Some good news from California’s Central Valley: A small rural school district that made the switch to a $5 million solar power system is saving enough green to reinstate the music program it had to cut back in 2009.

Shutterstock

Grist State of Emergency | A limited-run newsletter from Grist, exploring the ways climate disasters are reshaping elections. Delivered every Tuesday until Election Day.

Reader support helps sustain our work. Donate today to keep our climate news free.

From the Fresno Beehive blog:

How did Firebaugh-Las Deltas, a 2,300-student district, swing a deal like this?

Grist thanks its sponsors. Become one.

The district got help from a consulting firm to figure out if its payments on the loan would be less than the cost of its utility bills.

The numbers reportedly show a $9 million savings over the next 25 years, said [Superintendent Russell] Freitas, who worked with SolarCity, a national company with a Fresno office. The system will be paid off in 15 years, he said.

During the first five years, the savings will be about $900,000, said Freitas.

Grist thanks its sponsors. Become one.

That’s enough for keyboard classes, choir, drama, band, and more for hundreds of San Joaquin Valley kids — and all thanks to central California’s scorching rays.