Community Forum wed April 15 noon-2 p.m. Louise Lowry Davis Community
Center, 1232 De la Vina St. Santa Barbara FREE
https://www.facebook.com/LWVSB League of Woman Voters Santa
Barbara
Is this the Time to Establish a CCA to Provide Local Clean Energy?
A Community Choice Aggregation (CCA) is an agency set up to buy
electricity with a high percentage of green energy for the power company
to supply to an area's customers. Customers have the ability to choose
this source or the power company mix. Our April Forum will explain this
new concept.
Our speakers for the forum will include
Jeffery Litten of the Community Environmental Council, the lead
organization in the local CCA effort;
Joe Galliani of the newest California CCA forming, South Bay Clean
Energy, and County
Supervisor Salud Carbajal or County Supervisor Janet Wolf.
The April 15 forum will be held from noon to 2 p.m. at the Louise Lowry
Davis Community Center, 1232 De la Vina St. It is free and open to the
public. Bring a brown bag lunch and beverages and desserts will be
provided. Parking behind the center is free during the forum.
There are a number of reasons to be interested in moving now to green
sustainable sources of electricity. The major reason for most Americans
is to respond to climate change with costs and effects that only increase
drastically with time. Local action is especially important given the
limited ability of the federal government to respond. Surprisingly a
second reason is now economics.
Electricity with a high percentage of green energy is now being supplied
by California CCAs 4 to 5% cheaper than electricity from the utilities.
Cities and ratepayers can save money and at the same time put CCA profits
into local jobs in energy efficiency, solar, and green energy projects
which are decided upon locally.
California is behind several other states in developing CCAs, but they
have now been formed in Marin and Sonoma Counties in the north and are
being formed in Lancaster and six coastal towns of Orange and LA counties
in the south
. The state has mandated that local governments have a plan for reducing
greenhouse gases (GHGs) and a first milestone is in 2020. CCAs have been
suggested as being an important part of several plans, but CCAs have not
been acted on by either the county or the SB county cities.
A stumbling block to a local CCA formation has been the several million
dollar setup cost and the need for a vote on a bond to fund this. The
existing California CCAs above have been able to pay off the bonds in
several years and still supply higher percentages of green electricity at
4 to 5% less cost than the power companies. Is this the time to educate
the public and seriously consider a local CCA to meet the 2020 GHG
milestones?
(805) 962-2571
P.O. Box 92156, Santa Barbara, CA 93190
margie@sbpermaculture.org
http://www.sbpermaculture.org
P
Please consider the
environment before printing this email