
 
        
         
		Prevent the next tragedy 
 Don’t give up on Build Back Better 
 COURIER L 18     IFE, JANUARY 14-20, 2022 
 EDITORIAL 
 OP-ED 
 No amount of money can  
 compensate for the destructive  
 fi ve-alarm fi re  
 at a Bronx apartment building  
 on Jan. 9 that claimed at  
 least 17 lives, eight of them  
 children. 
 In an instant, a peaceful  
 morning  turned  into  a  horrifi  
 c tragedy, as the blaze — apparently  
 sparked by a faulty  
 space heater — quickly spread  
 throughout two fl oors.  
 But, as is the case with most  
 fi res, the fl ames  themselves  
 did not cause such horrifi c loss  
 of life. Rather, it was the thick,  
 acrid smoke that spread across  
 the 19 fl oors of the Twin Parks  
 North West tower — fi lling the  
 stairwells where people tried  
 to escape, and becoming into a  
 death shroud.  
 The incredible heroics of  
 fi refi ghters who ran in and  
 pulled one unconscious person  
 after another out of the building  
 were incredible to witness.  
 Some had run out of oxygen in  
 their own tanks, but still ran  
 in, managing to get victims  
 out as fast as they could. 
 And this horrifi c  scene  
 happened because a self-closing  
 door wasn’t fully closed.  
 That door could have confi ned  
 the blaze to a single fl oor, and  
 spared so much heartbreak.  
 Whether the door was  
 faulty  or was  left  open  in human  
 error remains to be seen.  
 The investigation into this horrifi  
 c fi re is only beginning. 
 The circumstances are eerily  
 similar to another deadly  
 blaze in the Bronx in the winter  
 of 2017, when 13 people  
 were  killed  in  an  apartment  
 building fi re. As Fire Commissioner  
 Dan Nigro pointed out,  
 the smoke and fl ames were allowed  
 to spread throughout  
 the structure due to an open  
 door.  
 These tragedies remind us  
 of two simple, yet very important  
 tips that the New York  
 City Fire Department is quick  
 to remind the public. 
 If a fi re breaks out in your  
 apartment building, get out of  
 the premises — but make sure  
 you’ve closed the door behind  
 you. If the door isn’t closing on  
 its own, pull it shut. This reduces  
 the chances of the fi re  
 spreading. 
 Secondly, and this is particularly  
 important during  
 the cooler months, take steps  
 to operate your space heaters  
 safely. 
 Keep them at least three  
 feet away from any linens, including  
 bedding and curtains.  
 Plug the heaters directly into  
 a wall outlet, not an extension  
 cord or surge protector. Turn  
 the space heaters off if you’re  
 leaving the room or going to  
 sleep; never leave them operating  
 unattended. 
 Let’s do our part to prevent  
 the next tragedy from happening. 
 BY MICHAEL SACHSE 
 In the 20th century, America transformed  
 its built environment. We built  
 the roads, highways, and interstates that  
 made automotive transit effi cient  and  
 fast. We built houses and apartments at  
 a pace and cost that made middle class  
 lifestyles  much  more  broadly  accessible. 
  And we built an energy grid that  
 made previously unimaginable things  
 ordinary: we press a button to turn on  
 a light, access hundreds of television  
 channels, or change the temperature in  
 our homes. Those investments fundamentally  
 transformed our lives. 
 We now have no  choice but  to do  it  
 again. Climate change will remake our  
 world unless we remake it fi rst. Fortunately, 
  we know what to do. We need to  
 transition away from fossil fuels and  
 towards a low carbon economy, and we  
 need to fast. The challenge isn’t ideas,  
 it’s  speed. As  Professor  Robert  J. Gordon, 
  the self-professed “prophet of pessimism” 
  put it about the pace of innovation  
 more  broadly,  “Lots  of  things  are  
 being proposed …but they are going to  
 happen very slowly.”  
 This is why it is so critical that Democrats  
 reach a compromise on Build  
 Back Better – the poorly marketed, onagain  
 off-again reconciliation package.  
 Once you scrape away the stories about  
 posturing and price tags, you fi nd it’s at  
 least as important to remaking our infrastructure  
 as the highly touted infrastructure  
 package that came before it. 
 In particular, the least controversial  
 components  of  Build  Back  Better  will  
 jump start a transition in how we heat  
 and cool our homes. Residential and  
 commercial buildings account for 40  
 percent of America’s carbon emissions,  
 making enhanced energy effi ciency and  
 green transformation critical to any climate  
 change solution. Indeed, most of us  
 burn “natural” gas, a fossil fuel, to heat  
 our homes and offi ces. That must change  
 and change quickly. That’s why we need  
 to expand access to new renewable longterm  
 resources. As one example, in the  
 case of heating and cooling homes, heat  
 pumps, especially ground source, that  
 replace fossil fuel powered systems can  
 reduce a home’s carbon emissions by up  
 to 80%. At the same time, we need to fast  
 track electric generation from renewable  
 sources, and we need to do it with  
 US made products  that aren’t vulnerable  
 to geo-political drama. 
 New York’s own communities are  
 leaders on fi ghting climate change, from  
 policies at the local to the state level  
 and to key partnerships and incentives  
 through the NY Clean Heat program  
 that empower homeowners and businesses  
 alike to afford to make changes  
 that make  a  difference  that  over  time  
 will create a more robust economy and  
 higher quality of life. 
 The climate portions of Build Back  
 Better  do more  than  any  bill  before  it  
 to accelerate  the  transition  in how our  
 communities heat and cool their homes,  
 and it does it through proven means. Often, 
  the challenge with energy related  
 investment is that the upfront costs are  
 usually signifi cant, while the benefi ts  
 are realized over many years. Tax credits  
 help solve this problem by lowering  
 the upfront costs so that those long-term  
 benefi ts are more likely to be realized. 
 This methodology has worked already. 
  Investment tax credits have been  
 most used by solar installers, helping  
 create surging demand for a once out of  
 reach  technology  that’s  making  buildings  
 more energy independent and carbon  
 neutral. The bill would broaden the  
 application of tax credits, applying them  
 to heat pumps, fuel cells, and extending  
 and expanding them for ground source  
 heat pumps. As a leader of a renewable  
 energy innovator scaling in New York  
 because of incentivized opportunities  
 for local residents who want to make the  
 switch, I have seen fi rsthand how much  
 acceleration is needed and the exponential  
 impact it can have on empowering  
 consumers to make decisions that will  
 preserve their communities for this and  
 future generations. 
 Build Back Better also makes these  
 tax credits more equitable by paying  
 them directly instead of deducting them  
 from a tax bill. This means that people  
 with lower tax burdens can benefi t from  
 the credits. It also means that schools,  
 churches, and non-profi ts will be more  
 incentivized to invest in renewable energy  
 as well. 
 Finally,  Build  Back  Better  puts  its  
 fi nger heavily on the scale in favor of encouraging  
 the deployment of U.S. manufactured  
 goods by offering an additional  
 ten percent tax credit for goods primarily  
 manufactured in the U.S. On paper,  
 this is important because it means that  
 we’ll develop our own clean industries  
 and capabilities. 
 It’s also important for a larger, more  
 central reason. It’s trite to observe that  
 America is a divided country. While  
 there’s no single cure for that, it might  
 help to invest more in the physical world.  
 Building creates opportunity. It requires  
 college degrees and skilled labor. It demands  
 teamwork in the broadest sense.  
 And there’s a unique pride that comes  
 when, at the end of the day, you can look  
 and touch the results of your work. 
 When people look back fondly at our  
 past, they are often looking to a past  
 where we transformed the world and  
 made it better. We need to do it again  
 and quickly. Build Back Better can  
 still help us get there. I hope an agreement  
 is reached and we can start the  
 real work ahead, starting in New York,  
 and in every state across the nation. 
 Michael Sachse is the CEO of Dandelion  
 Energy, the nation’s leading home  
 geothermal company. 
  “Climate change will remake our world unless we remake  
 it first. Fortunately, we know what to do.