Blood feud: the solar panel massacre of 2008
History is filled with stories of feuding families: Hatfieds vs. McCoys, Corleones vs. Tattaglias, 2Pac vs. the Notorious B.I.G. and now, Vargas vs. Treanor-Bissett. The feuding Silicon Valley neighbors recently took their dispute to court, facing off in what I have deemed the "Solar Panel Massacre of 2008." To set the stage, both families are environmentalists; Treanor drives a Prius, while Vargas drive an electric car. Both families recycle, both believe in alternative energy and nature conservation -- so what could they possibly disagree about? It all started 10 years ago, when Richard Treanor and his wife Carolynn Bissett planted 8 Redwood saplings along their fence line. Since then, neighbor Mark Vargas has become what some might call, a "solar nut." In 2001, Vargas began a small solar panel project that has since ballooned into an obsession. $100,000 later, his roof was covered with panels and he needed to look for alternative space. Vargas settled on a trellis that was partly shaded by the now 30ft. Redwood trees --herein lies the problem.
Although the trees were planted well before the solar panels were put in place, a California law known as the 1979 Solar Shade Control Act establishes that solar power generators take precedence over trees -- plain and simple. After spending $25,000 on a losing court battle, Treanor and Bissett have been ordered to remove 2 of their trees or be fined $1000 a day -- setting a groundbreaking legal precedent. Vargas says, next year he might go after 2 more of their trees.













