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Home Energy Magazine Online March/April 1996
trends
in energy
Libraries and Utility Collaborate to Educate
In an innovative program, Dane County Library
Service (DCLS) and Madison Gas and Electric Company (MGE) in south central
Wisconsin are collaborating to deliver energy information and assistance.
Both the libraries and the utility benefit from the program. It increases
the libraries' ability to supply patrons with energy information-an obvious
need, given that energy materials are checked out of the libraries 50%
more often than the nonfiction collection as a whole. From MGE's standpoint,
the libraries provide a visible community-based distribution system.
DCLS is a coordinating agency for programs involving
the 17 municipal libraries of Dane County. MGE serves much of Dane County
and customers in six additional counties. Their partnership has resulted
in a grant of nearly $20,000 for energy awareness and educational activities
at nine public libraries over an 18-month period ending December 31, 1996.
Project activities focus around October Energy Awareness Month in both
1995 and 1996.
The grant comes from the Wisconsin Environmental
Education Board (WEEB), in cooperation with the Wisconsin Energy Bureau.
The project aims to teach citizens how to develop good energy conservation
habits. A key element of the grant is to publicize the project and encourage
similar partnerships between other interested utilities and public libraries.
A buzz of activity surrounds a table staffed by Julie
Chase, Dane County Library Service director and Betsy Proctor, branch coordinator
for the Madison Public Library. Items displayed include energy books and
an energy kit full of weatherization tools, which is also available for
loan. |
Program Basics
Half of the grant goes toward the purchase of circulating
energy books, videos, and tool kits. The kits contain basic tools needed
to caulk and weatherstrip a home, such as a caulking gun, hammer, utility
knife, tape measure, putty knife, scraper, and screwdriver. Portable energy
meters and Green Plugs will be added in 1996, so that borrowers can test
whether Green Plugs will save energy for their refrigerators.
Individual libraries selected activities for
fall 1995 from a number of options, including energy displays, exhibits,
children's programs (for example, "Wizard of Watt," an energy conservation
puppet show) and adult presentations, such as home energy workshops.
The workshops consisted of a general session
and three breakout sessions. The general session covered such topics as
hidden heat losses, heating equipment tips, cost-effectiveness ratings
for various improvements, and services and financing for home improvements.
The breakout sessions addressed lighting, insulation, and services and
financing. All of the sessions allowed plenty of time for questions, and
the breakout sessions offered participants a chance to handle insulation
materials and compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs).
Energy-saving incentive gifts, such as CFLs and
water-saving showerheads purchased through the grant, help to bring people
to the workshops and make it easier for them to implement the energy measures
they're learning. Each attendee completes a home energy action plan charting
proposed energy-saving actions and purchases. MGE follows up on the action
plans, offering assistance while also monitoring the program's progress.
MGE and the libraries also issue surveys to determine whether the participants
have taken energy saving actions as a result of the program. Thus far,
survey results indicate that 40% of the respondents have acted or are planning
to do so.
Publicity and Promotion
The program got a major boost when Governor Tommy
Thompson declared October "Wisconsin Energy Awareness Month," and the State
Energy Bureau developed a special energy poster. The poster was prominently
displayed during October 1995, often in conjunction with energy exhibits.
The local media also helped publicize the program.
And, in connection with a City of Madison planning effort, middle-school
students dropped off fliers in local neighborhoods about the library's
home energy workshop. The school also made the fliers available during
registration week. Workshop attendees could and did check out the new resources
on the spot, thanks to a computer and the library system's new on-line
information system.
Overall, promotion of the energy activities and
resources made use of the libraries' and MGE's ties with local schools,
businesses, city government, and community organizations. For instance,
one library convinced the local bank to include a flier about upcoming
energy happenings in the bank's September mailing of account statements.
Lessons Learned
The 1995 energy activities and resources were received
very well by participating libraries and their patrons. Evaluation of all
areas of the project is an important ongoing part of the grant. Insights
from the 1995 activities will be used to fine-tune the 1996 activities.
Individual events, such as the children's puppet
show and adult energy presentations, tended to be most successful when
scheduled during a regular library time slot-for example, family night-or
when piggybacked onto a community meeting-as one library did with the Parent-Teacher
Association.
One library had an energy display that generated
considerable attention. It consisted of a coal pile topped with a compact
fluorescent light bulb. The caption explained how savings from using the
fluorescent bulb translate into environmental benefits. Equally creatively,
another library decorated its homecoming parade float with state Energy
Awareness Month posters and an energy banner and balloons.
These examples illustrate the flexibility of
the collaboration to adapt to individual library and community needs. That's
a strength essential to the continued vibrancy and evolution of the partnership.
For further information, contact Julie Anne Chase,
Director, Dane County Library System, at (608)266-6388, or Eileen Vandoros,
at (608)252-5631.
Eileen Vandoros is senior market analyst
at Madison Gas and Electric Company in Madison, Wisconsin.
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