Citizen Portal
Sign In

Lifetime Citizen Portal Access — AI Briefings, Alerts & Unlimited Follows

Lakeville EAC discusses grant timing, building audits, electric equipment procurement and community outreach

Town of Lakeville Energy Advisory Committee · February 15, 2026

Loading...

AI-Generated Content: All content on this page was generated by AI to highlight key points from the meeting. For complete details and context, we recommend watching the full video. so we can fix them.

Summary

Committee reviewed repurposing of an open grant for the animal shelter and Loon Pond Lodge, weighed ASHRAE level-2 vs level-3 audits and a municipal technical-assistance 'meta' grant, and agreed to pursue library and school outreach plus local demonstrations of zero-emission equipment.

Town of Lakeville — In operational business on Feb. 9 the Energy Advisory Committee reviewed the status of open grants, potential reuses of remaining funds for weatherization projects, and whether to pursue higher-detail building audits to support future competitive funding.

Animal shelter and Loon Pond Lodge: The chair reported that an outstanding competitive grant tied to an animal shelter project must be closed before applying for another competitive award. Committee members said they are exploring a repurpose of remaining funds to complete weatherization or related enhancements at Loon Pond Lodge; staff estimated those projects are roughly 95% complete and will follow up with a repurpose request to the Green Communities division at DOER if appropriate.

Audits and technical assistance: Members discussed state-funded ASHRAE level-2 audits (state-funded) versus level-3 audits (more detailed and costlier). The committee asked Prism Energy to provide a nonbinding estimate for a level-3 audit to understand cost per square foot and to evaluate whether a separate municipal technical-assistance grant (~$12,500 referenced in discussion) could be used to upgrade to a level-3 study with local matching funds.

Procurement and equipment: The committee considered a 'zero-emission first' procurement policy as part of climate-leader criteria. One member described finding a 52" battery-powered zero-turn mower with a list price near $6,000–7,000 (six batteries included) and an aggregate example that two units could be ~$14,000 after utility rebates versus a $28,000 gas alternative. Committee members suggested vendor demonstrations and DPW testing prior to any procurement change.

Library and schools outreach: The committee noted a $30,000 lighting capital request at the library and discussed pursuing utility commercial lighting rebates; members agreed to seek a liaison from the regional school district and to offer EAC assistance on lighting and other building-efficiency projects.

Public outreach: Members accepted an invitation to participate in a Sustainable Middleborough fair on March 21 and discussed using demonstrations such as Google’s Project Sunroof to show solar potential to residents.

Next steps: Staff and members will follow up on the Loon Pond Lodge repurpose, seek Prism Energy pricing for a level-3 audit (informational), finalize plans for library and school contact, and consider vendor demos for electric equipment. The committee will meet again March 9 to review a draft resolution and the survey questions.

Note: Several dollar amounts and the count of climate-leader communities were cited in discussion and should be verified in documents; the committee asked Lisa Sullivan to provide the list of certified communities and contact names.