Houser says Page County residents who fought solar development were driven by a not-in-my-back-yard mentality. “It’s pretty. It’s open ground,” Houser says of his property. “But it’s like, you know, some panels on it, that’s not going to change it.”
Credit:
Ryan Kellman/NPR

Roger Houser’s ranching business was getting squeezed. The calves he raises in Virginia’s Shenandoah Valley were selling for about the same price they had a few years earlier, while costs for essentials like fuel and fertilizer kept going up. But Houser found another use for his 500 acres.

An energy company offered to lease Houser’s property in rural Page County to build a solar plant that could power about 25,000 homes. It was a good offer, Houser says. More money than he could make growing hay and selling cattle.

“The idea of being able to keep the land as one parcel and not have it split up was very attractive,” Houser says. “To have some passive income for retirement was good. And then the main thing was the electricity it would generate and the good it […]

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