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Number of Posts:49
Registered on:8/31/2019
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I’m driving next to a guy today who was going 75 in a 70. We pass 2 police cruisers and continue going for about 3 miles when one of those cruisers comes flying up at what looked like 95mph out of nowhere and pulls that guy over.

The police cruiser caught him within 2 minutes and he was going 75. Pulled him over and began the citation process. How does a police cruiser driving to for 3-4 miles at 90+ mph (to catch him) How is that making the roads safer?

re: Area 51 Game Thread

Posted by TegrityFarms on 9/20/19 at 5:28 am to
For all the “people are sheep” daily comments on this board and “government FOR the people BY the people” types on here; many of you sure are triggered by a bunch of people trying to figure out what the gov’t is hiding.

“No, I’d rather just not know. Makes the Bud Light and Vape taste better”
Maybe someone who came from modest beginnings to become successful, or someone who lost everything and was able to piece it back together?
Typically Louisiana politicians tried to fleece big oil for more cash and they said “frick y’all” and went to Houston. Now Louisiana is largely destitute
SEPTEMBER 12, 2019

Killed an opportunity to diversify Louisiana’s economy and now jobs will be lost.

quote:

Once upon a time, Louisiana had some of the best support for rooftop solar in the nation. The combination of a 50% state tax rebate and the federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) on top of the foundation of retail-rate net metering made for some of the best economics for rooftop solar in the nation. But Louisiana is also a state that is not known for its thriving democracy, with the oil, gas and utility sectors firmly in control of politics. Thus it is not surprising that the form of energy democracy that rooftop solar represents was on shaky ground. After the 50% tax credit was capped in 2015 and fully subscribed in 2016, installations fell sharply. But what is far more important is that as a result of yesterday’s decision at the Louisiana Public Service Commission (LPSC), as of January 1, 2020, utility customers who are foolhardy enough to install solar will be paid a 12-month calculation of wholesale rates for the power they generate and export to the grid on an instantaneous basis, while buying power from the utility at retail.

This is a big departure from the monthly “netting” of import and export under retail-rate net metering and will greatly undermine the economics of rooftop solar for many customers. The final vote at the LPSC yesterday to implement this policy was 3-2, with Commissioner Skrmetta (R) joined by two relatively recent additions to the LPSC: Craig Greene (R) and Mike Francis (R). The commission’s two Democrats, Lambert Boissiere III and Foster Campbell, both voted against the move.

The Alliance for Affordable Energy, which has advocated for renewable energy in the state for more than a decade, blasted the decision, with Executive Director Logan Atkinson putting this in the context of larger political problems in the state. It is always stunning to see how hard communities and workers have to fight for what is right, while corporations are handed golden tickets in Louisiana. The unsupported canard of “subsidies” from net metering in Louisiana doesn’t remotely compare to the real subsidies ratepayers are paying to prop up uneconomic gas, coal, and nuclear plants owned by utilities. As explored in a previous article, Skrmetta has been in conflict with the solar industry for many years, and may have pushed to remove net metering at this time to help to derail the solar industry from funding an opponent in 2020. Industry impacts

Solar installers roundly condemned the ruling, which they say could lead to layoffs in the state’s 3,000-strong solar workforce. Per Tom Neyhart, the CEO of PosiGen: Today’s vote was a job killer and an insult to the people of our state, Instead of moving Louisiana forward, the Public Service Commission – fueled by the utility companies – moved Louisiana backwards. Jeffrey Cantin, the president and owner of Solar Alternatives and a board member of the Gulf States Renewable Energy Industries Association (GSREIA), notes that while the new move puts Louisiana behind even neighboring Mississippi in terms of its compensation to owners of PV systems, that it will not end the state’s market. Cantin says that this will hit the most energy-efficient homes the hardest, but that solar will still be viable for those that use the most power mid-day, including retirees and those with inefficient homes where the air conditioning is running 24/7.

He notes that this move actually incentivizes those adding solar to use more power mid-day, when demand is already intense. “This is going to make things worse for the grid,” Cantin told pv magazine. There are still opportunities for home and business owners to get in under the old system of retail-rate net metering, but in order to do so they must have a fully installed system and have filed an interconnection application by the end of the year.


LINK


re: Talk to me about solar farms

Posted by TegrityFarms on 9/15/19 at 12:30 pm to
Fed tax credit goes to 26% next year from 30%.

They’ll reintroduce a bill and see if it gets approved. I’d be surprised of the federal solar incentives completely go away. Louisiana would be an excellent state for it but sadly the population rejects it.

re: Angelica Anderson (NSFW).

Posted by TegrityFarms on 9/15/19 at 9:47 am to
She looks like she has so much to contribute to society. If Instawhoring wasn’t a thing, half these women would be working at a grocery store or strip club. Nothing but whores.

re: Korn Album Leaked

Posted by TegrityFarms on 9/15/19 at 9:40 am to
Don’t forget As I Lay Dying

re: Talk to me about solar farms

Posted by TegrityFarms on 9/15/19 at 8:01 am to
quote:

wish all government would quit subsidizing these projects


I mean, I don’t disagree with you but do you apply this same logic to O&G because they get a SHITLOAD of subsidies.


quote:

In March 2012, President Obama called for an end to the $4 billion in oil industry subsidies. Some estimates indicated that the real level of oil industry subsidies is higher, between $10 and $40 billion. At the same time, oil company profits benefited when oil prices reached a record of $145 a barrel in 2008. The oil industry subsidies have a long history in the United States. As early as World War I, the government stimulated oil and gas production in order to ensure a domestic supply. In 1995, Congress established the Deep Water Royalty Relief Act. It allowed oil companies to drill on federal property without paying royalties. This encouraged the expensive form of extraction since oil was only $18 a barrel. The Treasury Department reported that the federal government has missed $50 billion in foregone revenue over the program's lifetime. It argued that this may no longer be needed now that deepwater extraction has become profitable. Here is a summary of the 2011 oil industry subsidies compiled by Taxpayers for Common Sense in its report, "Subsidy Gusher." Volumetric Ethanol Excise Tax Credit - $31 billion. Intangible Drilling Costs - $8.9 billion. Oil and Gas Royalty Relief - $6.9 billion. Percentage Depletion Allowance - $4.327 billion. Refinery Equipment Deductions - $2.3 billion. Geological and Geophysical Costs Tax Credit - $698 million. Natural Gas Distribution Lines - $500 million. Ultradeepwater and Unconventional Natural Gas and other Petroleum Resources R&D - $230 million. Passive Loss Exemption - $105 million. Unconventional Fossil Technology Program - $100 million. Other subsidies - $161 million. Greenpeace argues that the oil industry subsidies should also include the following activities: The Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Defense spending that involves military action in oil-rich countries in the Persian Gulf. The construction of the U.S. federal highway system which encourages reliance on gas-driven cars. The BEA argues that these federal government activities were primarily done to protect national security and not promote specific activities within the oil industry. Even though the intent was not to directly subsidize it, they may have benefited the industry indirectly.
quote:

The current companies in it though... I like escrow idea to return land.


A lot of Louisiana-based companies went out of business after 2016 because the state was offering an additional percentage on top of the federal 30% so many companies were competing and undercutting one another just to get the deal and the state pulled the plug on their end of the bargain at the end of the year and left a lot of companies in debt. Louisiana renegged on its end because we were broke.
quote:

Solar is A LOT MORE EXPENSIVE than conventional generation. In order for the solar to pay its bonds off they get the state to require the utilities to buy this electricity at higher rates than they can generate it themselves and it gets passed on you you. It's a JBE transfer of wealth to his buddies. Pure scam.


Sounds like you know almost nothing about solar. The customer gets 30% back from the federal government upon initial purchase (let’s say a $20,000 system, you’d get $6,000 back up front.)

Many states offer additional state incentives on top of that but Louisiana is currently not one of those. The electricity you generate is stored in the grid under your account and you use what you generate. If you have any overage, the utility company has the option to buy your unused electricity but it’s typically cheaper than what they charge but they will cut you a small check for what they buy

Edit: it sounds like a good deal, OP. Just know that the person approaching you is likely a middle-man and is helping the state produce a mandated green energy goal for your local utility. They’re probably making A LOT on this deal and giving you a small piece of the pie. Ask for more.
quote:

In 10 years if solar goes kaput, what’s the realistic chances of putting it back in ag use?


1. Solar isn’t going anywhere but up

2. You’ll still be tied into your local utility grid in case anything happens. That’s where all the electricity is stored because the batteries to hold that much power just aren’t there yet. You’re still storing your energy in the grid.

re: RB athletic stats

Posted by TegrityFarms on 9/14/19 at 10:56 am to
Tricky thing. I barely lifted seriously as a junior and was getting looks from D-2 and double A programs.

Focused my senior year on getting as jacked, strong, and big as possible and it slowed me down and I was just not the same player anymore. I’d say lift throughout HS but don’t focus so much on those raw numbers. A college strength and conditioning program will get you (or your son or whoever) where you need to be. Focus on just playing the game, knowing the offense, getting your hands better, cutting, ladders, and quick burst speed. Those lifting numbers are mostly irrelevant. I left my sr year benching 315, squatting 450, and deadlifting about 465 and was a worse playing than when I was lifting 2/3rds of that.

I was eventually able to walk on and play college ball so I have a semblance of knowledge on this matter.
Eddie Money died?

No, uh uh uh l ohhhhh
“Braxtalynne’s pastime in between Summer ball, and Fall ball that he’s gon got a scholarship for us living vicariously through him for”

But that’s probably a lot to fit on a shirt.