The cast will include Jessy Carvalho, Kris Connelly, Steve Dooner, Annie Dunn, Declan Dunn, and Alex Norton, all of Weymouth; Tim Bevens, Annie Daly, Colin Daly, Dave Daly, Sara Daly, Sarah Dewey, Isabella Monti, and Elizabeth O’Neill, all of Hingham.
And also, Bonnie Gardner and Max Ripley of Rockland; Meghan Boutilier and Melissa Carubia of Abington; Christie Emerson and Christopher Spencer of Quincy; Jeff Foster of Boston; Jim Foster of Milton; Hana Bowker-Wickersham of Hanover; Renee O Neill of Kingston; and Chris DiOrio of Whitman.
While the Company Theatre’s mainstage has been closed for the past year, the company has been presenting live outdoor shows since last fall.
Ben Gonzalez,left, and Dave Daly with Paco at their Shelter Island home. (Credit: Charity Robey)
When Ben Gonzalez and Dave Daly decided to start an oyster farm, Dave knew exactly where he wanted to raise bivalves.
His great-grandfather, Thomas Daly, bought a large Southold property in 1919 to get his family away from the flu pandemic sweeping through New York. He put down roots, and over the decades the family extended and built houses all around him. Dave grew up sailing in Southold Bay, and riding the ferry across to Shelter Island for ice cream.
Dave and Ben picked out an underwater lease site in Southold Bay for their new farm in 2013, one of the 10 leases granted by Suffolk County for aquaculture that year.
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Press of Atlantic City
Public Service Electric and Gas Co. received approval Thursday to spend $700 million over four years to roll out smart meters for its 2.3 million customers, vaulting New Jersey s largest utility into a modern age it says will be more energy efficient and eco-friendly.
The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities approved the utility s plans to install the digital wireless devices, which allow for two-way communication between customers and the utility s network. The gadgets provide real-time meter readings and improved outage management. They also allow utilities to shut off or turn on a customer s power with the flip of a switch at a central utility station.
Dive Brief:
New Jersey regulators on Thursday approved Public Service Electric & Gas plan to install 2.3 million smart meters across its territory, creating a more modernized distribution system that will allow for real-time customer communications and help to lower the utility s operating and maintenance (O&M) costs.
PSE&G says total expenditures for the advanced metering infrastructure (AMI) program are approximately $778 million, including $707 in capital investment and $71 million in O&M expenses.
Upgrading electric meters is a key step in PSE&G s plan to create an energy cloud that can provide near real-time outage detection, help customers use energy more efficiently, and integrate with new in-home technologies like Amazon s Alexa.
Public Service Electric & Gas can move forward with a $700 million plan to install advanced meters in homes and businesses across its service territory.
The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities on Thursday approved PSE&G s four-year plan, proposed in 2018, to provide its 2.3 million electric customers with so-called smart meters.
The utility said it will not seek to recoup the costs of the project from customers until after it files its next rate case,
The Newark-based utility said the new meters will create a two-way communications network between electric customers and the utility, enabling near real-time meter reading and more efficient response to outages and providing customers with more information about their energy use. It will virtually eliminate estimated utility bills, PSE&G said.