Tuesday, March 26, 2013

Letter to the editor: People's Energy Coop

Letter To the Editor:

The Minnesota Legislature is considering several proposals that would negatively impact the members of People’s Energy Cooperative and cooperative members throughout the state.
Although we understand the Governor’s and Legislature’s desire to increase the amount of renewable energy used in Minnesota, on behalf of our 15,000 members, we must remind them that the state’s electric cooperatives are struggling with the cost of meeting the current renewable energy standard (RES), which was signed into law in 2007 and remains one of the nation’s most aggressive mandates. Any expansion of the RES would require electric cooperatives to add un-economic power generation we do not need at a time when our members can least afford it.

When it passed out of the House Energy Policy Committee, House File 956, the Omnibus Energy Bill, would require utilities to purchase 4 percent of their electricity from solar energy and establish a goal of up to 10 percent from solar energy. This amount would be on top of the 25 percent renewable energy utilities are already required to provide. The bill also includes a 1.33 percent annual assessment on all utility sales to fund solar energy subsidies; this assessment alone would require People’s to charge our members an additional $400,000 annually.

At a time when solar energy is more expensive than other types of electricity generation these two proposals could cost Minnesota utilities and ratepayers as much as $10 billion in capital costs and significantly raise monthly electric bills. We do not believe this is the best use of our members’ energy dollars.

Although supporters of these efforts to expand solar energy claim the mandates could create thousands of new jobs, they do not seem to consider the very real job losses we would face when electricity costs skyrocket and businesses choose to relocate or expand outside of Minnesota.
Please join us in contacting your legislative representatives and ask them to oppose these costly proposals. Although we support the continued development of cost competitive renewable energy resources, we oppose additional energy mandates or expansion of the state’s renewable energy standard.

Sincerely,
Elaine J Garry, President & CEO
People’s Energy Cooperative
1775 Lake Shady Ave. S, Oronoco, MN 55960
(507)367-7000

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Nuff Said!

It’s been a long winter, at least by recent standards.  Shoveling every other day, warming up the car to get going, it’s all getting old.  That darn groundhog said spring was just around the corner.  Looks like a pretty big corner!

There are ways to round this corner, to make this corner time fly.  We pretend and envision, we prepare for that corner to turn.  It’s a bit a of mind warming we have to do.  I like to do these mind warming things.

One good thing is Tackle Box Night in the kitchen.  Any fisherman’s tackle box gets tangled and disorganized during the fishing season.  A night in the kitchen with this tackle box mess is pretty fine.  Hmmm… these wax worms have seen their better days, well they’re dead moths now.  Toss ‘em!  Sure got a bunch of hooks and leaders.  They start out in plastic bags, organized by size.  Then they escape as used.  Tuck ‘em back where they belong.

And in this mess, I find the lures from days gone by, like the Dare-devil spoons I got from my Dad’s tackle box.  They got hit by many a Northern Pike, the ones that made it back into the boat.  There’s a couple Rapalas, the wooden minnow that dances across the surface.  In this mess, I also find… the church key.  It’s a bottle opener and opens cans, too.   Mine has ‘Pabst Blue Ribbon’ engraved upon it.  Probably older than me!  It’s good to have a couple bottles of beer, ones with a top that cannot be twisted off, along for a day of fishing.

I have fishing stringers, stringers to gather your catch, in this tackle box.  Most times they are not real strained.  A good picture will have a stringer full of the day’s catch.

Tackle box night is best done with friends, who also long for ‘The Opener’.  We can all tell our fishing tales.  Boy, do we have big fish in our tales!

So the tales of fishing, while organizing our tackle boxes, will help us turn the corner to spring.  And then, the new tales begin.
Nuff said!

by Mark Sannes