School boards adopt plan to reduce the shock of skyrocketing electricity bills

Publication
Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 28 Mar 2007, p. 10
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Halton's two major school boards have a plan to take some of the shock out of their escalating electricity bills. Armed with the promise of $90,000 in funding for the next three years from the region's four electrical utilities, the Halton public and Catholic boards are embarking on a venture to educate staff and students about energy consumption.

The Conservation Education and Demand Management Program is a three-year partnership co-ordinated by the Halton Learning Foundation-- the fundraising body of the Halton District School Board-- involving the Halton public and Catholic school boards and the four local distribution companies (LDCs) that provide electricity to the region-- Burlington Hydro, Halton Hills Hydro, Milton Hydro and Oakville Hydro Energy Services.

The goal is to develop and implement strategies that result in significant reductions in electricity consumption within Halton's schools.

Using a combination of existing Ontario EcoSchools resources and modified and new resources, the program will provide information and training to enable school staff to identify and carry out actions that are intended to produce savings both financially and environmentally.

Halton public board business superintendent Steven Parfeniuk said they have budgeted $3 million for the board's electrical costs during the current school year. The forecast was to consume 49,100 megawatts (49 billion, 100 million watts) of power during 2006-07.

"Our across-the-board costs for electricity are going up 5-10 per cent per year," noted Parfeniuk. He said spikes in electricity costs have been tempered somewhat by the board's membership in a power-buying consortium of 46 Ontario school boards. Parfeniuk said he didn't know enough about the new board-wide program to speculate on anticipated savings but said the game plan is simple. "The No. 1 thing we can all do to save energy is turn the lights off." If you're energy-conscious at home, "Take that attitude to your workplace," he said. One aspect of the new energy conservation

program is a `Haltonized' guide being distributed to the project's stakeholders, said Ron Ballentine, the Halton public board's co-ordinator of science and technology, and environmental education. The guide contains provincial research statistics and Halton public board figures for 2005-06 concerning electrical usage, primarily via computer monitors and general lighting. Websites, posters and stickers are also part of the training and information being made available to school staff.

"Everything we do environmentally we do it together," Ballentine said of the two Halton school boards. He said the boards will have equitable access to the multi-year funding from the local utilities.

"It depends on the need each year, (but) we have identified what to work on first. Building (environmental control) automation systems aren't new but the modifications and additions to the equipment, the new software or techniques, are."

However, the attitude of consumers, as much as the new products themselves, can have a positive impact on energy usage, said Halton board facilities superintendent Gerry Cullen, noting he is emphasizing the program's potential to change the attitude of school staff and students over any anticipated cost savings.

"It's not really a dollars and sense issue as much as the right thing to do. We don't have a lot of big industrial (electrical) stuff. For us it's lighting," Cullen said of the board's biggest source of electricity consumption.

Ballentine said lighting accounts for about 15 per cent of electrical costs in a typical home but about 45 per cent in schools and board administrative offices. Lights and computer hardware are the prime culprits, items that students and staff can exercise some control over, he said.

"It's computer monitors and peripherals, like printers, but mostly the monitor-- it uses more energy than any other part of the computer." Heating and air-conditioning are centrally controlled and the responsibility of the school/building custodian and may not end up as part of an energy action plan.

Each school will assemble an Eco Team. Comprised of an administrator-- likely a principal-- a teacher, custodian and several students, Ballentine said it will be akin to an environmental club.


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Creator
Whitnell, Tim
Media Type
Newspaper
Item Types
Articles
Clippings
Photographs
Date of Publication
28 Mar 2007
Subject(s)
Personal Name(s)
Parfeniuk, Steven ; Ballentine, Ron ; Cullen, Gary
Corporate Name(s)
Halton ; Halton District School Board ; Halton Hills Hydro ; Milton Hydro ; Oakville Hydro Energy Services ; Ontario
Local identifier
Halton.News.220310
Language of Item
English
Copyright Statement
Copyright status unknown. Responsibility for determining the copyright status and any use rests exclusively with the user.
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Halton Hills Public Library
Email:askus@haltonhills.ca
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