85°F
weather icon Cloudy

City aims to expand solar lease program

During Tuesday night’s City Council meeting, members took the first step in designating an additional 1,110 acres for future solar leases in Eldorado Valley.

“We have received a lot of interest about land for solar lease,” said Brok Armantrout, the city’s community development director.

The proposal now goes to the Planning Commission, which will review it for zoning issues. If all goes well, the commission will send it back to the council for approval, City Manager Dave Fraser said.

If approved by the commission, Fraser said approximately one-third of the 1,100 acres would be put up for competitive bid to lease.

The remaining two-thirds would eventually be put up for lease, but a change in the solar market has companies preferring to lease smaller amounts of land, Fraser said.

“These are smaller pieces than we’ve been leasing, but we’re seeing that power purchase agreements are getting smaller. The company that’s buying the power from them (leasers) is liking to buy it in smaller increments now,” Fraser said.

When the 2,200 acres of land that Techren Solar currently leases was put out for bid, Armantrout said the city received interest from 20 companies. Techren’s 2,200 acres, and the 2,000-acre Copper Mountain 3 project leased by Sempra, are the two biggest pieces of leased land in the energy zone, Armantrout said.

The city leases about 8,000 acres for solar projects.

“This is just the beginning of the public discussion about this matter,” Councilman Duncan McCoy said.

The proposal is expected to go before the Planning Commission in April, Fraser said.

In other news, council members recognized the Boulder City High School’s flag football team for its perfect 22-0 season.

Contact reporter Steven Slivka at sslivka@bouldercityreview.com or at 702-586-9401. Follow him on Twitter @StevenSlivka.

MOST READ
LISTEN TO THE TOP FIVE HERE
THE LATEST
Really better buy that helmet

With a couple of significant amendments, the city council voted unanimously to pass an ordinance regulating the use of e-bikes and e-scooters in Boulder City. The ordinance passed unanimously Tuesday and will take effect on Sept. 18.

Nevada Way to go Pink … and pay for the privilege

The main topic of discussion was color. As in color of a building when the board of the Boulder City Redevelopment Agency (aka the city council) met two weeks ago.

City to nix admin services dept. in favor of deputy city manager

In a move that is really little more than “cleanup” (i.e., bringing official city code into sync with decisions made by the city council more than a year ago), the council voted to approve changes to city code related to the created-but-not-yet-filled position of deputy city manager.

Better buy a helmet …

It was just the opening salvo, but it appears that lost patience with riders of e-bikes and scooters are to the point that they are ready to go well beyond the “Well, how about more education” approach they opted for back in April.

Boulder City approves fire captains’ 2-year contract

For those who may have seen any of the recent social media posts put out by reps of the firefighters union calling out the city about pay and benefits, they might have been surprised that one collective bargaining agreement covering fire department personnel was approved by the city council this week without any discussion at all.

What’s on the pole?

There are 1,450 power poles in Boulder City and 880 of them support equipment owned by private companies who don’t pay for the privilege.

Shooting gets another look

It’s a case that captured the attention of many in Boulder City more than four years ago and has kept that attention ever since.

Advocate for preservation?

It is not often in Boulder City that there is resident pressure for the city to create a new position and hire someone to fill it. But that is the situation discussed recently by the Historic Preservation Commission.