How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page
How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page
Lake County News,California
  • Home
    • Registration Form
  • News
    • Education
    • Veterans
    • Community
      • Obituaries
      • Letters
      • Commentary
    • Police Logs
    • Business
    • Recreation
    • Health
    • Religion
    • Legals
    • Arts & Life
    • Regional
  • Calendar
  • Contact us
    • FAQs
    • Phones, E-Mail
    • Subscribe
  • Advertise Here
  • Login

Letters

Wallace: Acknowledgment of support for National Crime Victims

Details
Written by: Deborah Wallace
Published: 21 April 2011
The Lake County District Attorney’s Office, Victim-Witness Division would like to say “thank you” to all the agencies that helped facilitate all the events that took place during the week of April 10-16, 2011, National Crime Victims’ Rights Week.


A special thanks to Annie Barnes of the Sunrise Special Services Foundation for generously providing the funding for the Victim-Witness barbecue to honor law enforcement and all service providers that assist crime victim’s throughout the year.


We would also like to thank Sunrise Special Services, Inter -Tribal Council of California, Lake Family Resource Center and Victim-Witness for their collaboration on coordinating and setting up three individual trainings on “Reshaping the Future and Honoring the Past.”


The Lake County Office of Education, the Lake County Children’s Council and the Lake County Child Care Planning Council did an excellent job planning the successful event at Library Park called “Lake County Cares for Kids.”


Deborah Wallace is program administrator for the Lake County District Attorney Victim-Witness Division, based in Lakeport, Calif.

Montoliu: Not leaders but managers

Details
Written by: Raphael Montoliu
Published: 14 April 2011
This is an open letter to Speaker of the House John Boehner.


It seems that the Republican party has decided, while under the influence of some extremist, radical right-wing ideology, to embody evil in all its forms, from the war on women to the war on the working class and the environment ... even wolves do not escape your dark agendas.


More people than you can possibly imagine understand the “good cop/bad cop” games the two parties indulge in to confuse and divide the American people along completely phony and forever shifting ideological lines, while providing equal support for the military-industrial-corporate-banking

complex.


Your masters indeed pull your strings while you distract the public with the circus acts you call governing, which are pitifully pathetic and more obscene than any known act of prostitution.


Give it up, and no longer call yourselves members of a government. Instead call yourselves managers, as the actual agenda of both parties is to manage the affairs of the military-industrial-corporate-banking complex while screwing the people of America, whom you obviously despise.


Raphael Montoliu lives in Lakeport, Calif.

Felperin: Solar makes better financial sense than SmartMeters

Details
Written by: Dan Felperin
Published: 13 April 2011
One of the most frequent complaints I’ve heard about these new fangled (wireless) SmartMeters is that the customer’s electric bill has significantly increased from past billings.


How can that be? Is our regulated utility stealing from its customers?


It appears the answer is simple (NO!); but nonetheless tough to swallow. It seems that customers with old-style gear-driven (dumb) meters in many instances (obviously “many” evidenced by the large number of reported bill increases) have been aging overtime and as a result have slowed down according to meter reader sources.


When one considers the escalating, five-tiered electric rate structure and limited baseline kW-hr allotments, an affected customer with a newly installed (and finely calibrated) SmartMeter would likely see a significant increase in their electric costs since they would have historically been paying less for what they have actually used!


If you don’t like SmartMeters then that is even more reason to consider solar.


When you sign up for net metering (spinning your meter backwards), the utility installs a bidirectional meter calibrated roughly to +/- 2 percent accuracy.


There is currently no type of SmartMeter that can reliably spin both ways and track (peak, partial-peak and off-peak) times. Therefore the grid-tied solar customer-generator must have a hardwired (semi-smart) meter manually recorded monthly by a utility employee (job saving).


My sources tell me that it will be at least a couple of years before they can develop, test and deploy analogous (not analog) bidirectional (time-of-use) SmartMeters … or maybe not. Today, however, solar technology makes real (dollar) sense.


It is now very doable to swap your utility payment for no down payment (own the system); receive federal tax credits and accelerated equipment depreciation (businesses only).


What is the catch, you may ask? The property owner (or long-term lessee) must qualify for the loan (i.e. current on the taxes/mortgage payments). The solar loan payment is essentially covered by the monthly PG&E savings (maybe even positive cash flow)! Grid-tied solar photovoltaic is now a very affordable, clean energy technology that locks in lower electricity rates and high rates of return for the projected (30+)-year system life.


Dan (the Solar Man) Felperin lives in Cobb, Calif.

Glasser: PG&E crossing the line on SmartMeters

Details
Written by: Howard Glasser
Published: 12 April 2011
I'd be interested to know where a public utility company or state regulatory agency could be found guilty of breaching public trust, committing fraud, violating consumer rights and inappropriate and unethical conduct that falls short of the business standards most agencies and businesses are otherwise held to when it has deliberately manipulated and misled the print and broadcast media resulting in a misinformed general public.


No matter how sheltered the California Public Utilities Commission may be, does this excuse it from abiding by the law where its actions would otherwise be judged as criminal?


Here of some examples of Pacific Gas & Electric's inexcusable transgressions where they have violated the public's sacred trust:


1. Pointing media to the PG&E Web site which had stated that 39,000 SmartMeters had been installed in Lake County when at that point in time, only 2,500 meters had actually been installed.


2. Declaring a “delay installation” list that customers can be placed on through the PG&E SmartMeter phone line and then ignoring the list and not enforcing it when it comes to SmartMeter installations.


3. Leading the public to believe that an opt-out position would be considered or provided down the line for those customers who choose to opt-out while concurrently beefing up installations of SmartMeters so that by the time this provision was there, it would be moot since the entire deployment would be considered “mission accomplished.” That's a shell game.


Regardless of the code that the CPUC cites as its operating guidelines, it’s clear that the CPUC is using its mandate as a shield to defend the commission against allegations that could hold water in court.


In matters where it can be shown that the public trust, health and welfare are disregarded and a state regulatory agency yields to industry’s demands while ignoring the people that it is chartered with protecting, I would think that the law provides recourse against such abuses of power.


No matter what the circumstances, the CPUC cannot hold itself above the law and where ethical and legal lines have been crossed, they should be held accountable to the people of California.


Howard Glasser lives in Kelseyville, Calif.

  1. Inomata: Japan expresses gratitude to people of California
  2. Stark: Time to put SmartMeters in perspective
  3. Berry: Kelseyville Presbyterian Women enjoyed successful rummage sale
  • 254
  • 255
  • 256
  • 257
  • 258
  • 259
  • 260
  • 261
  • 262
  • 263
How to resolve AdBlock issue?
Refresh this page