Greener days ahead for Northwestern

WINSTED — The Region 7 School District is only days away from permanently flicking the switch to a greener energy footprint.

The district’s solar panel project is expected to be completed by the end of this week, and the system should be online and producing energy for the Battistoni Drive campus by the end of this month.

“We’re about 97 percent done,� Region 7 Superintendent Clint Mongomery told The Journal Monday.

The project, which is being managed by the Vermont-based GrowSolar, involves placing 3,000 individual solar panels on the school building’s roof.

The panels harvest the power of the sun and transport the gathered energy through a series of conduits leading from the roof to a set of inverter boxes on the ground. There, the energy is changed from DC to AC  before it is pumped through a set of underground wires into the campus’ electrical system in the basement.

Once in place and online, the panels will produce an average of 450 kilowatts per hour of electricity. Montgomery said the energy produced by the panels will account for about one-third of the district’s electricity needs.

“We use an awful lot of power,� he said.

To help purchase the system, the district applied for and received a state Clean Energy Fund grant for $1.7 million, about half the cost of the project. The district will fund the remaining amount, and GrowSolar will continue to manage and maintain the system.

The panels must be operational by Dec. 31, Montgomery said, or the grant money will have to be returned, according to its agreement with the state.

“And we are just on track to meet that date,� he said.

Montgomery said, that while the solar panel project will allow the district to lower its overall energy bill, the project also presents numerous educational opportunities for the district’s middle and high school students.

“The main purpose, the overall plan, is to incorporate green sciences throughout our curriculum,� he said. “That’s our number one reason.�

Recently, the district received a $20,000 grant from Alcoa Howmet in Winsted to hire a part-time teacher, Audra Leach, for the current school year.

Montgomery said Leach is teaching two environmental science classes this semester, while also leading the district’s Green Team.

In addition, the administration is hoping to secure a $250,000 grant from Connecticut Light & Power to allow the district to increase Leach’s post from part time to full time, enter into a partnership with Northwestern Connecticut Community College to develop a joint green workforce educational program and build a green science lab on campus.

This is in addition to the wind turbine that has been proposed for Region 7’s campus (see story, Page A1).

If all three renewable energy sources were to come online — solar, wind and geothermal — Montgomery said the district would be powered almost entirely by green science.

“We’re looking to permanently change our carbon footprint,� he said.

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