryan <resolutionvideo@yahoo.com>
<christeb@ashland . or. us>
1/27/2009 11 :53 AM
comment to Council reo Siskiyou Safety Committee recc's
Hello, I want to comment on the Siskiyou Blvd. Safety Ad Hoc Committee's recommendation for the
Garfield Street crosswalk remodel, for whenever that comes on the agenda, being:
As a committee member, I support the Garfield-Siskiyou crosswalk recommendations of the Siskiyou
Safety Ad Hoc Committee. The time it took us to reach the decision was perhaps longer than we wanted,
and we would like to be able to fix the intersection as soon as is physically possible, but the process was
open, there was public comment (wish there had been more), I thought we were thorough and inclusive
and built our recommendation on factual evidence, and the limitations were those arising from due
diligence. I agree with the idea that the easiest short-term fix, would be to hire a crossing guard to flag the
pedestrians and stop traffic for them during the busiest times, as resources allow, or assign that as
community service perhaps. Partnering with SOU might turn up a work-study student candidate. Then fix
the intersection as soon as physical constraints allow. Thanks to Staff and his honor Mayor Morrison for
allowing me to serve my community.
Stephen D. Ryan
Siskiyou Safety Ad Hoc Committee citizen at large member
~lluJftcJ 2(?1or
Polk. ~
February 3,2009
Mayor and City Council
City Hall, 20 E. Main Street
Ashland, OR 97520
RE: ASHLAND GUN CLUB LEASE AGREEMENT
Honorable Mayor and Council:
As I am sure most of you know, we the City of Ashland owns land on Emigrant
Creek Road that is leased to the Ashland Gun Club (AGC). The current lease expires
on May 1,2009. While the City and AGC have been working on a new lease document
for approximately 2 years, the lease agreement signed by Mayor Morrison on August 8,
2008, was changed significantly by members of the Council during the public hearing
process, without any discussion or negotiation with AGC pertaining to the impact of
those amendments.
AGC had the revised lease reviewed by their attorney, and it was his opinion that
the lease agreement, as revised, is not favorable for the club and that the club should
not sign that document. Subsequently, we met with Staff, and believe staff and the
AGC can jointly address the issues noted by the attorney, with the result being a lease
that is amenable to both parties. With that in mind, we would respectfully request that
the Council take the following action:
1. Authorize the extension of the current lease agreement past the May 1, 2009
date, on a month-to-month basis, pending approval of the new lease agreement;
and,
2. Authorize staff to work with AGC to deal with the various issues extant and
bring the document back to the council. We understand that a public hearing
may be necessary to address the changes made to the agreement, but that the
hearing would be limited only to those changes made.
Sincerely,
0Cl,9c~
ASHLAND GUN CLUB
Chuck Parlier, President
arold Edwards says the time
was finally right for the
Limoneira Co. to be powered
by the sun.
"That all falls nicely into the
concept of sustainability:' says Edwards,
CEO and president of Limoneira, a corpo-
rate farm of about 7,000 acres headquartered
in Santa Paula, Calif. It also falls into the con-
cept of doing the right thing for sharehold-
ers, because the $8 million solar project has
secured a low electricity rate for the compa-
ny for at least the next couple of decades.
Edwards explains that the sofar project,
which came online late in summer of 2008, is
a I-megawatt installation of solar panels that
ties into the existing Southern California
Edison grid. It will supply about a third of the
power used annually at Limoneira's 200,000-
square-foot facility in Santa Paula. which
boasts enough cold storage for about 500 rail
cars of fruit and features a large packing-
house for lemons. That amount of eleCtricity
could power 200 single-family homes for a
year, so the farm is saving that amount of
electricity for the community.
As Edwards points out, the company has
answered one of the "great unknowns" of
the modern farm: the question of how high
J
nomic feas;.
A 1-megawatt array of solar panels is providing a third of the power required for Limoneira's
citrus packing and cold storage facility in Santa Paula, Calif.
AIO · GROWING · JANUARY 2009
*Free info! Circle # on card or go to www.growingmagazlne.com/freeinfo
III .
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rising electricity prices will go.
Its investment has solidified
electricity prices for that section
of the farm at 9 cents per kilo-
watt over a period. of~O, years,
and 7 cents per kil~w:ittif the
- project lasts tor 30 years.
"Today, we're paying 13 cents
per kilowatt:' Edwards says pf his
Edison charges, and the utility is
talking about price increases. The
solar array not only lowers his
prices, it takes away the uncer-
tainty to some degree. He says
that the company had talked
; about the possibility of a solar
installation several times in the six
years he has been the CEO, but
costs were not advantageous until
recently. Increased incentives and
tax breaks made the project not
only feasible, but imperative.
"The key part - of the making-'
sense part is that it had to be eco-
nomically viable:' Edwards says,
and there were several elemen.ts'
that made it work. First, it
required no capital outlay from
Limoneira. The $8 million was
borrowed from Farm Credit
Systems in a special alternative
energy lending program, where
Farm Credit actually owns the
system for the first 10 years, with
Limoneira leasing it. In year 11,
Limoneira could buy the sys~m:
for $1 million, with a IS-m,01111tili1i
payback on the solar system.
Edwards estimates that 'tk€
arranaement will cut $2S0,OOma
b _
year from the company's eleG1iFiw..
bill for the first 10 years, _ '
$750,000 a year from year 11 on.
Mark Palamountain, CEO of
Perpetual Power, the San
Francisco company that built
the Limoneira sy.stem, says the
incentives right now are tremen-
dous, both from the federal
government and the state of
California.' Other states have
similar, and even better,
programs. The IRS allows a one-
time, up-front, federal t~ credit
of 30 percent on this type of
investment, and that credit has
just been renewed and is in place
for the next eight years.
California offers a rebate
program funded by ratepayers
and paid through local utilitie~
Continued on page A l~, '
Solar Farms
Continued from page An
through -its California Solar'lIlitiative. _The
rebate. is a tiered system for every kilowatt
produced through solar, and for Limoneira
it means the company is paid 26 _ cents per
kilowatt for every kilowatt produced tip to 1;;"
megawatt for the first five years. In addition,
the company sells back every kilowatt it does;.
n't usetotheutility, realized as a credit on
itsbilt.
Edwirds notes that the company could
have built more solar generation, but didn't
because - of the 1 megawatt limit per site. In
addition, a company can only sell- back to
Edison the amount of energy that it uses,
which makes the size of the generation
pla,.n;tGrucial to its economics. Some states
ct~~~B~ - have this limitation, and there is a
m.9-vement to have it changed in California.
,.-;E~oneira -has another orchard -in the
S~<J~aquin Valley where it is building
-~,pil.~r 1-:megawattsolar array, which also I
~q~alify for both state and federal p~o-
grams. That site will feature a different kind
of4~ap:~1~~rangement, and will power four
:el~~tr~~,pumps for .irrigettion .:Plltposes,
~~\v~(,i]s$C:lYs. That San JQ~qaim Vale., farm
An obserVe.tion'deckwa~~oU~abovethe'
array to educate visitors to the farm on the
subject of'soli:l:r po"V~ri '
grows nard orang~s-and speci,alty citrus
varieties.\He . saysithatb.ased on current
projectiOlls,the co:rnpany's 2-megawatts of
generati6n, make it the largest - solar power
producer in the state, th.?~gh that could
change quickly as oth~J_ entities take r
a(j:yaIltage of incentives.
":Palamountain says that the physical
pla~ttare preuy,:standard,. with this
technology being well-known. for decades.
Limoneira's Santa Paula site has 6,400 solar
panelsIIl()unted o~.fixed.platformswitllan
a,<ljll~tmc:~t,tPilt~~R~vs.w.e_[,()p~r~!or _.~() ..'.
rnanu~y;!'-~._ - ".-cp;le~.;"t9f!~'~t~~'-0l1~_'
sttmm~r'$~tt' "t"lmproves' 'the u;gle to - :
"'Free info! Circle # on card or go to ~.g'DwingmagBzin8.cDm/frBBin'D
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11~';" ':; .
jthesun.The San Joaquin Valley site will also
: 'feature...;6,400.,panels, but WIll be on an
.ailtomatic trCicking system.
The - Mitsubishi Electric & Electronics
USA poly-silicon photovoltaic panels ar~
industri~-grade'and withstand I-inch hall
and 120 mph winds, Palamountain says.
Limoneiraput its.panels on the ground
, 'rather than on the roof of its packinghouse
because of the age of the roof. The panels
are tied into the utility grid in a new
building where two sOO-kilowatt inverters
\ change it from DC to AC. It then goes to a
i. transformer that will boost or reduce power
I according to the facility's needs. What isn't
I! used goes into the grid for a credit.
"The expected life is 30 to 40 years," .
I Palamountain says of the solar system (the
I silicon is projected to degrade about .5 per-
cent annually). Since payback through the
incentive program is. much earlier than
that, the company should have really cheap
electricity for a long time. "With the ince~-
tives and financial mechanisms out there, It
makes sense to do it."
Perpetual Power has a contract to maintain
the Limoneira system for 10 years,
Palamountain says. The inverters are
"'ooi warranted for 10 years, and the transformer
Continued on page C8
Solar Farms
With its commitment to community
interaction, Limoneira added an observa-
tion room with'a deck above the solar array
so that visitors could tour the installation. It
has a restroom and a weather station, and
the building has LEED Gold certification-
reportedly, the only solar installation in the
world with that standard for environmental
construction.
"The point is that as we begin to be
known as a solar producer we will be able to
distinguish ourselves in the marketplace;'
Edwards says, nd ultimately there may be a
way to garner premium prices for fruit
packed in a solar facility. It isn't a stretch to
foresee fruit labeling that notes a farm's
"green)) credentials, especially for
Limoneira's organic produce, he says.
Continued from page A 12
is on the utility's side (though Limoneira
had to pay for it). Maintenance of the panels
consists of setting them to winter and sum-
mer settings, as well as monitoring output
and washing dust and grime off the panels
three times a year. Native vegetation was
planted close to the panels to reduce dust.
Edwards notes that the company's mission
statement is all about "stewardship of
resource," and the company aims to achieve
sustainability in all of its operations. As the
nation's largest grower of avocados and North
America's largest grower of lemons, the
company wants to maintain a green image
both for goodwill in the community and
marketing leverage in the global marketplace.
The 6,400 solar panelS tak,e up 55 acres alia
are adjustable to winter and sumrr,er semngs
Edwards notes that farms are a natural sit-
uation for solar generation because they have
the land and often have high-use electric
needs. This investment does not pal' off as
well if the farm has only low-use facilities. He
notes that the San Joaquin Valley, with its
hundreds of electric pumps and processing
facilities, could turn out to be the
most solar-intensive region of the
world if the farmers there catch
on to the incentive programs.
Palamoun-tain has calculations
to determine whether a facility
could use solar to its advantage,
and~canbeoon~~dilirou~
the company's \Veb site at
www.p2solarsolutiolIs.coill.
The final selling point Tor
Edwards was the security aspect.
In an era when there are period-
ic electrical outages, it lowers a
company's risk to have its own
solar facility always producing
power. He says that Santa Paula
and this entire valley are a natu-
ral for solar power, and he is
working with n1unicipal officials
to look at alternative energy
resources that vwuld make the
entire area energy independent.
To check out the compa.rx's
extensive operations, and its
commitment to sustainabilit)',
visit its 'Neb site at \\",\\\,
limof1eira.co/11. For a look at
some of the equipment used in
constructing a solar arra:.-.
go to www.mitsuLJisllidectric
solar.com, which also offers a
solar calculator to roughly deter-
mine whether solar will work for
specitlc situations.
"I think we all need to be pd::-
ing attention to this field,"
Edwards says. ..
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