Home Sen. Warner visits Y to learn about solar project
Virginia

Sen. Warner visits Y to learn about solar project

Chris Graham

Of course it would rain. U.S. Sen. Mark Warner was in Waynesboro on Friday to get a firsthand look at the $100,000 thermal-solar project being installed at the Waynesboro YMCA, and the rain was coming down in sheets.

So instead of climbing on the roof to see the panels that will cover approximately 1,600 square feet of roof above the Y’s indoor swimming pool, Warner was dry inside the facility going over the details of the project with YMCA executive director Jeff Fife and Andy Bindea and Shawn Cooke of Sigora Solar, the project partner taking the lead on the installation.

Fife, Bindea and Cooke briefed Warner on the project, which is being made possible by grant monies from the Virginia Department of Mines, Minerals and Energy under a program funded by the American Reinvestment and Recovery Act federal-stimulus program.

“There was a lot of criticism about the stimulus dollars, and I understand that. But there was also a lot of good that came out of that project, and here in Waynesboro, at the YMCA, we have an example of one of the projects that’s working,” Warner said.

The thermal solar system will be tied in the building’s domestic hot-water and space-heating system and has the potential to save the YMCA $13,000 a year in energy costs, said Bindea, the president of Sigora Solar, a Waynesboro-based company.

For the Y project, SIgora designed a drain back solar thermal system with a pumping station and a 500-gallon custom built heat storage tank that will be installed in one of the Y’s mechanical rooms along with all the heat exchanges and automatized controls.

Once the system is operational, it will be fully automatic with minimal maintenance required – an estimated two to three hours a year.

Warner was impressed with what he saw and learned from the Y and Sigora about the project.

“It makes sense in every area. It makes sense in terms of the jobs that are being created in terms of the solar installation. It makes sense in terms of a local business that’s going to have a great reference here in terms of the Y. It’s going to make sense in terms of the community that uses this great facility to see that solar power can work. And by being able to redirect $13,000 that otherwise would have been paid to the power company into additional programs and projects at the Y. That means more kids, more folks in the community will actually get help,” Warner said.

Support AFP




Chris Graham

Chris Graham

Chris Graham is the founder and editor of Augusta Free Press. A 1994 alum of the University of Virginia, Chris is the author and co-author of seven books, including Poverty of Imagination, a memoir published in 2019. For his commentaries on news, sports and politics, go to his YouTube page, TikTok, BlueSky, or subscribe to Substack or his Street Knowledge podcast. Email Chris at [email protected].

Latest News

school bus arm
Local

Albemarle County schools leader resigns as division deals with fallout from child sex arrests

staunton
Local

Staunton: Police ID suspect in shots fired incident near Gypsy Hill Park

Staunton Police have identified a suspect in a shots fired incident in the vicinity of Gypsy Hill Park reported on Wednesday.

derek dooley uva football
Football, Politics, U.S. & World

Former UVA Football walk-on is a long shot in the Georgia GOP U.S. Senate run-off

Former UVA Football walk-on Derek Dooley rallied to clinch a spot in the June 16 run-off for the Republican nomination for Jon Ossoff’s U.S. Senate seat from Georgia, but per the latest polling data, he’ll need to pull off another comeback to win the primary.

homeless shelter food line buffet soup food insecurity
Politics, U.S. & World

State AGs win injunction to block Trump effort to keep people hungry over politics

interstate 81 i-81
Local

Staunton: VDOT announces Interstate 81 closure overnight Saturday

uva baseball chris pollard
Baseball

UVA Baseball: Ranking prep recruiting, transfer portal pick-ups, assessing needs

FIFA world cup 2026 soccer
Etc.

Two former UVA Soccer stars set to compete in the 2026 World Cup