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County spends $6.5 million on diesel generators for stopgap backup power fix

The County of Sonoma has completed the first phase of an initiative to install 13 large generators at major evacuation centers and other important public facilities.

The countyā€™s Department of General Services and District 3 Supervisor Chris Coursey marked the completion of the initiativeā€™s first stage with a ribbon-cutting ceremony last week at the Santa Rosa Veterans Memorial Building. The event celebrated the recently completed installation of a 100-kilowatt generator to supply the countyā€™s largest evacuation center with electricity during power outages.

Earlier this year, the Department of General Services installed 80-kilowatt generators at veterans halls in Petaluma and Sonoma. Together with the veterans hall in Santa Rosa, all three facilities play critical roles in providing shelter, electricity, internet access and other services to the public during emergencies.

A barrage of fires, power shut-offs and flooding in Sonoma County over the last five years have underscored the need for permanent generators built into key facilities. Mobile generators are often scarce during emergencies, prompting the County of Sonoma to procure permanent generators to ensure it can provide reliable, uninterrupted electricity to high-priority public facilities.

ā€œEvacuation centers, like the Veterans Memorial Building, provide safe havens for the public during emergencies. We have made this strategic investment to ensure they can keep the lights on during blackouts,ā€ said Supervisor David Rabbitt, who presided over the dedication of a new generator completed last week at the Petaluma veterans hall.

The county also installed permanent generators at several county facilities including its Transportation and Public Works yard in Santa Rosa. Future generators are planned for the sherrif department headquarters, the airport, county information systems offices and other county faculities.

The Department of General Services is actively seeking funding for the initiative through a variety of disaster and resiliency grants, including federal Hazard Mitigation Assistance Grants and other funding through the Federal Emergency Management Agency, as well as via the countyā€™s general fund.

Diesel-powered generators were installed at the veterans buildings as a first step toward grid independence and reliable backup power during emergencies, said Caroline Judy, director of the Department of General Services. However, she notes the County is actively searching for cleaner, more environmentally friendly sources of emergency power and evaluating opportunities to use greener fuel cell or solar/battery backup systems as alternatives to diesel generators. Other facilities, such as communications towers, may be better served with more modern and sustainable technology, especially for Proton Membrane Exchange type fuel cells.

ā€œTechnology advances and legislative support for green resilience have advanced dramatically since 2017,ā€ said Judy. ā€œWe are very committed to achieving the climate action goals in the Countyā€™s five-year strategic plan, which will put us on track to become carbon neutral by 2030.ā€

ā€œDiesel generators are not the optimal solution, but they are necessary now. This is phase one of a two-phase plan to build redundant power generation at our critical facilities,ā€ said third district Supervisor Chris Coursey.

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