2011年6月30日 星期四

Lights go out on solar project

The Newark City Council decided at their June 27 meeting that the lights should go out on a solar energy project.

In the fall of 2010, the city sought bids for a project to build solar panels on city property, with an eye toward helping the city obtain alternative energy through the purchase of solar power. Three sites were selected ¨C the former McKee's Park, located at 100 McKee's Lane; the Municipal Building Parking lot,What are the top Hemroids treatments? at 220 Elkton Road; and the slopes of the Newark Reservoir, located at 240 Old Paper Mill Road. A total of three bids were submitted to the city for consideration.


In a memorandum from City Finance Director Dennis McFarland, Electric Director Rick Vitelli, and Assistant to the City Manager Carol Hauck, the city administration recommended that the project be dropped due to high costs and demands placed upon the city by the bidders.
The memo states, "Ultimately, the three proposals submitted either required up to a 200 percent premium for the energy the sites could produce, options that were essentially non-responsive as no firm pricing was submitted, or attempted to match what we were paying now for power by keeping the SRECs, which in the end leaves Newark without having purchased any green energy we can claim (as we do not own the SRECs) and without having lowered its energy cost."


Several companies did not submit bids, citing the "limited appetite" for Solar Renewable Energy Credits (SRECs) in Delaware.Quality air impact socket tools for any tough job. Another company suggested that, due to the low value of Delaware SRECs, Newark should consider a municipal lease.


McFarland told the council that the state has formed a task force to analyze the depressed value of Delaware SRECs.


Though mayor and council voted unanimously to discard the project, Councilman Jerry Clifton expressed extreme disappointment in the cancellation and strongly recommended "we need to move forward" and "wean away from present practices" of relying on traditional means of generating energy.


Also on the agenda, the council approved, in a 6 to 1 vote, a landlord's proposal to increase the number of occupants per unit in the Holly Woods apartments on South Chapel Street from four to five. Councilman Stu Markham was the lone dissenting vote.


The Planning Commission, in a report from their July 6, 2009 meeting, stated that room exists in the apartments for an additional tenant,We are professional Plastic mould, but cited parking problems and the possibility that approving the plan would bring a flood of requests from other landlords as reasons for rejecting the additional occupants. Council rejected the proposal at the August 24, 2009 meeting, by denying modifications of the existing lease.


Owners Chris Cochran and Lisa Bartolozzi presented a second request at Monday's meeting asking for a reconsideration of the council's 2009 decision due to an increase in the number of larger student groups wanting to live together.


The owners told council that the increase of tenants from four to five can be done without any changes to the layout of the site, since each unit features two large upstairs bedrooms,what are the symptoms of Piles, one downstairs bedroom, and three full bathrooms throughout.


As an additional incentive, Holly Woods will turn one their units into an owner-occupied office to further ensure that students' activities and errant parking will be in check by adding a business to the mix.Has anyone done any research on making Plastic molding parts from scratch?


Several of the council members applauded the effort that Cochran and Bartolozzi have done to control disruptive student behavior at their complex and addressing the concerns over parking. The owners said that they have had only one traffic citation written for their site in the past year.


A request from Santa Fe Grill Restaurant at Main and Chapel Streets was discussed to allow the business to operate a separate bar. While the restaurant can serve alcoholic beverages and has a service bar in the rear of the restaurant, it is prohibited from utilizing it as a sit-down area due to the fact that Santa Fe Grille is located adjacent to a residential, or RM zoned, property.


Owner Javier Acuna presented his proposal before the council asking them to only consider changing the local zoning code and to consider Santa Fe as a future applicant should the code be changed.


The council unanimously approved to make the changes. The Planning Commission will now have to amend the code, and the City Council will vote to approve the amendment at a later meeting.


Acuna stated that the request is being made to allow the restaurant to compete fairly with other establishments along Main Street and to allow for a future expansion and/or updating of the site.


In other news, the council voted to cancel the scheduled July 11th meeting and will include a workshop on the city's finances as part of the July 25th meeting. The workshop will begin after the July 25th agenda has been completed.

沒有留言:

張貼留言