Hackett & O'Brien High Schools

 

Class of 1970

 

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Bob Dennany  1/8
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- ACTIVE CLASSMATES -

Percentage Of
Active Classmates: 53.2%



A: 126 Active
B: 111 Inactive

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- WHERE WE LIVE -

Who lives where - click links below to find out.

1 lives in Arizona
6 live in California
1 lives in Delaware
4 live in Florida
1 lives in Georgia
4 live in Illinois
2 live in Indiana
1 lives in Kansas
1 lives in Maryland
1 lives in Massachusetts
87 live in Michigan
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2 live in Oregon
3 live in Pennsylvania
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5 live in Texas
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3 live in Wisconsin
98 location unknown


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- THIS DAY IN HISTORY -

Brought to you by the great people at ThePeopleHistory.com.

 

Welcome Classmates

This web site was created and continues to be updated for Hackett and O'Brien Class of 1970

We will continue to do our best to bring you information on upcoming events, not only as a class but for our individual classmates as well.

If you have updates, for yourself or for any member of our class please send them to AMFLtd@GMail.com and they will get posted usually the same day.

We hope you enjoy the information our site and that you will share it with other classmates who you know may not have registered with us yet.

ANNOUNCEMENTS

O'Brien Get-Together  

  • February 17th, 5 PM to 8 PM

Old Burdicks Bar & Grill

2747 S 11th StKalamazoo, MI 49009-2177

  • This is our monthly lucheon turned in an evening get-together this month.

     

     

     

    Get an appetizer and drink on the way home from work or a dinner.

     

     

     

    Whatever you are ready for we hope to add you to a time of girlfriend chat!

     

     

     

    If you have one of our classmates as your FB friend please feel free to ask them to come by. It has been really cool to catch up on each other as adults.

     

     

    Also please RSVP so that I can get us a big enough table. It will be under my name.

     

     

    Thank you PS If you can't make it you are welcome to share any updates on this page.

    Patti Towsend

    http://www.facebook.com/events/

    325245200852024/?notif_t=event_invite

 

 

 

 

 

Kalamazoo Solar reports electricity production on track after first year in business

 

 

The first year of operation for Kalamazoo Solar shows that even though Michigan's weather is fickle, the amount of electricity a solar array can generate can be predicted.

"We ended the year within 0.5 percent of our projected output," says Connor Fields, who designed the array of 756 solar panels on a 1.5 acre solar energy farm in Galesburg. The panels are mounted on racks that allow the panels to be repositioned to take advantage of the changing angles of the sun. Fields says the company the most efficient of the larger arrays that have been built in the state for that reason. 

Fields also says they are finding when viewed over a long period of time electrical generation can be predicted.

They have a 12-year contract to feed their energy to Consumer's Energy.  The solar array has produced slightly under 250 megawatt hours since it came online in February 2010. The company believes that's the most electricity created by a solar array in Michigan. 

But just as important is the experience and knowledge the company which Fields built along with his father, Sam, has gotten as it put up the array and operaed it in the past year. 

"Because of what we and others have learned in the past two years we can build the same size facility as Kalamazoo Solar for about 80 percent of the cost we originally paid," says Sam Fields. That trend should continue as long as they continue to build projects and learn more about how to make them better and less expensively, he says.

Helios Solar, the Fields' second alternative energy company, is currently bidding on as many solar construction opportunities as we can.  "We are trying to come up with new and innovative ideas to cut costs and make projects economically attractive," Connor says.

The state of Michigan has a few roadblocks it could clear to make that easier, Sam says. He suggests all real and personal property taxes for solar projects like theirs should be abated, considering the tax bill the company received for 2010 was $28,000, more than the retail value of the power it produced.

He also would like the state to revise it's law requiring 10 percent of the electric power sold in Michigan to come from renewable sources to be amended to require a specific part of that 10 percent be from solar energy producers in Michigan. 

"We're currently losing projects to such things as landfill gas, wind energy produced in Indiana, and hydroelectric power generated in Ohio," Sam Fields says.

Writer: Kathy Jennings
Source: Connor Fields, Sam Fields, Helios Solar