Officials from Concord Public Schools in Arkansas, members of the community, and Entegrity hosted a flip the switch ceremony to celebrate the school’s new 341-kW solar array. The array, designed with a fixed tilt system, is located on 3 acres of school-owned land and will save the school over $17,000 a year in energy expenses by taking advantage of third-party financing and federal investment tax credits. The reduction in operating expenses will allow the district to reinvest back into the school’s budget and remain wise with taxpayer money.
/ Advertisement /
Concord’s local State Senator Missy Irvin voted in support of the 2019 Solar Access Act that enabled this project by allowing public entities to take advantage of low-cost solar energy with third-party ownership, net metering, and grandfathering. After the law went into effect, Concord Public Schools was one of the first school districts in the state to take advantage of it to reduce utility costs.
UpdatedThu, Jan 7, 2021 at 8:36 pm ET
Replies(3)
(Jenna Fisher/Patch)
CONCORD, MA Concord students and staff watched along with the rest of the world on Wednesday, as the U.S. Capitol Building was breached and desecrated by pro-Trump extremists. The protests-turned-riots led to at least four deaths, a delayed electoral count and a mountain of questions and anxiety surrounding our government.
With no answers and a day of lessons to fill, Concord educators saw an opportunity. The district will not shy away from discussing the siege of the Capitol Building, but rather use it as a way to help students understand U.S. government, which includes everything from the breadth of the Constitution to the electoral college process.