Advocates Pitch Community Solar To State Lawmakers. Some Say No

Advocates of community solar in West Virginia told members of the Joint Energy Committee Monday that enabling it would lower utility bills and create jobs.

Representatives from the solar power industry spoke to state lawmakers Monday about a community solar bill they’d like to see enacted.

Many states have the option of community solar, where residents can receive solar power without having to put panels on their rooftops.

Advocates of community solar in West Virginia told members of the Joint Energy Committee Monday that enabling it would lower utility bills and create jobs.

“So on day one, every subscriber to a community solar project is saving money and doing it at no risk to the customer,” said Richard Caperton, vice president of policy and market development at Arcadia, a community solar company. “They can leave it at any time.”

Caperton said West Virginia’s neighbors are embracing the concept.

“We’ve got very progressive states and we’ve got red states,” he said. And I look at our neighbors, just to the east in Virginia, where (Republican) Gov. (Glenn) Youngkin has made community solar and expanding community solar a part of his energy plan for the state.”

Adam Edelen, the founder and CEO of Edelen Renewables and the former auditor of Kentucky, said he’d be willing to invest hundreds of millions of dollars in community solar in West Virginia.

“Because the truth of the matter is, there’s nothing more compelling than a green energy project in a coal producing state,” he said.

Some lawmakers from coal-producing counties said they’d fight it.

“I’ve got a bag of pixie dust for you. It’s actually coal, OK,” said Republican Sen. Rupie Phillips of Logan County. “The sun don’t always shine. So what do you do? You’ve got so many coal-fired power plants have shut down because of this fairy tale story.”

Caperton said a variety of sources of power can support the grid.

“We are also seeing community solar projects with storage added to address that specific question,” he said.

Storage batteries that will soon be made here in West Virginia.

Dan Conant, founder and CEO of Solar Holler, told lawmakers that an individual subscriber could save $450 a year. He added that the bill introduced last year could create 12,000 jobs over 10 years.

Nancy Bruns, executive chair of the Dickinson Group, told lawmakers that even coal companies are investing in community solar projects in places where their mines are out of production.

That way, she said, they can avoid having a stranded asset.

House Passes Bill Increasing Penalties for Littering

Lawmakers in the House have approved a bill that would increase the penalties for littering in the state.

Littering on public or private property in West Virginia is already a misdemeanor, but House Bill 2303 increases the fines and community service hours associated with it.  

Fines in the bill are subject to the amount of trash a person disposes of improperly and are decided by a judge. They range from 100 to ten thousand dollars. The maximum amount of community service hours also increases in the bill to 200 hours, with a minimum of 8 required.

Delegate Rupie Phillips of Logan County, the only Independent member of the state Legislature, is the lead sponsor of the littering bill. He said he feels the penalties are reasonable, but wishes they were even stronger.

“If I was in committee, I woulda stood stronger on a stiffer bottom dollar than where they went,” Phillips noted, “but like I said, we got a bill out, and it raised; the community service I mean, to go from just a few hours to possible 100 hours or possible 200 hours, I mean, just whatever. It’s just like I said, let’s just make West Virginia shine.”

The bill ultimately passed 95 to 3.

Delegate Phillips to Become Independent

Logan County Delegate Rupie Phillips will officially file his paperwork with the West Virginia Secretary of State’s office today to become the only “Independent” in the West Virginia Legislature.

Phillips was first elected to the House of Delegates in 2010 and was just re-elected in District 24 which includes parts of Boone, Logan and Wyoming counties as a Democrat.

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