Having watched enviously for years as other states put PV incentive programs 
into place, I have seen the opposition from the electrical unions and large 
electrical contractors, especially in California.
What sort of friction did Oregons licensing procedure experience compared to 
California?
Jim Duncan
North Texas Renewable Energy Inc
817.917.0527
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.ntrei.com 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Bob Maynard 
  To: RE-wrenches 
  Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 4:50 PM
  Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] State licensing for PV installers in Texas


  Jim,

   

  In Oregon we have a Limited Renewable Energy Technician license.  We are 
capped at 25kw and can do residential and commercial.  The LRT license does not 
allow us to make final AC connections on any system and requires a site visit 
from an electrician.

   

  Regards,
  Bob Maynard

  VP NW Distribution Sales

  groSolar   What the World Needs. NOW

  535 NE Westbrook Way

  Grants Pass, OR 97526
  Direct:     541.291.4044

  TollFree: 800.467.6527 x4044 
  Fax:         541.476.7480  
  Mobile:   541.761.1636

  groSolar.com  

  http://blog.groSolar.com 

  North America's Premier Installer, Distributor and Integrator of Solar Energy 
Solutions

   

  Distributor for Evergreen Solar, Suntech Power, SMA, Fronius, PV Powered,  
Outback Power, GridPoint, UniRac, Heliodyne SHW and other premier renewable 
energy products

   

   

  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of North Texas 
Renewable Energy Inc
  Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2008 2:45 PM
  To: RE Wrenches
  Subject: [RE-wrenches] State licensing for PV installers in Texas

   

  Wrenches

  the Texas Dept of Licensing and Regulation has (finally) proposed a Limited 
Solar Electric License for installers in Texas. There is currently no "solar 
license" in Texas. 

  Among other fairly arbitrary and borderline ridiculous potential requirements 
(IMHO) is a 50 kWDC cap on the size of systems allowed, based on inverter rated 
output. Also the license holder may not work on commercial installations.

  Are these typical of the license restrictions in other states? 

  thanks

  Jim Duncan
  North Texas Renewable Energy Inc
  817.917.0527
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  www.ntrei.com 



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