
The pair built their first homemade solar panels with shower doors and caulking. They've since moved on to better materials, though they still "come cheaply." New Vision is affiliated with Seaman's church, Peoples Chapel, and doesn't have much funding as a result. Seaman and Prusa say the panels eliminate three major expenses: electricity, gas and heat, paying for themselves in utilities savings in less than 10 years. Energy independence is an added bonus to the lower bills, they say.
In the process of outfitting homes, they've created "an entire mini-economy that recirculates money among families receiving panels and allows currency to come in the form of volunteer hours." The cost of outfitting one home can be from $7,000 to $10,000. Families volunteer time installing panels on other homes to help pay back expenses. Savings from electric bills go into a general community fund that finances more solar panels on more homes.
New Vision is training leaders from other communities who want to take the system home with them. Groups from Detroit, southern West Virginia and Yoakum, Tex., recently completed the training program, which trains a solar-panel technician, project leader and volunteer coordinator in each group. Some say they've faced push-back from those who see conserving energy as unpatriotic. The executive director of Almost Heaven Habitat for Humanity in Franklin, W.Va., said her group doesn't receive any flak from those they help, whose electricity bills can be quadruple their monthly rent. (Read more)
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