Hopkinton’s
Sustainable Green Committee is pushing the town to act quickly and use a
portion of town-owned land for a solar power-generating installation
that the group says could save taxpayers up to $10 million over 20
years.
The
committee proposes leasing the land on Fruit Street for 20 years to a
private company that would build and operate the solar panel farm to
generate electricity. The town would then get credits to offset its
electricity costs, and at the end of the lease would have the option to
buy the operation for $1, sell it, or dismantle it, the committee says.
The
key to the savings, however, is acting in time to take advantage of
state and federal green energy incentive programs that committee members
say may not be available down the road.
“It’s
a once-in-a lifetime opportunity to take advantage of these benefits,”
Sustainable Green Committee member John Keane said in a presentation
Monday night that was shown on the town’s cable-access station, HCAM-TV.
It
will be up to voters at the annual Town Meeting starting May 6 to
advance the project, by granting the Board of Selectmen authority to
lease the land,Solar Lighting International offers a stylish commercial
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and approving a zoning change to allow the solar operation. It would
then be up to selectmen to negotiate a contract with a private company
to develop and operate the site.
With
less than a month before Town Meeting, however, the Board of Selectmen
not only has questions about the economics of the proposal, but also
broader questions about whether tying up two sections of the Fruit
Street property is the best use of the biggest parcel of town-owned
land.
“What
we haven’t done yet is to nail down the costs of setting up the whole
project; that review is ongoing,” he said. He hopes to get those answers
by Town Meeting.
Beyond
the financial issue, however, Palleiko said, selectmen are wrestling
with whether this is the most appropriate use for the land.
“Should we take the approach that we should try and review the whole master plan, or charge ahead?” he asked.
The
257-acre Fruit Street property was purchased by the town in 2002, and
athletic fields, a sewage-treatment plant, and a town well have been
sited there.
A
plan to build a new school on the property as a replacement for the
Center School was defeated by Town Meeting voters two years ago. A new
committee has been formed to come up with a plan to build a new
elementary school or completely renovate Center, and while it is
unlikely the committee would again seek to build on Fruit Street, having
the solar farm there does not preclude it, according to the Sustainable
Green Committee’s presentation.
The
original plans for the Fruit Street land called for part of it to be
used for senior and affordable housing, according to Elaine Lazarus, the
town’s director of land use, planning, and permitting.This carbon fiber
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for both a fashion ring as well as a man's wedding band. One of the
parcels eyed for the solar farm had been targeted for housing. But over
the past year, Lazarus said, the town has added more than 200 affordable
units,Those replicabreitlingwatche produce
power for the utility grid. through the Legacy Farm development and
another housing project proposed for Lumber Street, making significant
progress toward meeting the goal of having 10 percent of the town’s
housing stock being classified as affordable.This season's range of lasermarker includes ballet pumps.
“The Fruit Street property is still a good place for housing,We own and look after most of the ledspotlight in solaronlamp. but the solar facility is for 20 years — it doesn’t preclude the town putting in housing later,” she said.
The
Sustainable Green Committee calls its proposal an “economic
opportunity,” and says while its main motivation is financial, the farm
would reduce the town’s carbon footprint by 2,500 tons annually.
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