Open Market OC Comes to Irvine
After finding success in Long Beach, Huntington Beach and Brea, Open Market OC , Open Market OC...
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After finding success in Long Beach, Huntington Beach and Brea, Open Market OC , Open Market OC...
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It has now been a year since the Orange County Power Authority (OCPA) launched. In April 2022, all Irvine-based businesses were automatically transferred from their previous electricity provider — Southern California Edison (SCE) — and enrolled in the OCPA electricity plan at a significantly higher rate. Six months later, in October 2022, Irvine residents were enrolled in OCPA, also at a higher monthly rate.
Since being enrolled in the new OCPA plan last April, the City of Irvine has been paying $90,000 per month more for the same 100% renewable electricity that SCE provides its business customers. That’s more than a million Irvine taxpayer dollars that have been wasted in just 12 months.
Irvine residential customers are also paying more. On average, residents are being charged $30.52 more every month by OCPA for the same 100% renewable electricity that SCE offers. That means, on average, Irvine families are now paying $366.24 more in electricity costs each year
If you typically load up your aluminum cans and glass bottles and take them over to a recycling...
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On Saturday (April 22nd), we will commemorate Earth Day. In the run-up to this year’s...
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After years of persisting in his efforts to implement the will of the voters … and to make good on the promise Irvine made to veterans and their families more than a decade ago, Councilman Larry Agran finally won Council approval for construction of the long-promised Veterans Memorial Park.
However, Agran’s win didn’t come easy. In fact, Councilmember Tammy Kim refused to support the construction plan until the words “Veterans Memorial Park” were removed.
Kim spent several minutes complaining about Agran’s proposal being called a Veterans Memorial Park. She insisted that all of the elements in Agran’s plan — the control tower, planes, and military artifact displays; the Walk of Honor; the Great Memorial Meadow; and every other amenity honoring the former air station — should be referred to instead as a “botanical garden.”