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All Home’s Comforts, but No Electric Bill

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Associated Press Writer

Just because Richard Roberts and Martha Maloney live 2 1/2 miles from the nearest power line doesn’t mean that they have to read by candlelight and take cold showers.

One day this winter, with the temperature at 8 degrees and whipping winds making it feel 20 degrees colder, Roberts and Maloney stayed cozy with a fire in their 25-year-old wood-burning stove and heat from three propane heaters.

Solar panels in a field outside their home give them power for their electric lights, computer, stereo, TV, blender and other devices. Their refrigerator and kitchen stove run off propane. They heat their water using copper tubing that runs through the wood stove.

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Living off the electric power grid can conjure up images of life on the frontier, without the simplest of luxuries like a hot shower. But out here, off a dirt road, the husband and wife say they don’t lack for anything -- except electric bills -- while being self-sufficient and easy on the environment.

Even if they could connect to the power grid free of charge, they wouldn’t do it.

“We’ve survived this long without it. What’s the advantage of having it?” Roberts said.

Across northern New England, as in other regions, power lines wind their way to hundreds of thousands of homes and businesses, but within that grid of power lines are lots of gaps that the wires don’t reach.

Many people who own homes in those gaps use alternative energy sources because of the high cost -- $45,000 to $70,000 per mile, sometimes even more, to extend lines to a home, depending on the landscape -- to connect to the grid. Other people who live within reach of power lines choose to use alternative power for philosophical or political reasons.

Nobody tracks how many people live off the grid. But it’s thought that the number is on the rise as technology improves and prices go down for solar power, and as people move to outlying areas in search of land that is affordable, but removed from the power grid.

Richard Komp, president of the Maine Solar Energy Assn., estimates that more than 1,000 homes in the state are off the grid, not including seasonal camps and summer cottages. The Maine Public Utilities Commission is working with Komp to come up with an exact number of homes that use solar power, either off the grid or as a supplemental power source.

Floyd Severn, owner of Maine Solar in Starks, has a map of Maine on his wall with several hundred pushpins showing where he has installed residential solar power systems since 1975. The pins are in every county, as well as on remote islands off the coast.

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Severn, whose house and business are half a mile from the nearest power line, said he knows hundreds of people who live off the grid. Severn uses solar panels, perched prominently atop his roof, for his home and business, which have 5,700 square feet of space between them.

The inside of Severn’s home looks like it’s out of a home-design magazine -- not what you might imagine for a home off the grid. He even has an Italian espresso machine and red-cedar sauna.

This, he said, gesturing to the surroundings, shows that people don’t have to give up anything to live off the grid.

In Manchester, Tom Bartol, his wife and young son live in a solar-powered 2,200-square-foot saltbox house that they built in 2003.

While many solar power systems can cost more than $25,000, Bartol installed his for $10,000, just $2,000 more than it would have cost to connect his home to the power grid, he said.

Bartol said many people view folks who live off the grid as “hippies or granola-heads.” But he said his family simply wants to make efficient use of Earth’s finite resources.

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“I think there’s a misconception that you have to have this solar-looking house or live this crazy lifestyle,” he said.

Nationally, the hotbeds of solar energy include California, Nevada, Texas, New Jersey and other places that offer tax breaks and other incentives that encourage it, according to Brad Collins, executive director of the American Solar Energy Society in Boulder, Colo.

Alternative energy is also growing in places where the power supply is less predictable. Californians still recall the rolling brownouts of a few summers ago.

And Mainers cannot forget the ice storm of 1998 that left 700,000 people in the dark.

“I think people in northern New England like to be self-sufficient to the best of their abilities. You see that in Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine,” Collins said. “And this is a technology that allows you to be self-sufficient.”

In Maine, Roberts and Maloney built their 16-by-16-foot cabin off the grid because they couldn’t afford it any other way when they moved to the state from Ohio.

It was 1976 when Roberts, Maloney and a group of 18 others bought 100 acres in Bingham for $18,000, put it in a trust and began building homes. Eleven houses were built -- none connected to the grid. Eighteen children were born and raised in the small community.

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Nowadays, only three houses are occupied year-round. The rest are used seasonally, with the owners living elsewhere, drawn away for jobs and other reasons.

Roberts and Maloney have expanded their home over the years, adding a living room, sunroom, office, garage and workshop. They still use an outhouse, but hope to replace it with an indoor composting toilet.

When people in nearby Brighton Plantation last summer began talking about extending the power lines down the road, Roberts and Maloney gave some thought to what it would be like to be connected to the grid.

They decided that even if it were affordable, they didn’t want it.

Maloney said she always feels comforted when she’s driving home and passes the last power pole on the road leading home.

“When the poles stop,” she said, “I take a deep breath and let out a good ‘whew.’ ”

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