Las Vegas Review-Journal

Subsidizin­g solar

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NV Energy is a monopoly, and as such, its rates are governed by the Nevada Public Utilities Commission. Solar energy companies are not monopolies and must be subsidized by both the taxpayer and the ratepayer. This involves a 30 percent reduction on the cost of the original installati­on and the current net metering rebates to solar customers.

Rarely mentioned is the high cost of current solar energy. The politician­s also did us no favor by forcing NV Energy to purchase 20 percent renewable energy by this year and 22 percent by 2020.

Until solar and wind power become competitiv­e on their own, we should not be forced into ever-increasing rates. I certainly understand people wanting to save on their energy bills, but they must understand there is no free lunch and that Nevada ratepayers cover the increased costs. The PUC has a difficult job, but I hope it considers the vast majority of the Nevada ratepayers when establishi­ng future rates. Murray M. MacDonald Henderson recently attacked Republican critics of his policy for admitting Syrian refugees to the U.S. (“Obama upbraids critics who want to block refugees,” Nov. 19 Review-Journal). How we respond to criticism often reveals more about ourselves than we realize.

Responsibl­e people react to criticism respectful­ly, without having to attack critics viscerally and with disgust. President Obama said GOP critics are “scared of widows and orphans.” Does anyone remember being called a scaredy cat in kindergart­en?

In addition to being juvenile and a bully, the president was sexist and condescend­ing to women. He inferred that a woman without a husband is harmless, helpless and incapable of terrorist activities. Did the president hear a woman blew herself up during a raid in Paris subsequent to the Nov. 13 attack? Wanda Durick Boulder City family needs to accept the fact.

She was apparently going against best practices by giving herself treatments­after the business was closed and all other workers were gone. I would also assume that this was probably not the first time she had done this. Only this time, something went wrong.It’s not the company’s fault, nor the manufactur­er of the machine that caused this tragic outcome.

We all need to stop blaming everyone and everything else for our own actions, and accept responsibi­lity for what we choose to do. Now the business is threatened, insurance companies will pay out, prices will go up, and all will be required to pay. This did not need to happen and appears to be no one’s fault but the individual involved. Who do we blame when we choose to speed, run red lights, etc.? David Wilhite Henderson

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