January 29, 2012

Getting a charge in Madison

MG&E's all electric Prius conversion plugged in to charger Drivers of plug in electric vehicles will soon be able to charge up on the streets of Wisconsin's capital city. Madison Gas and Electric is the first utility in the nation to make electric vehicle charging stations publicly available, with the purchase of six such stations to be installed around the city, according to MG&E's Steve Krause.

"One of the disadvantages (to electric vehicles) now is when you don't have a public charging station, is you have to either charge the car at your home, or you have to charge it a prearranged location," said Krause. "People that want to use electric cars all day long, either in town or even town to town, need a place to refuel that vehicle, and these charging stations will do that. We also have an additional bonus. All of the power that will be used to power these cars will come from renewable sources, and it will be primarily wind energy."

This is a demonstration project and for now, electric vehicle drivers won't be charged for the juice. MG&E's Don Peterson said the utility sees this as a business opportunity eventually, so they'll be collecting data. For example, how many electric vehicles are out there in the Madison area? "We really don't know how many electric vehicles are out there," said Peterson. "The estimates go to anywhere from 25 to 75 vehicles." That's a number that could be increasing fairly rapidly: Peterson noted that a Madison area car dealership is already doing a brisk trade, converting Toyota Prius hybrids into all electric plug ins.

"We see this is as a business opportunity, but right now each charging station, installed, is costing somewhere between $5,000 and $10,000," said Peterson. "We're exploring avenues for grants and additional research money, but right now this is an MG&E funded program."

Drivers of electric vehicles will be charged about twenty five dollars for a key fob to access the chargers. "Every car comes with a home charging station," explained Scott Emalfarb, a principal in Chicago-based Carbon Day Automotive , supplier of the chargers being used by MG&E. "We're the solution for outside your house and urban environments, people that don't have garages." 

Locations have not been finalized, but MG&E's Peterson says they hope to have the first charging station in place by the end of the summer. 

AUDIO: MG&E press conference (16:00 MP3)

Budget wait continues

Lawmakers met behind closed doors for much of Thursday, with no details being revealed on what the final state budget plan will look like.

A conference committee meeting, that was expected to begin at eight in the morning, still had not started by late afternoon. A planned floor session in the Senate was also delayed until the evening hours.

Majority Democrats have said the delays are due to the drafting of the conference committee report, although it remains unclear if there is a deal yet that allows the plan to move forward.

The Senate could still vote on the package tonight, with the Assembly expected to act on Friday. 

AUDIO: Andrew Beckett reports (MP3 :31)

One dead, one injured as car strikes pedestrians

One person was critically injured and another killed when a car hit two pedestrians in Fond du Lac this morning. Police Captain Steve Klein says the accident happened near Lentz Auto at the South Seymour and Military Road intersection.

He says one pedestrian was killed and the other flown out to a hospital from the scene. Klein says the driver of the car did stop after hitting the two pedestrians.

The vehicle was heading south on Seymour at the time of the accident.

Klein says the victims were an elderly couple from St. Cloud, Minnesota. He says a 67-year-old woman was killed and her 74-year-old husband suffered serious injuries.

Fire kills 20 pets

Fifteen dogs and at least five cats are dead after a fire in the Town of Rock Wednesday. Rock County Humane Society Operations Manager Jim Hurley says the dogs killed in Wednesday's fire weren't mistreated. He had inspected the home and found it to be clean but there were too many dogs in a small space.

The Town of Rock is the same area where 44 Siberian Huskies were rescued from a home several years ago. The Humane Society worked with adoption centers as far away as Southern Illinois and Minnesota and were able to place within the canines with a week and a half.

Hurley has spoken with the town board in the past about establishing limits for pets but says the officials looked at Husky case as an isolated incident.  He does not believe in limiting animals for farmers.

AUDIO: Jim Hurley on limiting pets (MP3 :19)

Jennings Signs Deal

Packer WR Greg Jennings officially signed his three year contract extension on Wednesday.  The extension will pay Jennings about $27 million dollars over the next three seasons, making him one of the highest paid receivers in the NFL.

Last season he caught 80 balls for over 1200 yards and 9 TDs.

Over the last few seasons, a handful of Packers players who wanted extensions let negotiations get ugly.  Jennings said that he wanted to keep his conversations with the Packes low-key and he wasn't going to hold out.

The Packers still have a handfull of other players that could become free agents after the season including Pro Bowl safety Nick Collins and linebacker Aaron Kampman.

Listen/Download: Jennings didn't want to hold out to get a new deal. :17