Wednesday, January 30, 2008

ECOLOGY & NATURE


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TREES BLOCKING NEIGHBOR'S SOLAR PANELS MUST BE CUT

MERCURY NEWS, CA - In a case with statewide significance, the Santa
Clara County District Attorney's Office is pursuing a Sunnyvale couple
under a little-known California law because redwood trees in their
backyard cast a shadow over their neighbor's solar panels. Richard
Treanor and Carolynn Bissett own a Prius and consider themselves
environmentalists. But they refuse to cut down any of the trees behind
their house on Benton Street, saying they've done nothing wrong.

"We're just living here in peace. We want to be left alone," said
Bissett, who with her husband has spent $25,000 defending themselves
against criminal charges. "We support solar power, but we thought common
sense would prevail."

Their neighbor Mark Vargas considers himself an environmentalist, too.
His 10-kilowatt solar system, which he installed in 2001, is so big he
pays only about $60 a year in electrical bills. He drives an electric
car.

Vargas said he first asked Treanor and Bissett to chop down the eight
redwoods, which the couple had planted from 1997 to 1999 along the fence
separating their yards. Later, he asked them to trim the trees to about
15 feet.

"I offered to pay for the removal of the trees. I said let's try to work
something out," Vargas said. "They said no to everything."

He installed the panels.

After several years of squabbling and failed mediation, Vargas filed a
complaint with the Santa Clara County Advertisement district attorney
arguing that the trees reduce the amount of electricity he can generate.
In 2005, prosecutors agreed.

They sent Treanor and Bissett a letter informing them that they were in
violation of California's Solar Shade Control Act and that if they
didn't "abate the violation" within 30 days, they would face fines of up
to $1,000 a day.

The law, signed by former Gov. Jerry Brown in 1978, is rarely used. But
county prosecutors say Treanor and Bissett are breaking it.

"It's not that we think trees are more or less important than solar
collectors. It's that our state's leaders have said under the following
circumstances, solar takes precedence," said Ken Rosenblatt, supervising
Santa Clara County deputy district attorney for environmental
protection.

The law was written by former Assemblyman Chuck Imbrecht, a Ventura
Republican, as a way to guarantee, amid the energy crises of the 1970s,
that people who installed solar panels wouldn't see a drop in their
investment from nearby trees.

It affects only trees planted after 1979, and bans trees or shrubs from
shading more than 10 percent of a neighbor's solar panels between 10
a.m. and 2 p.m.

It does not apply to trees or shrubs that were there before the solar
panels were installed. But - and here's the key distinction - it does
apply to existing trees and shrubs that later grew big enough to shade
the solar panels. A violation is an infraction, like a parking ticket,
but with fines of up to $1,000 a day.

The redwoods, which Treanor and Bissett say they planted for privacy,
are now between 20 and 40 feet tall.

In December, Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Kurt Kumli found
the couple guilty of one count of violating the Solar Shade Control Act.
In a partial victory for each side, he ruled that six of the trees can
remain and that the two generating the most shade must be removed. He
also waived any fines.

http://www.mercurynews.com/ci_8063034?nclick_check=1

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