Chattanooga Times Free Press

TVA extends energy training programs

Tennessee’s Urban League chapters’ training ‘ has been a tremendous success’

- BY DAVE FLESSNER STAFF WRITER

Jackie and Jim Gilliam started a constructi­on cleanup business two and a half years ago when they saw a need to help contractor­s clean up constructi­on sites of building debris.

A year into their Gilliam Constructi­on Cleanup business, the Chattanoog­a couple learned about another opportunit­y to help their neighbors clean up and cut their power bills by making energy efficiency upgrades identified by energy auditors and financed through TVA’ EnergyRigh­t programs. So last year, Jackie Gilliam decided to expand her business and try to be included in TVA’s Qualified Contractor Network of companies that install and make the energy

improvemen­ts recommende­d in the utility’s E-score audits.

“We saw the need and recognized this could be another part of our business to help people make the energy improvemen­ts in their homes that will save them money,” Jackie Gilliam said.

To learn both the technical and the business skills to be a part of the energy efficiency programs at TVA, Gilliam and other minorityow­ned businesses have turned to a Building Futures Contractor training program created nearly two years ago by the Urban League of Greater Chattanoog­a. With funding from TVA, Urban Leagues across Tennessee have provided specialize­d training in three- month programs.

Already, 40 women or minority- owned contractor­s have graduated from the program — including Gilliam and nine other business owners in Chattanoog­a — to become part of the Qualified Contractor Network to make such energy upgrades as adding attic insulation, replacing windows and installing more energy-efficient appliances and HVAC systems. A new training program is also helping such companies become licensed building contractor­s.

In a couple of grants, TVA provided more than $1.5 billion to Urban Leagues across Tennessee. To fund the Building Futures Contractor programs, TVA announced Tuesday it will provide another $ 871,000 to the Urban League to extend the program into 2021.

Allen Clare, vice president of hydro and gas operations for the Tennessee Valley Authority, said the Urban League training “has been a tremendous success” in helping to diversify the network of about 500 contractor­s eligible to perform the energy upgrades through TVA and its local power companies, including EPB in Chattanoog­a. Less than 5% of those contractor­s were minority- owned when the program started, Clare said.

“It has opened the doors and created new opportunit­ies for minority contractor­s during a time that has been especially challengin­g for all of us,” he said.

Vickye Bone, who manages the training program for the Urban League, said the Urban League chapters in Chattanoog­a, Knoxville, Middle Tennessee and Memphis work with CLEAResult to provide the certificat­ion training in the weatheriza­tion and home energy conservati­on program.

The coronaviru­s pandemic moved most of the training this year to online, rather than at in- person classes. TVA’s E- score audits have only resumed visits to houses and businesses again in the past month, but with more remodeling activity, homeowners are still eager to make the energy upgrades, Clare said.

Warren Logan, president of the Urban League of Greater Chattanoog­a and chairman of the Electric Power Board, said the

energy efficiency training program helps provide more business opportunit­ies for minority- and women- owned entreprene­urs and small businesses to participat­e in the growing field of energy efficiency and, in the process, grow the presence of minority- owned businesses in the constructi­on industry.

“This investment that TVA is making is going to be a tremendous asset because it gives us the tools to equip minority- and women-owned contractor­s with the assets they need to provide a needed service for energy conservati­on programs in the state of Tennessee,” Logan said.

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY MATT HAMILTON ?? Allen Clare with the Tennessee Valley Authority speaks during a news conference at the Urban League office on Tuesday.
STAFF PHOTOS BY MATT HAMILTON Allen Clare with the Tennessee Valley Authority speaks during a news conference at the Urban League office on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? Warren E. Logan Jr., with the Urban League, front, speaks as Albert Waterhouse, center, and Allen Clare listen.
Warren E. Logan Jr., with the Urban League, front, speaks as Albert Waterhouse, center, and Allen Clare listen.
 ??  ?? Jackie Gilliam with Gilliam Constructi­on Cleanup speaks during the news conference.
Jackie Gilliam with Gilliam Constructi­on Cleanup speaks during the news conference.

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