The Star Beacon; Ashtabula, Ohio

Local News

November 23, 2009

Wind turbines to lower school, city electric bills

CONNEAUT — The Board of Education, and later City Council, approved separate agreements Monday night that authorized construction of energy-producing wind turbines.

“It's a historic day for Conneaut,” said school board member Nicholas Iarocci, prior to the board's unanimous approval of an agreement with NexGen Energy, a Boulder, Colo., company that will erect a 600 kW turbine behind Conneaut Middle School.

A short time later, City Council voted 7-0 on a similar pact that will put a 400 kW generator adjacent to the city's waste water treatment plant.

The CMS turbine will produce enough electricity to handle 60 percent of the building's needs, officials have said. The machine at the sewage treatment plant will create a smaller amount.

NexGen will design, engineer, construct and install the turbines at no cost to the school district or city. In return, the recipients have agreed to purchase electricity cranked out by the machines for 10 years. Also, the city and school district must pay a $9,500 good faith fee to NexGen that will be refunded via energy credits after five years.

The participants are hopeful the turbine-produced power will ultimately cost less than comparable energy from FirstEnergy. The school district's annual electric bill runs into the six figures, while the waste water plant is one of the city's biggest electricity users, officials have said.

The school board contract still needs “some minor tinkering,” but all the proper language should be in place by the end of the week, Iarocci said.

Law Director Lori Lamer, at the council meeting, said the city's contract also needs some additional verbiage regarding liability and insurance. The extra language won't cost the city any money in insurance premiums, she said.

"We're not getting anything in the contract that wasn't already in place," Lamer said.

NexGen officials have said they hoped the turbines, which will sit atop towers around 150 feet tall — or higher — could be in place by spring. The company is anxious to proceed, Iarocci said.

Absent from the meeting was Superintendent Kent Houston, who is recovering from an illness that developed last week. Houston, hospitalized out of the area, returned home Sunday to recuperate, said Sonny Heinonen, board president.

“It was a very serious illness,” Heinonen said. “(Houston) is having some rough times. But he's on the mend.”

In the place of the usual superintendent report, principals at all four Conneaut schools reported on recent activities in their buildings.

Monday night's regular school board meeting was attended by many members of the Conneaut Classified Employees Association, the union that represents the district's non-teaching workers. The CCEA and the board are negotiating a new contract to replace the pact that expired at the end of June. A federal mediator is assisting the talks, which have bogged down, union officials said earlier this month.

Members recently authorized its officers to notify the state of its intent to strike. CCEA members, who squeezed into the board room and spilled out into the corridor, wore badges that said “Fair and equitable contract” and “we matter too!”

Board members acknowledged the visitors, thanking them for their good work on behalf of Conneaut students. After adjourning the regular meeting, the board went into executive session to discuss contract negotiation, presumably the CCEA pact

Text Only
Local News
  • mn friday suicide2.jpg Murder suspect kills self at mother’s grave

     Madison Township police officers found the body of a murder suspect in the Alexander Harper Cemetery on Thursday afternoon, ending a day-long, multi-county manhunt.

    February 10, 2012 2 Photos

  • cef friday brown press.jpg Presses stopped

    It was June 23, 1969.

    February 10, 2012 3 Photos

  • Airport takes off with a new name

     A new name for the Ashtabula County Airport is winding its way through the regulatory channels.

    February 10, 2012

  • Property owners must pay for meth labs in Jefferson

    An ordinance requiring landowners to pay for the clean-up costs of clandestine drug labs was unanimously adopted by Village Council.

    February 10, 2012

  • Elections board gets help with time-consuming tasks

     A Xenia company specializing in election services will take on some time-consuming tasks that should help contain the Ashtabula County Board of Elections’ labor costs, members said.

    February 10, 2012

  • Commissioners pay to get the business

    Commissioners on Tuesday approved a $15,000 contract with Growth Partnership for Ashtabula County to provide business service representation on behalf of the county’s One-Stop job training center.

    February 10, 2012

  • cef thursday spell bee winn.jpg Grand Valley sixth grader wins Ashtabula County Spelling Bee

    James Elliott, a sixth grader at Grand Valley Middle School, clinched his win of the 29th annual Ashtabula County Area V Spelling Bee by successfully spelling the words “physique” and “daffodil.”

    February 9, 2012 2 Photos

  • Sports, academics to come together

     SPIRE Institute will expand its educational base and accept international students into its sports performance programs through a partnership with the Andrews Osborne Academy, Ted Meekma, SPIRE management team member, announced Wednesday.

    February 9, 2012

  • Conneaut Chamber lauds top citizen, ‘Champions’

     Nicholas Iarocci, Conneaut’s 2011 Citizen of the Year, needed plenty of gulps of water to complete his acceptance speech Tuesday night.

    February 9, 2012

  • Felony charge filed in robbery

     An Ashtabula woman who police said grabbed a woman’s purse inside a Conneaut supermarket late Monday afternoon faces a felony charge in Conneaut Municipal Court, according to reports.

    February 9, 2012

Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
House Ads
AP Video