Roger Ebbage (revisited)
January 2000: "I was exposed to solar technology as
a carpenter in the '70s," says Roger Ebbage, director of Lane Community
College's Energy Management Program. "I went back to school so that I
could teach solar design." As a high-school construction technology
teacher in Oakland, California, Ebbage and his students built and sold
four passive-solar houses at a profit. Still, that job fell to budget
cuts in 1988, so Ebbage moved to Eugene and found work at LCC, teaching
construction to welfare recipients. Since his accession to the energy
management post in '92, Ebbage has financed the program through
innovative partnerships with public and private utilities. He founded
the Northwest Energy Education Institute to train industry specialists
in the latest techniques, and as a source of revenue for the college's
two-year energy efficiency degree offering. "We've run about 80 people
through the program, with an 80 percent placement rate," he reports.
"Every kilowatt-hour we can save offsets pollution." Last October,
Ebbage was recognized as "energy manager of the year" by the
Association of Professional Energy Managers.
2018 update: "I encourage everyone to come look at
this building as an example of sustainable building design," says
Ebbage, standing beside an array of solar panels on the roof of the
Mary Spilde Center, LCC's downtown campus since 2013. "We use it as a
teaching tool." The Northwest Water and Energy Education Institute has
become a national model for energy education, offering two-year degrees
in energy management, building controls, and water conservation. After
30 years at Lane, Ebbage is easing into retirement this year; he still
works half-time. Around 75 of his colleagues and former students
attended an informal retirement party and networking session on the 4th
floor of the center last Friday, September 28.
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 4 October 2018
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