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City Becomes EPA Green Power Partner

The city dedicated $6,000 in 2012 to purchase 36.5 percent of its electricity needs from Puget Sound Energy's Green Energy program.

The City of Mercer Island has become a member of the Green Power Partnership with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), according to a city press release.

Membership in this free, voluntary program provides the City assistance with procuring electricity generated from renewable, "green" resources. Green energy purchases help reduce the risk of climate change and minimize environmental impacts associated with conventional electricity use.

As authorized by Mercer Island City Council last April, the city spent $6,000 to purchase 36.5 percent of its electricity needs from Puget Sound Energy's Green Power program — a fund which supports the use and development of alternative, "clean" energy from renewable resources such as wind, solar, geothermal, low-impact biomass, and low-impact hydro.

Mercer Island joins more than 1,300 Partner organizations in the program including dozens of Fortune 500 companies, colleges and universities, and other local and state governments. The city is the fourth in the state, after Bellingham, Lacey and Olympia, to join.

According to the Green Power Partnership website, purchasing green power helps fuel the development of new, domestic renewable energy sources. Additional benefits of the partnership include formal recognition that the City's green power use meets nationally accepted standards. The partnership also allows the City access to EPA communications tools and resources.

has also been supportive of several grassroots efforts to reduce the city's environmental impact by reducing its carbon footprint in other ways, such as through the and the .

The city and PSE are also currently promoting a "" to encourage at least 625 local residents to pay at least $4 from their electricty bill towards funding PSE's Green Power program.

Additional information about the partnership, as well as educational information on green issues, science/technology, and laws/regulations, is available on the EPA website.

(Ed. Note: The information in the story is from a City of Mercer Island press release.)

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Just a short thought to get the word out quickly about anything in your neighborhood.
Share something with your neighbors. Write a new post... What's up? Make an announcement, speak your mind, or sell something
William Kratz May 20, 2013 at 05:36 pm
I'll be a bit more direct than Jerry. The new site is a mess. Visually it's extremely cluttered.Read More It's slow, very slow. There appear to be no RSS feeds, a major negative. Following a few links sometimes sends you to a different community's Patch site. And what happened with the editing staff. Unless I missed something, suddenly there are new editors without any warning. No matter what the circumstances, normally such a move would be accompanied by an announcement of some sort. Venice may be the greatest editor ever, but it looks like she is splitting her time among several Patch sites, so the odds are stacked against her. Her "latest activities" list even suggests that she is editing a Patch site down in the San Francisco Bay area. With all due respect, Patch sites should be hyper-local, and the best route to that is a local (i.e. Mercer Islander) editor.
Jerry Gropp Architect AIA May 15, 2013 at 02:07 pm
The Jury is still out. I liked the "Old Patch". J