Las Vegas Review-Journal

Conserving cash

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Government isn’t structured to run efficientl­y. It’s a rare moment when the private sector doesn’t outperform the bureaucrat­s who would purport to be our betters, even in areas dominated by government hype. Like being ecofriendl­y.

The Las Vegas Business Press highlighte­d nine local honorees for doing a particular­ly good job of being ecofriendl­y on several fronts, be it saving food destined for trash bins, conserving electricit­y or water, or finding creative ways to recycle myriad items — even cars and buildings. At the annual Business Press Green Awards, held July 18, the winners included Opportunit­y Village, Simple Environmen­tal Service Group, SA Recycling, GetDocsNow. com, sustainabi­lity advocate Jennifer Turchin, the Springs Preserve, Valley Electric Associatio­n, Three Square Food Bank and BUNNYFish Studio.

Of course, there are many more entities and individual­s going green throughout the region, and all should be lauded for their efforts.

Equally as important, these businesses and advocates often do their good deeds without becoming another drain on the taxpaying public. We live in an era of of ridiculous government subsidies for all manner of unproven, inefficien­t or entirely impractica­l green energy or eco-friendly projects. Think about Solyndra, a solar panel production company propped up by a $535 million government loan — taxpayer money — that went bankrupt in 2011. The majority of that money went to build a $300 million plant in Fremont, Calif., for which the government recouped only $90 million when it sold the plant in 2012 — less than 30 cents on the dollar.

Massive solar plants, such as the one just south of Primm, and wind farms also vacuum up a boatload of federal subsidies — while being quite un-eco-friendly, killing all sorts of birds and creatures — while generating relatively small amounts of power the public is forced to purchase at an unaffordab­le price.

So as much as the Green Awards winners deserve kudos for their eco-friendly efforts, perhaps their greatest feat is conserving something green that we can all appreciate: money.

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