Bainbridge Island Review Staff Writer
December 15, 2011 · Updated 3:56 PM
Bainbridge Island’s city hall is looking 
to be a shinning example in an entirely new way after the city council 
approved a contract allowing solar panels to be installed on its roof.
The contract solidifies a relationship 
between the city and Community Energy Solutions in order to place solar 
panels on the roof of city hall on Madison Avenue. Through this 
agreement, the city will be able to lessen its energy costs while also 
making a public effort to be environmentally conscious.
“For city taxpayers it provides savings 
on money that would otherwise be used to pay electric bills,” Council 
Member Barry Peters said. “For a community that cares about the 
environment, it allows us to use less of coal-fired electricity that 
normally supplies our island.”
The city will own the property that the 
panels will be on, while CES will form a subsidiary, Community Solar 
Solutions, to purchase and manage the solar panel system.
City hall has three tiers of roof 
covering it — upper, middle and lower. The middle roof, the largest of 
the three, is where the solar panels will be installed. The roof faces 
south, which is an ideal orientation for the panels to collect light.
The panels will be constructed by Itek 
Energy, a company based out of Bellingham. A total of 309 photovoltaic 
panels will line the roof of city hall, with a capacity of 240 watts 
each. This puts city hall’s solar energy production just under the 
maximum 75 kilowatts allowed on a structure by law, according to Joe 
Deets, director of CES, and also president of the subsidiary CSS.
City hall will receive half the retail value of the energy furnished by the panels.
No charge
Deets said that the price tag on the 
project will run around $505,560 — or $1,633 per panel — and while it is
 difficult to say exactly when installation will begin, he is hoping 
that work will begin by March of next year.
“It is important to remember that this 
project will be 100 percent funded with private money,” Deets said. “The
 city will have no financial obligation, and in fact will receive rent 
from the project owners.”
CSS will pay for the panels through 
investors who will in turn receive benefits from state and federal 
incentives for using solar energy. Investors also receive a financial 
benefit from when the panels produce energy that is sold to Puget Sound 
Energy.
CES still seeks investors but Deets, an 
investor himself, is confident the project will be fully supported in 
time to install the panels.
At the conclusion of the contract in 2020, the city will have the option to purchase the solar panels, or have CSS remove them.
“It’s one of those rare opportunities to 
do something good for the planet that saves taxpayers money and creates 
an investment opportunity for the community,” Peters said.
Peters speaks from experience. He had panels installed on his own home and has been observing their benefits for four years.
“We have met almost 90 percent of our 
electricity needs over the past four years,” Peters said. “What people 
don’t realize is that our weather in the summer time gives us many 
months of solar energy, and our laws in the state of Washington allow us
 to bank the surplus in the summer so we can use it in the winter.”
Producing so much solar energy during 
months of adequate sunshine allows people such as Peters to do something
 called “net metering.” With net metering the excess energy is sold to 
PSE, who then holds that as a credit — ultimately lessening their power 
bill in the winter when solar panels aren’t as active.
“So solar works and it’s never been less 
costly than it is right now both in terms of the cost of the panels 
themselves and the incentives from the federal and state level,” Peters 
said.
Contact Bainbridge Island Review Staff Writer Richard D. Oxley at roxley@bainbridgereview.com or 206-842-6613.
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