Letters to the editor - December 11, 2014

Kudos for the beauty in town

We would like to thank all of our neighbors who contributed to the Salisbury/Lakeville Beautification Committee in 2014. Thanks to your generosity we were able to plant and maintain pansies in spring, a variety of annuals in summer and mums in the fall. We also want to thank Margie Vail, Gloria Miller, Stephanie Pellegrino and all the committee members for their help during each season. Our tireless plant maintenance person,  Alana Mulligan, deserves tremendous thanks for keeping everything watered and trimmed.

We would also like to invite anyone who is interested either in becoming a member of our committee or a volunteer during our planting times to write to Salisbury/Lakeville Beautification Committee, PO Box 118, Salisbury, CT 06068. You will enjoy learning about plant selection, window boxes and planters, and meeting a new group of friends who’ve been doing all this for many years.

Barbara Nicholls

Chany Wells

The Salisbury/Lakeville Beautification Committee

Salisbury

 

It was a great bazaar

Our enormous gratitude is owed to local businesses, farmers and friends who made possible the Good Brain Project and Faire Foods’ first annual Food For Thought Family Bazaar on Saturday, Nov. 22, at the Congregational Church of Salisbury. Propelled by the momentum of our first GoodBrainBody Time To Tri Mini-Triathlon in August, we endeavored the launch of a seasonal Spirit Festival that began on Veterans Day and continues through Dec. 5 with a raffle and Daily Dose discount series. It is our pleasure to provide as many opportunities to build a joyful, compassionate and conscientious town culture that celebrates a thriving economy rooted in a shared preservation land ethic that cultivates unity around good health, service to others and sustainable abundance. 

Special thanks for support of the Bazaar goes to Herondale Farms, Chaseholm Farm Creamery, Colin & Co Estate Sales, McEnroe Farm, Irving Farm Coffee Roasters, Labonne’s, Guido’s, Saperstein’s, When Pigs Fly in Sharon and a dozen other generous local business owners for powering the town’s first Farm to Table meal, earth-friendly and interactive shopping experiences, and a Toy Exchange program whose growth is already contributing to the development of young entrepreneurs who are entirely creative and enthusiastic about gaining financial independence when empowered to create their own unburdened solutions to social and economic “problems” that often baffle adults.

We look forward to providing our next institute and event series, Solstice Swing. It will be another opportunity to combine fitness, local food, fun and fine gifts that keep your dollars growing greatness near home. We encourage and invite Tri-corner community and local town committee members to transform their thoughts around economic development into active attendance of these and other local events that support a thriving community with a changing age demographic. We shall have the good fortune of keeping our area’s aging population vital the more we stimulate our young people to build their ethics and their businesses here as we join in re-imagining the business of doing sustainable, simple and just plain beautiful business. 

Liz Macaire

Athena Fliakos

Salisbury

 

Thanks from town employees

The volunteers from the Salisbury/Lakeville Beautification Committee were busily working along the main streets of Salisbury and Lakeville recently preparing for the holiday season.

They work quietly and without notice or fanfare, but the results of their work are clearly evident to those of us who pass through. From pansies in May through evergreens in the winter, their efforts enhance our everyday experiences of the beauty of living in Salisbury.

Their work is done with the assistance of a small budget from the town of Salisbury that they supplement with a fundraising appeal to purchase plants and materials. They volunteer their time.

Please join us in giving this committee and its devoted members a big “thank you” for the wonderful job that they so selflessly perform. And perhaps, if the holiday spirit so moves you, make a small donation to them. Happy holidays!

Rachel Lamb

Patty Williams

Emily Egan

Kayla Johnson

Jean Bell

Nancy Brusie

Joe Cleaveland

Curtis Rand

Salisbury Town Hall Employees

Salisbury

 

SWSA Swap again a success

Salisbury Winter Sports Association would like to thank everyone who donated and purchased equipment at our annual Ski and Skate Swap this past Saturday. The proceeds of the sale will again help to underwrite downhill ski programs in the surrounding schools that use Mohawk Mountain in Cornwall and Catamount Ski Area in Hillsdale. We are happy to be giving financial assistance to five area schools in Connecticut as well as one in New York.

Our appreciation to the members of the Lakeville Hose Company for the use of their wonderful facility which makes our event so easy to make successful. Hope to see everyone again next year!

Ken Barker, President

Salisbury Winter Sports Association

Salisbury

 

Too many solar installers exaggerate savings to customers

I consider myself fortunate to be involved in the residential solar electric (PV) business, which is flourishing in Connecticut due to historically low component costs and (let’s face it) our high cost of electricity. Solar PV works well here and sensibly crafted lease and financing programs ensure that its benefits are not only for the wealthy. 

So I am distressed to see installers touting solar PV on the basis of numbers that are, to put it kindly, exaggerated. I know this because I am often asked (fair disclosure: I am a solar installer, Litchfield Hills Solar) to review the proposals of competitors.

The key number is how much you pay for electricity, which should be about 16.4 cents per kilowatt hour (kwh) if from CL&P, at least until the approved rate hike kicks in. (This is calculated by subtracting the meter charge, usually $16, from the month’s total billed; then divide by the number of kwh used. All this information is on your bill.) You may be paying more or less if you have chosen an alternate supplier; if so you should regularly check your bill and compare it to the CL&P rate (go to www.energizect.com/compare-energy-suppliers). I have seen proposals of others based on a present rate of 20 cents per kwh, even when the customer is paying nearly 4 cents less. This makes the savings from solar look great; unfortunately, those savings will never materialize.

Another easy number to fudge is the anticipated annual increase in the cost of electricity over the life of the system (more than 30 years). Reputable installers follow the lead of CEFIA (the Clean Energy Finance and Investment Authority, aka the Green Bank) in pegging it at 2.99 percent. Of course, it could be more or less, but keeping it uniform allows customers to compare apples to apples. Less reputable installers assume a higher rate, again, to make their proposals look better.

There are other tricks: Some installers use optimal shading conditions to calculate system efficiency, which incentive dollars are based on. Their fine print disclaimers say that the final numbers may not be as proposed; of course, they will be less but customers may not notice until pressed to sign a contract. I could go on but you get the idea: One can bury a mountain of misleading data in a 20-page proposal; in fact, there is no reason a solar proposal should be more than one page. (And there is certainly no need to waste an entire page touting environmental benefits!) 

What to do? I have a list of “10 Rules for Purchasing Solar.” Rule 4 is “Always get a second estimate.” At the very least make sure your proposals are based on numbers that are correct for you. And go even further: report dishonest proposals to CEFIA or the Better Business Bureau. Let’s make sure our installers remain honest brokers in a reputable industry, one that doesn’t require the flim-flam of siding salesmen to make it successful. 

Ray Furse

Warren

 

Thanks for the childcare support

The Second Annual Falls Village Day Care Silent Auction was a brilliant success! The children are getting so excited for their new playground. We would like to thank our extended community for providing auction items for bidding and our sponsors for supporting our event. This auction would not have been possible without support from the entire community.

We encourage you to please extend a thank you to our generous donors and sponsors the next time you patronize their business. Sponsors of the auction included Associated Lightning Rod, Churchill Building Company, Dave’s Tire and Auto Repair, Double R Spray Foam Insulation, Herrington’s, Gregory M. Riley, Noble House, Northwest Realty Executives Tami Reid and Bob Riva, Segalla’s Construction, Sharon Country Inn.

We hope to see you all again next year!

Heather Mechare, for the FVDC board of directors

Falls Village

 

Is there a cemetery Grinch in Sharon?

Now is the season for hearts and minds to turn to the great themes of peace on earth and good tidings to all humankind. It is more than a particular season. It is a state of mind that permeates our lives. So we look with a bit of surprise when an opposite spirit seeks to penetrate this feeling of goodwill. Small as it may appear to be, such mean-spiritedness apparently raised its head at the Sharon East Side Cemetery on West Cornwall Road this past week.

An annual holiday wreath was bought at the Roaring Oaks Florist in Sharon on Dec. 3 and placed at the front gate of the cemetery that afternoon. By 10 a.m. the following morning, the wreath was missing. Was it stolen? Who would steal such an item from the land of spirits past? A report to the State Police in North Canaan was reported, Case No. 1400750534, followed by the issuing of an all-points bulletin in the hopes of finding the perpetrator of this meanness.

Is there an unscrupulous Grinch in our midst who wants to steal away the Holiday Spirit by running off with presents, or trees or wreaths? But maybe this Grinch of Christmas present will become the reformed Grinch of Christmas past and return all that has been taken away.

Glenn Dennis

 

Sharon

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