Wayne
Independent
May 27,
2008
www.wayneindependent.com
By Tammy
Compton
County -
Helen
and Tom
Rigler
want to
harness
the wind
and
eliminate
their
electric
bill.
The
Texas
Township
residents
are
considering
a
50-foot
high,
$15
thousand
personal
windmill
from Sky
Stream.
Tom says
it would
generate
enough
power
for
their
home,
with
leftover
energy
going
back
into
PPL’s
power
grid,
resulting
in a
check to
them at
the end
of the
year.
The
Riglers
say
their
electric
bill has
climbed
out of
control.
“Our
whole
house is
electric
(heat
included).
In the
wintertime,
it
really
goes up
high.
We’re on
the
budget
plan.
Right
now,
we’re
paying
about
$350 a
month
...
We’re in
arrears
with the
budget
plan of
over
$700,”
Helen
says.
Tom says
they’ve
done
their
homework
and for
them,
the
environmentally
friendly,
renewable
wind
power is
a
perfect
fit.
“When
that
house
was
built 40
years
ago
...electric
was the
way to
go,” Tom
says of
their
home on
Golf
Hill
Road. In
his
opinion,
it’s
still
the way
to go.
“It is
if you
have a
windmill,”
he
says.
Helen
says. “I
really
think
electric
is
cheaper
than any
of them
out
there
right
now,
between
gas and
oil.”
Her goal
is to
have
their
windmill
installed
by
September.
Ed
Lagarenne,
Zoning/Building
Officer
for
Damascus
and
Lebanon
townships,
says he
issued a
zoning
permit
in April
for a
personal-size
windmill
to be
put up
in the
Beach
Lake
area,
Damascus
Township.
“These
are not
considered
wind
farms —
a big,
generating
plant
that
provides
energy
for the
grid,”
he said,
like the
windmills
lining
the
Moosic
Mountain
Ridge.
Lagarenne
says the
residential
windmills
create
the same
amount
of
energy
as,
“putting
up solar
panels
in
(your)
roof.”
He said
they’re,
“similar
in size
to the
old-style
water
pump
windmills
used on
farms...at
the turn
of the
century
...to
pump
water
for
cattle.”
Lagarenne
says a
Lebanon
Township
resident
has also
expressed
interest
in a
personal-sized
windmill.
That
holds
true for
a
homeowner
in
Waymart
Borough,
as well,
who’s
considering
a
50-foot
high
windmill,
says
Waymart
Borough
Zoning
Officer
Richard
Gillette.
“They’re
certainly
safe,”
says
Lyndon
Wormuth,
Zoning
Officer
for
Buckingham
Township
and a
27-year
electrician.
Wormuth
was the
electrician
who
hooked
up a
100-foot
high
windmill
on the
Louis
Welch
farm in
Scott
Township
three
years
ago,
which
helps
supplement
the
farm’s
energy
use.
“Most of
the ones
(windmills)
I’ve
seen
don’t
produce
enough
energy
to feed
back
into the
power
grid.
Most of
them
produce
enough
to run
part of
your
home,”
Wormuth
said.
Wormuth
said
there’s
also a
personal
windmill
in
Preston
Township
that was
put in
place
some 20
to 25
years
ago. A
call
placed
to the
windmill’s
owner
was not
returned
by press
time. |
|
If you
experience any problems on this site, please help us out by
e-mailing us as to
what kind of problem you may have experienced. Please let
us know on what pages the problem occurred.
OUR POLICY ABOUT YOUR ORDER
Prices have
been unsteady, since the Iraq War and in most cases we have been
able to absorb the difference.
Should there be a price increase, you will be notified
before we ship so you can make a decision as to keep the
purchase or not.
Once we receive your additional payment, we will fulfill your
order.
Should you decide that you do not want to keep the purchase, you
will need to let us know via eMail.
When making a
purchase from this site, shipping charges are normally included
when placing your order..
On some large items such as appliances, batteries, etc. the shipping and
possibly crating fees may be
extra.
These items are noted by an * at the end of the Part Number.
In such case, you will be notified of the extra charges, which
need to be
paid prior to shipping.
ALL WARRANTIES ARE PROVIDED BY THE PRODUCT MANUFACTURERS, WE DO NOT ISSUE THE WARRANTIES.
This
Web Site is Maintained by Taos Artist, Terry Wolff - Artes del
Lobo
Last up-dated on
10 December 2008 |