Leftists still mock Ronald Reagan for having once said, “If you’ve seen one redwood, you’ve seen them all”. The Gipper did not, however, engage in arboricide – unlike grandstanders who want to prove their devotion to the Great War Against Warming:
SUNNYVALE, California (AP) – In an environmental dispute seemingly scripted for eco-friendly California, a man asked prosecutors to file charges against his neighbors because their towering redwoods blocked sunlight to his backyard solar panels.
But the couple next door insisted they should not have to chop down the trees to accommodate Mark Vargas’ energy demands because they planted the redwoods before he installed the solar panels in2001. . . .
After more than six years of legal wrangling, a judge recently ordered Richard Treanor and his wife, Carolyn Bissett, to cut down two of their eight redwoods, citing an obscure state law that protects a homeowner's right tosunlight. . . .
The case marks the first time a homeowner has been convicted of violating the law, which was enacted three decades ago, when few homeowners had solar systems.
The law requires homeowners to keep their trees or shrubs from shading more than 10 percent of a neighbor’s solar panels between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m., when the sun is strongest. Existing trees that cast shadows when the panels are installed are exempt, but new growth is subject to the law.
Residents can be fined up to $1,000 a day for violations, though the judge did not impose any fines against the Treanors.
Vargas says the law protects his $70,000 investment in solar power, and he believes it should bestrengthened. . . .
Treanor, a retired engineer, said he and his wife are not against solar power, “but we think there’s a rational way to implement it.”
The news account also includes some amusing environmentalist one-upsmanship:
Treanor and Bissett, who drive a hybrid Toyota Prius, argue that trees absorb carbon dioxide, cool the surrounding air and provide a habitat for wildlife.
Vargas, who recently bought a plug-in electric car, counters it would take two or three acres of trees to reduce carbon dioxide emissions as much as the solar panels that cover his roof and backyard trellis.
Without trying to resolve that theological dispute, let’s note that the decapitated redwoods would have absorbed CO2 for centuries into the future. The solar panels will be good only for scrap within a human lifetime.
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