Wells Fargo Awards Half a Million Dollars for New Solar Energy Project



The Wells Fargo Foundation announced a $500,000 grant to a broad-based coalition tasked with attracting clean energy investments that will stimulate the local workforce, combat air quality issues, and beautify the Northeast Valley neighborhoods of Sun Valley and Pacoima.

The grant will support the group’s bold goals of creating 150 new local jobs and generating at least $5 million in new private investment through the installation of five megawatts of rooftop solar. In addition to rooftop solar, the grant will expand the amount of open public space available to residents of the Northeast Valley.

Grant recipients include the Los Angeles Business Council Institute (LABCi) as the team lead, Pacoima Beautiful, GRID Alternatives, The Trust for Public Land and Los Angeles Conservation Corps.

“In supporting these organizations we are furthering our commitment to the Northeast Valley and promoting a healthier future for these communities,” said Robin Choi, San Fernando Valley region bank president for Wells Fargo. “This grant will also provide economic advancement opportunities for local area residents.”

Sun Valley and Pacoima have higher unemployment rates and lower than average incomes than the City of Los Angeles. Negative health outcomes from pollution exposure, such as acute respiratory and circulatory illness, are exacerbated in the Northeast Valley, with the area scoring in the bottom 25% of clean air in the state, and a childhood asthma prevalence 20% higher than the state average.

“Even though the need is great in Sun Valley and Pacoima, they have essentially been left out of the clean energy economy that’s booming in cities throughout California,” said Los Angeles Business Council Institute (LABCi) president Mary Leslie. “This grant is an important first step toward improving quality of life and public health while also creating quality, good-paying jobs in an area where they are needed most.”

Los Angeles currently has the most installed solar power of any city, fueled by successful solar programs driving private sector investment, such as the Feed-in Tariff (FiT). The FiT program allows businesses and property owners to sell energy gathered from rooftop solar installations directly to Los Angeles Department of Water and Power. The program allows building owners to earn credit for energy produced, while driving investment, increasing property values, and creating strong career opportunities. The FiT is now the largest urban rooftop solar program in the U.S. employing local labor. The LABC aims to replicate the success of the Los Angeles rooftop solar energy program in the Northeast Valley to help attract new investments.

“The communities of Pacoima and Sun Valley are hungry for this kind of investment,” said Veronica Padilla, Executive Director of Pacoima Beautiful, a grassroots environmental justice organization serving the San Fernando Valley. “Residents are excited by the changes they are starting to see in their community like cleaner streets, more green spaces, and cleaner air.”

Wells Fargo’s $500,000 grant is indicative of the bank’s larger commitment to invest in projects that accelerate a transition to a “greener” economy.


Like this story? Begin each business day with news you need to know! Click here to register now for our FREE Daily E-News Broadcast and start YOUR day informed!

Leave a comment

No categories available

View Latest Digital Edition

Terry Mulreany
Subscriptions: 800 708 9373 x130
[email protected]
Susie Angelucci
Advertising: 484.459.3016
[email protected]

View Latest Digital Edition

Visit our sister website for news, information, exclusive articles,
deal tables and more on the asset-based lending, factoring,
and restructuring industries.
www.abfjournal.com