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Letter: Solar farm consultant fee would have been better spent on renewable energy

Dear editor, I Googled the Burns & McDonnell PAC Profile. They are heavy donors to the Republican Party, particularly in 2016. I think this party affiliation, combined with recent events at the U.S. Capitol, make them somewhat experts in what is “illegal.” This being said, I would have preferred their consultant fee (for Andy McDonald and Walt Baldwin’s proposed solar farm project) to go toward either renewable energy or to those who did not qualify for COVID utility relief due to the arbitrary stipulations put on the program.  In order to get relief from the Kentucky Housing Corp. s COVID relief program, your landlord must not be planning on selling your unit to cash in on the sky-high real estate prices in Kentucky. 

FPB to hear report on solar proposal at Tuesday meeting

Large-scale local solar project to be discussed at Tuesday FPB meeting

Among the items to be discussed or voted on at the Frankfort Plant Board’s monthly meeting Tuesday is one that could significantly shake up Frankfort’s energy landscape.  The authors of the proposal, Andy McDonald and Walt Baldwin, estimate that a developer would invest $25 million to $35 million in the project in order to provide power to all four public entities at a rate almost half that of FPB’s current retail electricity rate.  The plan’s implementation is contingent on the FPB board s approval. The proposed facility would be funded by a private developer at no cost to the local government entities, McDonald said. 

Energy advocates propose large-scale local solar development

Franklin County could be getting a significant jolt of local solar energy — that is if plans presented by local energy advocates Andy McDonald and Walt Baldwin are adopted. The ambitious 39-page plan proposes that the City of Frankfort, Franklin County Fiscal Court, Frankfort Independent Schools, and Franklin County Schools come together to cooperate on a 20 megawatt (MW), 150-acre solar project. The plan’s implementation would be contingent on the Frankfort Plant Board’s approval. The proposed facility would be funded by a private developer with no cost to the local government entities; McDonald and Baldwin estimated that the project would save the organizations a collective $1.2 million annually but cost FPB $800,000 in revenue reductions.

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