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Louise B. Schwanke

Screen Shot 2016-01-19 at 7.03.19 AMLouise B. Schwanke, 100, passed away Saturday, January 16, 2016, at Citizens Medical Center in Colby. She was born to William Frederick Winter and Clara Marie Steffen Winter on April 6, 1915 in a farm house located near Robinson, Kansas.

Louise is survived by sons John Schwanke and wife Becky, Hiawatha, Kansas; Charles Schwanke and wife Debbie, Colby, Kansas; Vernon Schwanke and wife Robin, Colby, Kansas; and grandchildren Cole and wife Leigh Ann, Overland Park, Kansas; Michael and wife Tenille, Bel Aire, Kansas; Justin and wife Mary Beth, Bel Aire, Kansas; Jennifer, Manhattan, Kansas; Connor, San Marcos, Texas.; great grandchildren Peri, Olivia, Jorja, Jayda, Grayson, Westin, and Morgan; nephews Steve Winter, Hiawatha, Kansas; James Winter, Lecompton, Kansas; Kendall Schwanke, Hesston, Kansas; Randall Schwanke, Scott City, Kansas; and Maurice Schwanke, Arlington, Texas; nieces Nancy Weingart, Hiawatha, Kansas; Ann Dieter, Raymore, Missouri; Lisa Schwanke Nuzback, Ankeny, Iowa; Connie Schwanke Rubarsky, Kansas City; Marlene Decker, Whittier, California.; Debbie Hagewood, Whittier, California; Jane Viers, Livingston, Montana; Virginia Mingee, Kansas City; and Sylvia Trusdale, John’s Creek, Georgia; sisters-in-law Laura Schwanke, Whittier, California; and Joy Schwanke, Overbrook, Kansas. She is also survived by numerous great nieces and nephews.

After graduating high school, Louise attended Emporia State Teacher’s College receiving her teaching certificate in 1936. She taught for five years at Prairie College Country School in Brown County, Kansas, and at schools in Morrill, Kansas and Enterprise, Kansas. She met her husband Orville in 1943 while teaching in Enterprise. During World War II, while Orville was serving his country, she worked for the Quarter Master Depot, Department of the Army, in Kansas City, Washington D.C., New York City and Chicago. The couple was united in marriage Sept. 6, 1946 at her parents’ home located near Robinson, Kansas.

Louise and Orville built a skating rink in Scott City, Kansas soon after moving from Robinson. In 1948 they added a four-lane bowling center to the rink. In 1949 they bought the local swimming pool creating “Schwanke Amusements.” In 1955 they added four more lanes to the bowling center. In addition, the couple built a bowling center in Dighton in 1960 and in 1967 purchased Parkview Lanes in Colby. In 1974 they opened what is now the Colby Bowl.

Louise lived most of her adult life in Scott City where she was an active member of the United Methodist Church and United Methodist Women. She was a founding member of the Pyramid China Painters of Scott City and a charter member of El Quartelejo Study Club. In addition she was a member of community organizations and was a past member of the Scott Community School Board. She moved to Colby to be near family in March 2011.

She was preceded in death by her husband, Orville Schwanke, on Dec. 8, 1995; father William and mother Clara, sister Lillian Winter, brothers Arthur Winter and Wilbur Winter, and sister-in-law Betty Winter.

Visitation is scheduled for Tuesday, January 19, from 2-8 p.m. and Wednesday, January 20, from 10 a.m.-8 p.m. At Price & Sons Funeral Home in Scott City, Kansas.

Services will be held on Thursday, January 21, at 10:30 a.m. at the United Methodist Church in Scott City with the Rev. John Lewis presiding.

Interment will be in the Scott County Cemetery in Scott City, Kansas.

Memorials may be given to the United Methodist Church in Scott City or the Scott County Museum in care of Price & Sons Funeral Homes.

SCHLAGECK: Praising Bossy

John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.
John Schlageck writes for the Kansas Farm Bureau.

Talk to farmers, stockmen and ranchers – most will tell you how much they love their cows. Problem is this humble and in most cases easy-going beast rarely receives the praise associated with the noble show horse or one of the so-called smartest creatures, the squealing pig.

Fewer and fewer people extol the virtues of this contented creature that spends her days quietly grazing and eating grass. We’ve all watched movies about horses (Trigger) and pigs (Babe), but for most of the time, cows are considered boring and ignored by Hollywood, the media and the general public.

Still, cows are not whiners. They take their obscurity in stride and rarely complain about their circumstances. Except for a couple of rare occasions, animal rights activists have overlooked this wonderful beast of burden and focused their careful aim on mice, monkeys, rats and other vermin.

Everyone screams bloody murder when some shampoo company tests its latest shampoo on a furry rodent. Where is the outcry for the lifestyle of cows?

They spend days and nights under the stars without a tent or blanket and only their coat to keep them warm. They have to hoof it across the pasture just to get a drink of cold water.

But hey, I’m not here to say I feel sorry for the cow community. Confident and quiet, it is not their way to ask for preferential treatment.

Spend time with a herd of cows and you’ll soon discover they are indeed spiritual beings. They live their entire lives in service to mankind.

Behind that seemingly blank stare rests a knowing glint that suggests, “Go ahead. Make fun. I spend all day eating and sleeping. You’re the one with high blood pressure and cash-flow problems.”

Cattle occupy a unique role in human history, domesticated beginning with the Stone Age. Some are raised for meat (beef cattle), dairy products (cows) and hides (both).

They are also used as draft animals and in certain sports. Some consider cattle the oldest form of wealth, and cattle rustling, consequently, one of the earliest forms of theft.

Dairy cows are referred to as the foster mothers of the human race because they produce most of the milk that people drink. They provide 90 -percent of the world’s milk supply.

The best cows may give approximately 25 gallons of milk each day. That’s 400 glasses of milk. Cows in this country give an average of 2,000 gallons of milk per year. That’s more than 30,000 glasses of milk.

Beef cattle supply more than 30 different cuts of meat including the heart, tongue and what we grew up calling mountain oysters – a male private part. You gotta’ admit, that’s meaningful giving.

Another gift from the bovine community is leather that comes from their hides. We use it for boots, belts, baseballs, suitcases, purses, wallets, easy chairs and jackets. Yes, cattle or cows make the ultimate sacrifice for human comfort.
Another place cows shine is in the rodeo arena or as spokes mammals in advertising. Who hasn’t seen the skydiving cows on their television screen?
Another cow celebrity that’s been around for eons is Borden’s Elsie the Cow.

Snorting bulls symbolize a healthy stock market and a Hereford cow pioneered space travel. Every kid knows about the cow who jumped over the moon.

Milk, ice cream, cheeseburgers or that fine leather purse – think about it. Where would we be without our cows?

On any given day a cow often does more for us than our friends, neighbors, in-laws or even our elected officials. Cows deserve a roaring round of applause and recognition for a job well done.

Anyway, I’d much rather thank a cow and wear a pair of leather boots than sport a mink coat and thank a varmint. I know I’d rather drink milk from a cow than milk from a mink. Enough said.

John Schlageck, a Hoxie native, is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas. Born and raised on a diversified farm in northwestern Kansas, his writing reflects a lifetime of experience, knowledge and passion.

HAXTON: Brownback’s pyramid scheme

Rod Haxton is editor/owner of the Scott County Record.
Rod Haxton is editor/owner of the Scott County Record.

By ROD HAXTON
Scott County Record

If you thought the budget fiasco in Kansas was bad before, then brace yourself. Here’s the rest of the story.

By now, you may be familiar with how the Brownback Administration has been tapping into the Kansas Department of Transportation – half-jokingly referred to as the Bank of KDOT – to fill the growing pothole known as the budget deficit. What you may not know is how Gov. Sam Brownback and Republican leadership in the Kansas Legislature have been pulling off a budget scheme that would make Bernie Madoff proud.

When the state budget was approved last spring, it included a provision – at the request of Brownback – to suspend the KDOT debt cap for 2016 and 2017. The goal wasn’t to embark on a spending binge to improve highways and bridges across the state.

Instead, lawmakers had discovered a means by which they could circumvent the balanced budget requirement of the state’s constitution.

And they were attempting to do so with as little fanfare as possible.

State Rep. Don Hineman (R-Dighton) said there was not widespread understanding last spring that the debt limit had been suspended.

“The chairs of the Ways and Means and Appropriations committees claim this was public knowledge, but I don’t remember it ever being brought up and neither do my colleagues. We would have remembered if something this important had been brought to our attention,” says Hineman.

Attempts by the governor and legislative leaders to conceal their activity was further highlighted by the issuance of another $400 million in bonds on Dec. 2 which was supposedly for the T-Works highway improvement program. This raised KDOT’s bonded indebtedness to a record-setting $1.2 billion.

However, knowledge of this latest $400 million bond issue didn’t surface until two weeks after the fact and only after it was discovered by the media.

What lawmakers did was apparently legal – though arguably unethical.

“It’s pretty obvious the plan is to use this money to fill part of the hole in the general fund,” notes Hineman. “This is reckless fiscal policy. You do not take out long-term debt to pay your current bills. That’s not conservative and it’s not responsible.”

How long term is the representative talking about?

He saw the prospectus for the recent $400 million bond issue and the first principal payment is not due until 2025.

“We’re borrowing the money now to pay this year’s bills and we won’t start paying the principal for another 10 years,” emphasized Hineman. “How can you endorse this policy and call yourself a fiscal conservative?”

Just in case you were wondering, that’s seven years after Brownback leaves office. In all likelihood, a number of the ultraconservative lawmakers who are also responsible for this disastrous fiscal policy will also be out of the legislature by that time and enjoying their annual Christmas cards from the Koch brothers.

These so-called conservatives are decimating the sound budget principles that have long been the foundation of Kansas government. Bearing the brunt of this morally bankrupt policy will be those in Kansas who can least afford it as well as our children and their children who will have no choice but to pick up the tab.

We’ve seen it before.

It’s strikingly similar to the pyramid scheme used by Wall Street scam artists who promise huge returns on investments, but deliver on those promises by continually attracting “new” money from unsuspecting clients that is then redistributed to their earlier investors. In this case, the “new” money is hundreds of millions of dollars in long-term debt that’s being used to help pay off those who have received hundreds of millions of dollars in tax breaks.

What lawmakers are doing may not be in direct violation of the state’s Constitution, but it’s “a violation of the spirit of the Constitution,” argues Hineman.

We would take that a step further and argue that if it’s not criminal then it ought to be.

Not that any of that matters to the ideologues in the Brownback Administration or those who hold down leadership positions in the legislature. They aren’t concerned with whether massive income tax cuts represent good policy or whether using long-term debt from KDOT to pay current salaries and utility bills is morally responsible.

They are much more concerned with fulfilling the ultraconservative goal of giving tax breaks to the wealthiest individuals and corporations while further limiting the ability of government to perform its duties.

Further cuts to our social services safety net, toward the public education of Kansas children and in the state’s infrastructure that we all rely upon are of small consequence. How different is this from the disdain that Madoff had for the victims of his financial fraud that resulted in guilty pleas to 11 federal felonies and earned him 150 years in prison?

Only there will be no jail time for the fiscal shenanigans committed by Brownback and his co-conspirators. Instead, it will be up to future lawmakers – if they choose to act responsibly – and our children to clean up one helluva mess.

Rod Haxton is editor of the Scott County Record. [email protected]

HPD Activity Log Jan. 18

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The Hays Police Department responded to 5 animal calls and 10 traffic stops Monday, Jan. 18, 2016, according to the HPD Activity Log.

Animal Bite Investigation–2500 block Indian Trail, Hays; 11:03 AM
MV Accident-Private Property–1900 block Vine St, Hays; 11 AM; 11:27 AM
MV Accident-Hit and Run–2500 block Haney Dr, Hays; 1/16 5:30 PM; 1/18 11:59 AM
Warrant Service (Fail to Appear)–2800 block E 8th St, Hays; 12:07 PM
Suspicious Activity–500 block W 27th St, Hays; 12:54 PM
Civil Dispute–3000 block New Way, Hays; 12:51 PM
Theft (general)–300 block Ash St, Hays; 2:14 PM
Found/Lost Property–700 block E 6th St, Hays; 2:33 PM
Harassment, Telephone/FAX–600 block E 15th St, Hays; 5:18 PM

hpd top sponsor jan 6

Kan. woman found dead in an apartment, suspect arrested

police murder crime

OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Overland Park police are investigating the death of a woman whose body was found in an apartment as a homicide.

Police found the body of 35-year-old Jennifer Lopez of Overland Park Monday evening inside an apartment just south of Shawnee Mission North High School Monday evening.

Police say an acquaintance of the woman was arrested and is being held in the Johnson County jail pending charges.

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OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) — Overland Park police are investigating the death of a woman whose body was found in an apartment as a homicide.

Police were called to the apartment just south of Shawnee Mission North High School Monday evening and found the woman dead.

Police say an acquaintance of the woman was taken in for questioning.

Cloudy, cold and a chance for snow

There are two rounds of wintry precipitation this week. The first is today and tonight with very little to no snow accumulation. The second round comes Wednesday evening into Thursday with up to 1.5 inches possible.

Screen Shot 2016-01-19 at 5.32.46 AMToday A slight chance of snow showers between 7am and 4pm. Patchy freezing fog before 8am. Cloudy, with a high near 31. East wind 8 to 13 mph becoming north in the afternoon. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Tonight Partly cloudy, with a low around 18. North northeast wind 5 to 9 mph becoming light and variable.

WednesdayA slight chance of rain and snow showers after 3pm. Increasing clouds, with a high near 41. South wind 6 to 11 mph increasing to 13 to 18 mph in the morning. Winds could gust as high as 28 mph. Chance of precipitation is 20%.

Wednesday NightA 40 percent chance of snow. Cloudy, with a low around 28. Southeast wind 6 to 14 mph becoming north northwest after midnight.

ThursdayA 30 percent chance of snow, mainly before noon. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 34. Breezy, with a north wind 16 to 21 mph.

Thursday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 17.

FridayMostly sunny, with a high near 37.

Friday NightPartly cloudy, with a low around 22.

SaturdayMostly sunny, with a high near 47.

Monday’s high school basketball results

BOYS BASKETBALLHigh School Scoreboard Whitmore

Lakeside 55, Chase 44

Basehor Linwood Invitational

Blue Valley Stillwell 73, Pembroke Hill, Mo. 49

Topeka Hayden 51, Benton, Mo. 50

Burrton Invitational Tournament

Berean Academy 59, Burrton 35

Pretty Prairie 55, Fairfield 49

Canton-Galva Tournament

Ell-Saline 37, Derby Invasion 29

Sedgwick 66, St. John’s Military 40

Cherokee Southeast Tournament

Seneca, Mo. 48, Southeast 28

Flint Hills League Tournament

Council Grove 81, Northern Heights 56

Lyndon 56, Chase County 40

Osage City 67, Herington 32

West Franklin 53, Mission Valley 37

Halstead Tournament

Cheney 60, Moundridge 48

Hoisington Tournament

Minneapolis 65, Victoria 62, OT

Russell 43, Otis-Bison 38

McLouth Tournament

Bishop Seabury Academy 73, KC Christian 31

Northern Plains League Tournament

Lincoln 46, Tescott 38

Osborne 46, Rock Hills 31

Pike Valley 67, Wilson 56

St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 66, Thunder Ridge 21

Sterling Tournament

Beloit 68, Remington 45

Hugoton 74, Smoky Valley 50

Tonganoxie Invitational

Wamego 63, DeSoto 49

Twin Valley League Tournament
First Round

Centralia 62, Axtell 39

Troy 66, Hanover 59

Washington County 70, Frankfort 39

Wilson County Classic

Fredonia 74, Bluestem 37

Girard 79, Caney Valley 52

GIRLS’ BASKETBALL

Jackson Heights 42, St. Mary’s 40

Sylvan-Lucas 67, Rock Hills 28

Basehor Linwood Invitational

Blue Valley Stillwell 48, Park Hill, Mo. 44

Topeka Hayden 61, Olathe North 38

Hi-Plains League Tournament

Southwestern Hts. 50, Wichita County 22

Hoisington Tournament

Minneapolis 58, Ellinwood 35

Russell 55, Otis-Bison 26

McLouth Tournament

KC Christian 27, Bishop Seabury Academy 16

Pleasant Ridge 54, Maranatha Academy 15

Mid Continent League Tournament

Phillipsburg 45, Norton 32

Stockton 56, Smith Center 44

Hays-TMP-Marian 77, Plainville 40

Hill City 50, Trego 20

Northern Plains League Tournament

Glasco/Miltonvale-Southern Cloud 33, Lakeside 28

Pike Valley 61, Wilson 57, 3OT

St. John’s Beloit-Tipton 46, Natoma 19

Thunder Ridge 51, Lincoln 22

South Central Border League Tournament

Caldwell 49, Udall 46, OT

South Haven 36, West Elk 35

Flinthills 33, Central Burden 27

Sedan 52, Argonia 30

Southeast Cherokee Tournament

Baxter Springs 61, Southeast 42

Columbus 59, Erie 30

Parsons 44, Jayhawk Linn 12

Sterling Tournament

Beloit 52, Remington 45

Hugoton 63, Hutchinson Trinity 30

Tonganoxie Invitational

Jefferson West 55, Tonganoxie 20

Silver Lake 55, Eudora 27

Bonner Springs 44, Wamego 36

Twin Valley League Tournament
First Round

Axtell 50, Wetmore 39

Centralia 53, Clifton-Clyde 26

Frankfort 55, Washington County 53, OT

Wilson County Classic

Fredonia 68, Bluestem 45

Girard 57, Neodesha 24

 

 

Kansas teen hospitalized after ejected in rollover accident

KHPSTRONG CITY -A Kansas teen was injured in an accident just after 9p.m. on Monday in Chase County.

The Kansas Highway Patrol reported a 2005 Mazda Rx8 driven by Trevor Colt Burright, 19, Cottonwood Falls, was westbound in the 500 Block of 4th Street in Strong City at a high rate of speed.

The Mazda left the roadway into north ditch, struck a culvert by a driveway, went airborne, rolled and the driver was ejected.

Burright was transported to Newman Regional Medical Center. He was not wearing a seat belt, according to the KHP.

Monarchs claim multiple ‘firsts’ at Wichita chess tourney

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L-R, Back Row: Paul Brull, Ethan Rohr, Patrick Kepka, Ian Lenser, Justyce Briney, Lucas Kraus. Middle Row: Aakash Patel, Hunter Flax, Ben Pfannenstiel, Japheth Briney, Seth Perrett. Front Row: Tate Dinkel, Jensen Brull, Jenna Brull, Noah Bruggeman, Braydon Binder.

Submitted

WICHITA — Wichita North High School, on the east bank of the Arkansas River, provided the setting for a day of “firsts” for the TMP-Marian High School and Junior High chess teams. There was the individual first place of Japheth Briney as he collected a rare picket fence, the six “ones” indicating a perfect score six consecutive wins in the junior high section of the tournament.

Teammates Seth Perrett, Aakash Patel, and Ben Pfannenstiel contributed four, three, and three wins respectively to provide the team’s 16 point total, enough for a first place tiebreaker finish. Galesburg Middle School of Erie also put up 16 points, but had faced opponents with weaker scores and was assigned to second place. Lucas Kraus (1.5 points) and Hunter Flax (1.0 points) also participated in the 7 team, 48 player middle school section of the tournament.

On the high school side there were more “firsts.” Senior Patrick Kepka claimed the first place individual trophy with a five and one record. His score was matched by four others in the section including classmate Justyce Briney. Again using tiebreaks, Patrick and Justyce were assigned first and fifth places respectively in a field of 60 individual entrants. Ian Lenser (3.5 points, 10th place), Paul Brull (3.5 points, 19th place), and Ethan Rohr (3.0 points, 35th place) filled out the high school roster in the ten team high school section of the tournament.

The final “first” of the day, again on tiebreaks, was the first place high school team trophy which came home with the TMP-Marian team. The top four players for both the Monarchs and the Erie team had compiled a total of 17.5 points of a possible 24. Valley Center and host Wichita North placed third and fourth in the ten team section.

Four regular season tournaments remain on the Monarch schedule: Onaga on January 30, Concordia the following weekend, Pleasant Valley on February 20, and Hillsboro on March 5. The chess season will end with the state tournament at Lawrence on March 12.

Holy Family Holds on the Runner-Up Spot in K-5

Four 5th grade students from Holy Family also made the trip to compete in the K-5 division. The fifth grade team of regulars, Tate Dinkel, Braydon Binder, Jensen Brull, and Noah Bruggeman, meddled 18th, 13th, 10th, and 6th respectively in the K-5 Division. Binder, Bruggeman, and Brull each had four wins. Dinkel’s three wins brought the team total to 15 points, which was enough to hold off challenger Holy Cross of Wichita and claim the second place team trophy. Wichita’s St. Francis of Assisi’s nine talented team members won the K-5 division.

Holy Family second grader, Jenna Brull, represented the K-2 division and competed for individual honors. She ended the day with two wins and two draws for a 3-3 record and enough to take 10th place in the division.

The Wichita North Invitational had nearly 200 registrants across all four divisions. Hays Catholic Schools were well represented with medalists in all four divisions and team trophies in K-12, K-8, and K-5.

Click HERE for photos of the day’s action.

 

Great Bend getting national attention for community reading program

Screen Shot 2016-01-18 at 8.27.27 AMGREAT BEND -Read To Them is a non-profit organization promoting family literacy.

USD 428 took a program from Read To Them titled “One District, One Book” where everyone in the community reads and supports the reading of the same book over the course of a month.

“The World According to Humphrey” became a huge hit in Great Bend with community members and businesses getting involved with the book.

USD 428 Superintendent Brad Reed said the district is the first in Kansas to do this and the community being recognized for their implementation of the reading initiative

Reed will speak on the success of the program at the National Superintendents Conference in Phoenix February 11–13.

Reed says the reading initiative is even being considered on a statewide level where the entire state of Kansas would read the same book with activities planned and community support.

“The national superintendents association has just entered into a business relationship with Read to Them,” said Reed. “They are becoming a national sponsor of the program and it’s really beginning to pick up steam across the country.”

A committee has met and selected the next book to be read throughout the Great Bend school district for next year.

Study groups plan to meet this week to organize activities to go along with the theme of the book.

CDC: Strong signs birth defects are tied to mosquito virus

CDCHONOLULU (AP) — Health officials say a baby born in a Hawaii hospital is the first in the United States born with Zika virus.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Sunday it’s also the first infant born in the country with microcephaly  associated with Zika virus. It’s a birth defect where a baby’s head is smaller than expected. Babies with the condition often have smaller brains that might not have developed properly.

The state Department of Health announced Friday that the baby was born recently in an Oahu hospital. The mother likely had the mosquito-borne virus while living in Brazil and her newborn acquired the infection in the womb.

Neither the baby nor the mother is infectious. Officials say there’s no risk of transmission in Hawaii.

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RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) — The U.S. Centers for Disease Control says researchers have found the strongest evidence so far of a possible link between a mosquito-borne virus and a surge of birth defects.

The CDC said that researchers found the dengue-like Zika virus in the babies of two women in Brazil who miscarried and two newborns who died. Those who were born had small heads, a rare condition known as microcephaly.

CDC’s director of mosquito-borne diseases is Dr. Lyle Petersen and he says that finding the virus in brain tissue is “very significant.”

Brazil’s government says 3,530 babies have been born with microcephaly in the country since October. The number was less than 150 in 2014.

Westar offers customers chance to try alternative energy

SolarTOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Westar Energy is looking for customers interested in using some solar energy without having to install equipment.

The utility announced Monday it will build a solar array if enough customers agree by the end of March to buy at least 1 megawatt of power. That’s enough electricity to power 164 homes.

Westar spokeswoman Gina Penzig says anywhere in Westar’s territory could participate in the program.

The Lawrence Journal-World reports a household would pay about $10 per month to receive about 15 percent of its electricity through the solar community project. The incentive is that the rates would be locked in for as long as the customer is enrolled, regardless of how regular rates fluctuate.

Customers can enroll by visiting Westar’s website, WestarEnergy.com/communitysolar.

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