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Hush money
The County Office of Education is a State of California department. It is not part of the County of San Diego— September 29, 2009 4:11 p.m.
Alan Greenspan proclaimed that central bankers can’t foresee or forestall bubbles
Response to Post #1 I think there may be a fundamental problem with trying to proactively regulate a system that is so complex, nobody fully understands it. I think there is a fundamental problem with having a system that is so complex nobody understands it! Like "Too big to Fail" a system or set of financial instruments that no one understands should not be allowed to exist.— September 17, 2009 11:59 a.m.
SDGE Should Push Rooftop Solar Program, Says City Attorney, Noting Utility's Lagging Response to State Clean Energy Mandates
Response to #6: SDGE claims that it has certain costs that they cannot recover by selling excess electricity generated by solar. I'm not sure how they can say that with a straight face. With the new demand meters they will credit solar users for excess energy at a higher rate during the peak hours (11 am to 6 pm) but you have to pay the connection fee and the meter rental regardless. The net effect is that I might as well run my A/C all day since I have no incentive to save. The good news is that my electric bill for all of last year was only $89. For more info on the new rate schedule for Solar users see sss.sdge.com/solar. Dennis— July 9, 2008 8:24 p.m.
SDGE Should Push Rooftop Solar Program, Says City Attorney, Noting Utility's Lagging Response to State Clean Energy Mandates
I've had solar panels on my home for two years. The biggest gripe I have is that SDGE charges a $5 monthly connection fee regardless of whether or not I use any of their power. In the meantime they sell any excess that I generate. Now with the new demand meters they are charging an additional $3.81 per month for the meter. I have no incentive to conserve power since they will charge me roughly $110 per year even if I use none of their power.— July 9, 2008 2:04 p.m.