Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts

Monday, September 23, 2013

Utilities Want Solar Customers to Pay More

Their argument: The few (homes with solar power) are being subsidized by the many (everyone else).



"People with solar panels on their roofs often get a pretty good price break on their energy bills.
Too good, some utilities say.

Now, utilities in several states—including the country's sunniest, California and Arizona—are trying to do something about it.

Here's the issue: For most homes, solar panels don't generate all the power the residents use. At night and on cloudy days, and sometimes even on sunny days, these homes draw power from the grid that serves all a utility's customers. But at other times, the panels generate more power than the home is using, and that surplus power flows into the grid.
Under state rules known as net metering, customers are credited on their bills for any power that flows from their homes to the grid, usually at the same rate they pay when they draw power from the grid. 

So, customers with solar panels not only are buying less electricity from their utilities, but also are able to offset much of the cost of what they do buy.

The utilities say solar customers are paying so little that they don't cover their share of the cost of maintaining the grid, which they still rely on. That drives up costs for nonsolar customers, utilities say, and they warn that the burden will grow as the number of solar customers continues to swell.
Solar companies and their customers deny that people with solar panels aren't paying their share of utility costs, and argue that rooftop solar systems benefit utility grids by relieving demand and providing extra power. Cutting incentives would reduce the appeal of solar energy, they say, depriving the grid of some of that additional power, blunting the environmental benefits of solar power and hurting the young, fast-growing industry."

Continue Reading

 Ms. Sweet is a Wall Street Journal staff reporter in San Francisco. She can be reached at cassandra.sweet@wsj.com.

A version of this article appeared September 23, 2013, on page R3 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Utilities Seek to Raise Bills for Solar Customers.

Monday, October 10, 2011

Gov. Jerry Brown signs Dream Act for state's illegal immigrants

No other Country or State in the world takes money from it's legal citizens and rewards illegal immigrants. Struggling Californian students life just became a little harder this past weekend when Gov. Jerry Brown signed the Dream Act for state's illegal immigrants. The new laws allow illegal immigrants full access to public and private money that once was reserved for legal citizens.

This is after all just another back door attempt at rewarding those who break the immigration laws of the USA. The argument goes like this it's not the children's fault that their parents broke the law, pay for their education. Oh wait you have a degree but are not allowed to work, we would not want to waste all of that money we spent on educating the illegal students. The last step in the plan is that they plan to ask for full citizenship for students and their extend families.

Some have made the argument that perhaps we should also then give ill-gotten gains from other types of criminals to their children after all it's not their fault that daddy was a drug dealer . While others think it will begin the next Californian gold rush. After all who would not want not only a free University degree for their children but also citizenship for their family while not having to be troubled with applying and going through that normal citizenship process.

Gov. Jerry Brown signs Dream Act for state's illegal immigrants
John and Ken: John and Ken's blog postings.

Jerry Brown has signed the Illegal Alien CA Dream Act!
John and Ken: John and Ken's blog postings.

Saturday, May 8, 2010

USA National Train Day

Discover the Rail Way. On May 8, 2010, the 3rd Annual National Train Day will be a FREE coast-to-coast celebration. Don't miss out on your chance to tour private and Amtrak train cars, explore interactive and educational exhibits, enjoy live entertainment and much more!

USA National Train Day Events:
800 N. Alameda Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012
11:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
FREE!
  • The Railroad Braceros Exhibit*†
  • Train Equipment Displays*‡
  • Model Train Displays*
  • AmtraKids Depot Go-Green Express: Eco Exhibit*
  • National Park Service Trails & Rails Exhibit*
  • Snapshot Station
  • Trains Move our Economy Exhibit*
  • Amtrak: Dining the Rail Way* exhibit and culinary demonstrations, featuring Chef Marcel Lagnaz
  • Amtrak Brand Display - Enjoy the journey®*
  • Amtrak California: A Winning Partnership*
  • Live performances by the USC Trojan Marching Band and Playhouse Disney's Choo-Choo Soul with Genevieve!
  • Appearance by California Gold’s Huell Howser

Friday, April 30, 2010

PG&E Details Smart Meter Problems


"Pacific Gas and Electric admitted that there are problems with some smart meters, although it said almost none of those problems had to do with accuracy.

The California utility was taken to task by state lawmakers on Monday over smart meter complaints. Regulators have received nearly 1,000 complaints that smart meter installations have caused spikes in billing prices, but PG&E said that only eight of the nearly 5.5 million digital meters had to be replaced because of "accuracy issues.

Although only a handful have been inaccurate, about 43,000 smart meters installed since 2007 have had other problems, including installation errors or transmission failures, Helen Burt, PG&E's vice president and chief customer officer, told the senators during the hearing."

Read the full story by KATHERINE TWEED at greentechmedia.com

Monday, April 5, 2010

California businesses hope going "green" will put them in the black.

CNN's Casey Wian reports on how some California businesses hope going "green" will put them in the black. Check out Green Wave Energy Corp.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Russian ambassador urges Schwarzenegger to save Fort Ross

Stunned upon learning that California might close Fort Ross, the Russian government dispatched its ambassador to the United States, Sergey Kislyak, to urge Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to save the picturesque wooden outpost from the state's budget guillotine.

"It's not my job to tell the government of California what to do with its budget," he said while touring the fort-turned-park Thursday. "But this place is wonderful proof that the U.S. and Russia have had a very rich, largely positive shared history. We would like to see it remain open."

The ambassador stopped short of offering cash to maintain the fort, which loses about $800,000 annually. No decisions will be made, he said, until the state releases its closure list.

About 200,000 people visit Fort Ross each year, many of them Russians seeking signs of an earlier Russian foray into California. The park is the 77th most visited in California.

Visitors on Tuesday said they wouldn't mind if the Russian government helped keep Fort Ross open.


Read more

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Is Dry Wall the Next Chinese Import Scandal?


Homeowners claim toxic drywall imported from China is endangering their health and the value of their houses. Beck is among hundreds of homeowners in Florida alleging that toxic levels of chemical pollutants such as sulfur are issuing from contaminated drywall made in some Chinese factories. At least four class-action lawsuits have been filed in Florida; others have been filed in California, Louisiana and Alabama.

read more | digg story

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

California Planning for Alternative Fuel Highway

SAN FRANCISCO – Soon after Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) took office in 2003, he set in motion a campaign promise to build, by 2010, a "hydrogen highway" composed of 150 to 200 fueling stations spaced every 20 miles along California's major highways.

Schwarzenegger's "Vision 2010" plan promised that every California motorist would have access to hydrogen fuel by the end of the decade. He has since repeatedly mentioned the highway in a standard stump speech on his environmental accomplishments.

But the program has fallen short of expectations. With less than 10 months until the end of the decade, only 24 hydrogen fueling stations are operating in California, most of them near Los Angeles.

The vision of a hydrogen infrastructure, with fueling stations dotting the interstates, has not materialized, partly because the eager governor may have set unrealistic targets.

read more | digg story

15000 join KFI talk show hosts in California tax protest


They're revolting in Fullerton. Families with children, bikers, seniors, pirates - by the thousands descended on a Fullerton bar Saturday to join talk show hosts John Kobylt and Ken Chiampou of KFI in protesting tax increases recently approved in Sacramento. Police estimated that over 8,000 people came to the Slidebar Café in downtown Fullerton to listen to The John & Ken Show.

"I expected a lot and it was way more than I expected," said co-host John Kobylt.
The talk show hosts put forward an ambitious goal for their Tax Revolt 2009 live broadcast that ran for more than three hours.

"The purpose is to vote down Prop 1A on May 19 because it's a two-year tax extension," said Kobylt. "The purpose is to tell people how their Republican legislators lie about their votes. The purpose is to get support to recall Schwarzennegger, (Assemblyman) Anthony Adams, (Assemblyman) Jeff Miller, and everybody else."

READ MORE AT THE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER


Saturday, December 20, 2008

If You Rescue Someone You May Get Sued!

Would-be heroes were warned by the retarded California Supreme Court on Thursday that they could be liable for damages if they inadvertently injure a person while attempting a rescue. In a 4-3 ruling, the high court held that a state statute immunizing rescuers from liability applies only if the individual is providing medical care in an emergency situation. It doesn't apply when Good Samaritans accidently cause injuries while, for example, pulling someone out of a burning house or diving into swirling waters to save a drowning swimmer.

read more | digg story

Saturday, October 25, 2008

California foreclosures spike 228%


A new law mandating delays in foreclosure actions may create a fleeting lull, but observers wonder whether it will lead to widespread mortgage workouts.

Reporting from Sacramento and Washington -- The number of people losing their homes in California hit a record high of nearly 80,000 in the last three months, but a new state law appears to be dramatically slowing the foreclosure process -- at least for now.

Loan default notices, the first step toward foreclosure, fell to 94,240 for the three months that ended Sept. 30. That's down sharply from the record 121,673 for the previous quarter, according to research firm MDA DataQuick.

read more | digg story

Thursday, July 31, 2008

California to be wiped off Russia’s map

Source: Pravda.Ru

Deputies of Russia’s Nizhni Novgorod region intend to liquidate several settlements in the region, including the village of California.

Vladimir Gryzhin, an official of the Sechenovsky district, where the village is situated, said that the village of California was a deserted settlement, which had absolutely no perspectives for development since there was not even a power line in California.

Another official of the district, Vladimir Osokin, advised Gryzhin should ask the US Senate for help to recreate California.

California’s last residents moved to the village of Lipovka in the beginning of the 1990s. Nevertheless, the village of California was left on the map and still has its zip code, Lenta.ru reports.

There are several variants to explain the existence of the settlement with such an unusual name in Russia. One of them says that a local landowner visited the USA in the second half of the 19th century and subsequently renamed one of his villages to California.