Sunday, June 28, 2026

It is appropriate to highlight something very promising and worthwhile happening in town, in Ramsey, MN, where I live and notice things going on.

 Solar.

On otherwise unusable level wasteland, soil that cannot hold a building, the periphery of a closed landfill. The terraced main capped landfill is not something to be disturbed. Time works on the fill content, protectively capped, but there is an answer to what might we do to improve the town without damage to the fill?

The site - google map

  

The terraced landfill mound is south of the park area, with the ball diamonds for scale. That is the capped area - the main fill zone. The solar is located now at the intersection of Sunwood drive and Sunfish Lake Blvd, the lower corner half along Sunwood northward. Capped land and wetlands are left unchanged.

Solar installation in landfill areas are not new, the EPA has published Best Pratices guidelines dating back to 2022, if not earlier.

For the State of Minnesota, this is a pilot project - proof of concept.

A local newspaper has published detail:

Ramsey council OKs solar panels on closed landfill

The Ramsey City Council unanimously approved a site plan review for a Solar Energy System on its closed landfill.

The proposed site plan by Cedar Creek Energy is for a solar panel array on an approximately 24-acre portion of the landfill grounds, said Ramsey Planning Manager Todd Larson at the council’s meeting on April 8. The site is west of Sunfish Lake Boulevard, and north of Sunwood Drive.

“The site is basically all solar panels,” Larson said. “With a small area for some equipment.”

The site is zoned closed landfill, where solar energy systems are permitted; however, it is subject to a formal site plan review.

The site has some natural screening and will be secured by a 7-foot-tall galvanized woven-wire style fence.

[...] Alex Gast, Chief Operating Officer for Cedar Creek Energy in Blaine, spoke to the council about the project.

His office has been working with Conexus [the regional co-op energy supplier] to develop it and build the approximately 8,700 solar arrays, and they anticipate that they will work for more than 30 years.

“It’s frankly a really great use of the land,” Gast said. “With it being a closed landfill, the MCPA has ongoing monitoring requirements as part of this.”

Council Member Kirsten Bucher expressed support.

“I am really excited to see this, I think it’s incredibly important that we’re utilizing something like this to build our energy infrastructure on land that would not typically be able to be used,” Bucher said.

She then asked to hear about the company’s’ “community benefit plan for workforce development training.”

“As part of this project, Cedar Creek Energy intends to use our registered apprenticeship program,” Gast responded. “So we have a commitment for 15% on the job training to advance electricians in the field.”

Gast added the need for electricians in the state is “extremely high. We intend to use this project and others within our portfolio to advance these individuals.”

[...] “So what happens after the 30 years is a really good question, typically what we’re anticipating is repowering these systems,” Gast said.

Repowering entails recycling the module then installing new solar panels.

Council member Chris Riley asked staff what they are missing out on by allowing this.

“The land doesn’t have the soils that’s suitable to support a building, so we really can’t use it or get it turned back for building an industrial use on it,” Larson responded. “… Redeveloping into a parking lot and building just can’t happen.”

Council member Michael Olson asked if the panels would be secure enough given that the land isn’t stable enough for buildings.

“We have performed a substantial amount of geotechnical exploration on this site, …” Gast said. “What you’re going to see from a foundation type on this site is a driven I-beam or a pile system that’s going to go to a depth of around 10 feet.”

The site will have about 1,800 of those piles.

“Under high-wind events the tracking system itself goes into a wind stow mode to alleviate shear on the panels themselves, it goes flat, and essentially allows the wind to pass over it. Thus mitigating uplift and some of these other wind shear event type things that can happen.”

All that information has been confirmed by structural engineers, Gast said.

Mayor Ryan Heinemann asked if city residents will see any benefit from the project.

Brian Brant, CEO Connexus Energy, responded to the query.

“Ramsey’s growing, we have a greater electrical need,” Brant said. “Adding solar here negates the need to add additional substations and transmission lines for the city of Ramsey to meet their growing need. That’s the immediate benefit.”

 An undated linkedin entry from roughly 2 months ago adds:

Built on a state-controlled brownfield site through the MPCA Closed Landfill Program, this 4.125 MW AC solar array is the first of its kind in Minnesota. It transforms previously unusable land into a productive source of renewable energy. The impact is real: 

• Offsets 7,427 tons of CO2 annually 

• Powers the equivalent of 830 homes 

• Keeps the equivalent of 7.5 million tons of coal unburned each year 

[...]  Special recognition to Brian Burandt for his leadership and commitment in helping bring this project across the finish line.  

 

Historical Background

For a general review nationwide try search = national efforts to add solar to landfills

With regard to Minnesota legislative history - 

Thanks to legislation passed in 2019, the state commissioned a feasibility study on the subject. It concluded that it was very possible, but there are some barriers. Among the biggest: Of the 110 parcels of land in the Pollution Control Agency’s Closed Landfill Program, half have use restrictions from general obligation bonds used to fund their cleanup.

In other words, the solar arrays can’t go up until the bonds are retired. And some of them have 30-plus years left on their repayment schedule.

Could the process be sped up?

Rep. Todd Lippert (DFL-Northfield) sponsors HF1879 to create a pilot project to see if money from the state’s Renewable Development Account could be used to retire general obligation bonds on a closed landfill. The test case would be the Anoka-Ramsey landfill in Ramsey, and $3 million would be appropriated for the purpose.

With the removal of bonding restrictions, the site could be converted into a planned five-megawatt solar electric generation facility. According to the bill, the project must be owned and operated by an electric cooperative association that has more than 130,000 Minnesota customers.

The appropriation would be strictly to deal with the bonds, not to finance the project, procure land rights or manage the solar array.

[...] To briefly explain the Renewable Development Account: It’s a pot of state money that Xcel Energy pays into annually, set up in 1994 when Xcel was given permission to store nuclear waste at its Prairie Island plant in southeastern Minnesota. Storage at its Monticello plant was added in 2007. For each waste cask used, Xcel gives the state between $350,000 and $500,000 annually. The fund is earmarked for grants for the development of renewable energy sources in Minnesota.

“This pilot would make it possible for us to see if it’s possible for [Minnesota Management and Budget] to do this, and if this kind of model can work in the future,” said David Shaffer, executive director for the Minnesota Solar Energy Industries Association. “It’s outside Xcel service territory, but it would benefit Xcel customers in reducing their rates. It makes too much sense for Minnesota not to do.”

The company that wishes to build the solar facility is Connexus, an electric cooperative that serves the northern part of the Twin Cities metropolitan area. And that doesn’t sit well with Rick Evans, director of regional government affairs for Xcel Energy.

“Having Xcel customers pay for this would be like requiring you to pay off the debt on someone else’s mortgage,” he said.

Lippert responded that the pilot project could benefit Xcel Energy.

“There are 17 closed landfill sites within Xcel territory,” Lippert said. “That seems a good argument for use of the Renewable Development Account.”

Also - earlier this year naming of the program was dedicated to the memory of a Dem MN House Speaker who'd been gunned down in her home by a deranged Christian nationalist gunman. 

Related legislative items, here and here. Familiarity with legislation archiving in Minnesota is needed on these links, which might only confuse those not so familiar.

BOTTOM LINE: This is, for Minnesota, a landmark first in what has proven nationwide to be sound repurposing of otherwise faulted land. Ramsey is first in proof of concept and implementation in State. City government and private sector firms making it work deserve recognition, which is the point of this post.

Crabgrass is unclear on this, but it appears the operation was completed and put onto the power grid in the last few days, but possibly that final step remains.

Without a link, Crabgrass has seen online that the local co-op has ceased a contract partial ownership of a North Dakota genco firm, now having customer status, so that the co-op doing community solar meets or assists meeting expanded electricity demand growth as more housing projects and business uses arise as the town grows.

 

Yes. From taking ideas from the same campaign site, and that should weigh on how you view things. That said - read about it -

 https://www.chapinforcongress.com/events

 

https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbid=122168076434813590

In person. You can see a calendar where you can attend an event and talk to Chapin, who will show up and want to hear your ideas and share his.

Emmer, you can see speaking at a Ralph Reed thing, about "assimilation" for people from all over the Christian nationalist world, while Chapin talks with Minnesotans who can learn about him and his thinking.

Ultimately, the MN CD6 election will be among those who share ideas face to face with the two candidates. Minnesotans. Not Ralph Reed activists. 

Does Emmer think he can distant-propagandize the State? Are we like that?

Try this - and this is for Minnesotans who can and should go to one of Chapin's townhall scheduled events -

Chapin's issues page (https://www.chapinforcongress.com/issues) is complete and clear, organized that way. Not cutting corners. Direct, not cute or evasive.

Go to one of the events, pick any of the issues he summarizes on the page, one you think matters a lot, and talk to the man about it before the event begins, or during the event, ask about it for a detailed public answer. Hear the man out. It will be better than telling Somali people to "go back" if they don't "assimilate."

What Emmer means by assimilate is up for grabs, but it seems to involve being his view of a Catholic American middle class rural Trump supporter playing hockey and growing up in a family owning a lumber business. Less than that to Emmer would be failure to "assimilate." He appears that narrow and shallow. Buy into all "correct" propaganda, watch FOX. Think attacking Iran was smart. The right thing. And then wonder why the MOU is so favorable to Iran, wondering "who won?"

And don't think, Trump drags it out for his big-oil industrial buddies. He did it and does it and will do it for months, for you. That's how to "assimilate." Fool yourself, Emmer's way. Own a lumber yard

 

 

 

Guns and butter?

 It would be nice to have decent healthcare and lower, more reasonable supermarket prices. Something better than paycheck to paycheck - is it possible, and who'd deliver it for us? Who has that simple direct vision? 

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37rV4AJvaxk

At the beginning you can spot the two teleprompters, which are giving us this speech.

This long repetitive speech. Teleprompter technology to you.

You can't eat AI. But the teleprompters, they can speak. Saying little.

UPDATE: You cannot eat a surveillance state or an F-35. An F-35, missile equipped, will not better your cancer survival odds. Your quality of life. Your disposable income levels.

There is a saying about rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. 

Heller, in Catch 22, had a character at the start, Lt. Scheisskopf, whose main skill was arranging parades. At the end, it was Scheisskopf, supreme commander. 

Why does that come to mind - You tell me. 

 

 

Demagogue

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yq3wnASvqJY

Joe McCarthy lives in GOP House whip land.

Doug Chapin is an answer to a question this hate-mongering pure idiot makes manifestly clear. The question? What's one simple thing to do aimed at bettering the nation?

Vote Doug

Ralph Reed's kind, they should go back where they came from (Alexandria, MN, in Emmer's case). 

Doug Chapin does not yell at you. He holds town halls. In Minnesota. No Ralph Reed. No hate. Simple, clear answers to what Minnesota and the rest of the nation needs to to improve, to be better than it is. He shuns long hate-thy-neighbor high volume ranting at people. He is as different from Emmer as light is from dark.

Thomas Emmer - How could my neighbors have elected this raving theatrical asshole? How?

 


Saturday, June 27, 2026

Mr. Emmer says consistency is the hob-gobblin of petty minds.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UE-m6Abut8w 

 

American Gothic -- When you lack, use two teleprompters. Let them talk - through you - to sincerely show who you are - a suit able to reed and say what the teleprompters say, and improvise.

If this is for you, enjoy it. You have the link - 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5FMbk7a2Sa0 

 

How can paired teleprompters be that fatuous? Making it a contest for which is more dreadful as he pivots from one to the other, and improvises. Is "fatuosity" an actual word, or a concept some have it some not? 

OED online

There is one meaning in OED's entry for the noun fatuosity. See ‘Meaning & use’ for definition, usage, and quotation evidence.

This word is now obsolete. It is only recorded in the late 1600s.

More than that, "see meaning and use," toggle that and get a subscription wall. 

So much for the OED. The phrase "used to be."  

Webster - https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/fatuity -says 

fatuity

noun

fa·​tu·​i·​ty fə-ˈtü-ə-tē 
fa-
-ˈchü- 
-ˈtyü-
plural fatuities
Synonyms of fatuity
1
a
: something foolish or stupid
2
archaic : the condition of being affected with intellectual disability or dementia

Crabgrass favors "fatuosity" anyway, but current usage seems "fatuity" when the speaker deserves it. Indeed, "fat-headed fatuity" says it all. While repeating itself. 

And he's the President of the United States. 

AI, or Steven Miller likely wrote the speech. I'd exempt AI, and take Miller authorship.

And it is all at a Ralph Reed presentation. Knock millions of doors for Jesus. 

https://www.ffcoalition.com/about/road-to-majority/ 

Poor man. Hung on a cross. And forever after abused by hucksters. Fatuity after fatuity dumped at the foot of the cross. As if what the Romans did was not enough, the torment of faith protestations for benefit goes on and on and on -

__________UPDATE_________

It is easy to stop there. It is enough to make the point, not overkill.

However, bear with me. Irony is its own reward.

Guardian on the Trump speech at the Ralph Reed event -

Donald Trump has previewed a Republican strategy for the midterm elections, seizing on a progressive sweep in New York to portray Democrats as “godless communists” who pose an existential threat to the nation.

The US president, who was a child during the “red scare”, seized on wins by democratic socialists backed by the mayor of New York City, Zohran Mamdani, to stoke fears that the Democratic party has embraced extremism that could lead to the violent persecution of Christians.

Remember that - red scare times, 1956 I-Like-Ike times. Red Scare days.

More - 

[...] He focused on Tuesday’s Democratic primary election results in New York, where three leftwing [?] candidates endorsed by Mamdani, a Democratic socialist who is the city’s first Muslim mayor, upset incumbent or establishment rivals.

The radical left “want to resume the transgender mutilation of children, they want to restart the war on Christians and churches, and as you saw with the communists elected in New York recently … they want to completely destroy the traditional American way of life,” Trump warned.

[...] Mockingly, the president said as a communist he could give free rent, houses and food, but the country would inevitably fail after two or three years. He said: “Everyone will suffer or die. That’s what happens.”

 [...] He described the election winners in New York as “very troubling people” and claimed without evidence that they “want to destroy our country, and they hate our country and our people”.

Republicans have spent months trailing in the polls as voters accuse Trump of breaking his campaign promises to lower prices and keep the US out of foreign wars. But party strategists believe they have spotted an opening in the rise of Mamdani, giving them an opportunity to tag the entire Democratic party with the most extreme views of the left.

Put differently, the bull shits farther and farther to the Right, under the arrow of time, until falling of that edge of the earth by being too enamored with rightwing bullshit rhetoric over truth, first, and a disrespect for what some -indeed many - in the past have regarded as total reasonableness.

Consider: 

Heather Cox Richardson, in turn, in addressing the podcast camera almost too tediously lays out what American tradition has been, the place of capitalism as a part of national heritage; Nineteenth Century leading into Twentieth; and a host other present day middle-road liberal ideology of arguably sound but conservative political management and goals - sounding at times too middle of the road from the Crabgrass view; while being of the stripe Trump stands at Ralph Reed's podium to label "marxist" as each of the two teleprompters tell him to say, Dems want to destroy the fabric of the nation. 

At great length Richardson sets the table her way, sensibly so, pedantically so, until at about min 40:00 to 40:30 of the video she drops the hammer.

 Take your choice, watch it sequentially or go to see the hammer drop first, whichever you've time or inclination to do, but she does construct a consistent coherent verbal structure, something Trump does not know the meaning of and JD shies away from as if it could give him a disease. 

(Trump and JD in competition in moving with the bull rightward. Goosing the bull along. Marco a tag-along kid.)

And yes, the bull only moves Rightward, and fools never notice. And lo, we've got a trillionaire calling shots these days. A first. And groceries cost more, surprisingly so?

If you follow up on the Trump - Ralph Reed extravaganza speech, wear hip waders. It gets that deep.

 

Friday, June 26, 2026

Two links. Plus.

 Here and here.

UPDATE: related, here, here and here 

 and a shot at Mr. Pete

What's next is more important than what's been, although opinions can differ.

What's next has to be leading sane discussion. All else is smokescreen. Finger pointing. Shooting at Mr Pete is like saying Stephen Miller is a jerk - true but unhelpful. As to what's next.