The Michigan Land Use Institute sent a letter to Traverse City Light & Power's board, at their invitation, describing the qualities we would like to see in a new executive director for the city's publicly owned utility.
We were glad the board asked the community for suggestions; the new director will lead the municipally owned power company at a remarkably tumultuous time in the state, national and worldwide utility and energy industry sectors. The choice will affect TCL&P and the city's economy, reputation and environment.
Our message is clear: TCL&P board members should look far and wide for a new director, attract the best candidates possible, and interview them with wide-open minds and complete transparency.
Like every utility today, Traverse City's is at a crossroads. It must choose between its business-as-usual model and the new, even revolutionary 21st Century models now emerging around the world.
Consider:
n Coal power is dying out — it's dirty, increasingly expensive, increasingly regulated, and ever harder to dig up.
n Natural gas is thriving — it's cleaner than coal, currently much cheaper and abundant, but there are tough questions about "fracking" and its long-range price.
n Renewables are also thriving — wind and solar power gets cheaper by the day, but they require a grid better than the often-shaky one we're all depending on.
n Energy efficiency is taking off — utilities, businesses, homeowners and all levels of government are looking for ways to finance projects that cut energy demand, costs and emissions. A push for communitywide efficiency projects is emerging here.
n Distributed generation options like rooftop solar panels, backyard wind turbines and geothermal systems are growing rapidly.
n Efficiency and distributed generation are emerging as powerful economic development tools. They generate local jobs and keep former "energy dollars" in town, rather than shipping them to coal-mining states.
Many utilities don't like to talk about that last point. They think goals like profitability and reliably supplying cheap power are enough. But that's why municipal utilities are such great things; there are no stockholders to please, only the community itself, which owns the company.
So, if a community likes the idea of, say, building a residents-owned solar installation, or starting a community bank to finance efficiency work, or trading a 1 percent rate increase for more renewables, environmental stewardship and jobs, a municipal utility can respond with a genuine, face-to-face, town hall discussion and decision. That's something the big private utilities simply cannot do.
That's why people should express their thoughts to the TCL&P board about this crucial decision. And that's why it's important that the new TCL&P executive director have community-building skills, a broad overview of the utility and energy industry sectors, a deep understanding of new technologies and utility business models — and of how utility decisions can help or harm local economics. That director can make TCL&P, our community-owned utility, shine.
About the author: Hans Voss is executive director of the Michigan Land Use Institute; by email at: hans@mlui.org.
About the forum: The forum is a periodic column of opinion written by Record-Eagle readers in their areas of interest or expertise. Submissions of 500 words or less may be made by e-mailing letters@record-eagle.com. Please include biographical information and a photo.
Archive: Sunday
Forum: Choosing new TCL&P director a big deal
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TBAISD to hold budget hearing
Traverse Bay Area Intermediate School District Board of Education will hold a hearing on their fiscal year 2013-14 budget on Tuesday as board members consider whether to spend some of their nearly 58 percent fund balance.
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Wineries find efficiencies
A dwindling labor pool and challenging packaging costs are prompting several northern Michigan winemakers to utilize innovative technologies in their vineyards.
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Following the Freedom Riders
Six Leelanau County and 31 Detroit black, white and Hispanic high school students were scheduled this morning to board a bus for a two-week trip that retraces the steps of civil rights “Freedom Riders” into the Deep South a half century ago.
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Depasse, Leib take top spots at Cherry-Roubaix
A pair of first-timer finishers earned first place in the men's and women's Cherry-Roubaix criterium pro races Saturday.
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Editorial: Medicaid expansion vote makes sense
The issue: State House approves Medicaid expansion. Our view: It’s a big step, but there’s more to do.
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Letters to the Editor: 06/16/2013
Appalled by remark; Gratuitously inhumane; A common bond.
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Doug Luciani: Our youth can come home now
Riding on a school bus doesn’t exactly conjure up fond memories of days gone by. But this ride was different.
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Green reunion committee searches for classmates
Listen up, Traverse City High School Class of 1973: Your classmates want you!
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'Family is our whole life': Raising quadruplets plus two
Since her quadruplets grew out of diapers, life smoothed out for Tonya Lewandowski.
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TC West surges into 5th at golf finals
The rebound Traverse City West hoped for happened. In a big way.
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Business in Brief: 06/16/2013
Health care reform; Biz after hours; NCMC program.
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Program aims to keep tenants in their homes
Charles Alexander sat in 86th District Court and uttered that he'd rather be dead than homeless.
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Jason Tank: Economics a dizzying display of acronyms
In one corner, the Federal Reserve is busy stacking up dollar bills on top of each other. In the other, the beleaguered American economy is putting up one mediocre data point after another.
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Forum: Waste of fossil fuels cannot continue
We often hear jokes about husbands forgetting their wedding anniversaries, but this month there is an anniversary we must not forget. I’m suggesting we commemorate it with action.
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Garret Leiva: Best gift on dad's day is fatherhood
Today, millions of men will receive a tie, gadget or gizmo destined for the back of a closet. Most guys think it’s the greatest gift in the world — fatherhood.
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State golf finals results
How area teams finished in the state golf championships this weekend:
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Acme beach buildings demo set
Acme Township purchased the last of three buildings on its growing project to create a mile-long shoreline park, and demolition crews are ready to dive into work.
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Beach Bums slam Slammers, 6-2
Johnny Omahen earned his first victory of the year as the Traverse City Beach Bums won their fourth straight game with a 6-2 come-from-behind victory over the Joliet Slammers.
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Business Memoranda: 06/16/2013
Traverse City-based EverywhereUGo has expanded, with board locations in the Van Andel Arena in Grand Rapids and the Great American Ball Park (home of the Cincinnati Reds) in Cincinnati, Ohio.
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Free fishing day hooks young anglers
Screeches, squeals and screams of excitement could be heard from Northwestern Michigan College's Great Lakes Campus as kids reeled in rainbow trout.
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Sports in Brief: 06/16/2013
Public input for Buffalo Ridge Trail; PaddleboardClassic is July 20; Rays pitcher Cobb leaves on stretcher. (Plus more)
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Best Sellers: 06/16/2013
Northwest Michigan — Hardcover fiction: 1. “And The Mountains Echoed” by Khaled Hosseini, Riverhead Books, $28.95.
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Fire damages Garfield Township home
Firefighters were called to 4327 Stoneridge Dr. Saturday at 2:12 a.m. and arrived to flames through the roof.
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Terry Wooten: Native heirlooms spark imagination
When I was 6 years old Grandpa Helmboldt gave me an old Indian pipe made out of wild cherry wood.
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Community in Brief: 06/16/2013
Summer crafts; geneaology group meets; Haas Quintet performs; and more.
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TBAISD to hold budget hearing



