
Tramblie told the commission of his recent trip to Long Beach, Calif., for a solar conference. He said the Northwest is about five to 10 years behind California on solar paneling. He said the additional mortgage payments offset the electric bills after solar paneling is installed. In 10 years, he said, green incentives will be the standard.
PUD Auditor Erin Wilson told the commission about a request from the USDA Rural Development to refinance loans on the Western Wahkiakum Water System (WWWS). She said it would need to be returned in 60 days. The loan, she said, dates back to 1997.
PUD Attorney Tim Hanigan said he would need to look at the loan document and, with Tramblie, would look into options and work to find a better rate than the current five percent.
A budget workshop has been set for October 16 at 1 p.m., and a rate hearing has been tentatively set for November 20. There will be notice given so the public may attend.
The board decided that the WWWS Expansion Project ribbon cutting would be scheduled for November 20 at 2 p.m. in the PUD meeting room. “There will be cookies!” Wilson added.