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Wind Views

When we say One Energy tours are a hands-on experience, we mean literally… hands-on!

This week’s Wind View shows Salvation Army Summer Day Campers inspecting and measuring #windturbine blades during a tour of the North Findlay Wind Campus. It can be difficult to understand the scope of our projects from afar. In-person tours offer visitors the chance to get up close and personal with the work that we do. Our goal is to be as informative as possible, hopefully inspiring knowledge and future interest. Come visit to see (and feel!) a One Energy #WindforIndustry project for yourself.

  

Those who teach never stop learning!

Here at One Energy, we love giving curious minds an opportunity to get a hands-on experience with wind energy. This week’s Wind View shows OE Field Engineers Claire and Duncan providing a tour of the North Findlay Wind Campus to retired teachers. Remember, it’s never too late to learn something new.

 

            

As a lawyer, I have noticed a phenomenon. People tend to assume you’re right and what you say holds special weight. Even if I am just brainstorming on possible downside scenarios, people assume what I am saying is gospel and that the path forward is doomed. On the other hand, if I say everything is a-okay, few people push back.

If you have noticed yourself doing this with a lawyer, or doctor, or any professional for that matter, please, for the sake of your company or yourself, stop. Sure, lawyers have special training, but lawyers aren’t, by virtue of being a lawyer, special or right. And you are doing yourself and your company a disservice if you treat them that way.

I will never forget my first orientation meeting at law school. A Dean walked into the room of new law students, and she said: “Look around you. At the end of law school, some of these people you will trust with your life. Others you will not trust to watch your dog for a weekend.”

After closely working with lawyers for about a decade, I can honestly say, she was absolutely right, which is terrifying.

Lawyers are meant to protect your legal rights. In some circumstances they are protecting your freedom, in other circumstances, they are protecting your livelihood. The idea that some of them are mediocre at best, and just plain terrible at worst, is a thought that shouldn’t make a person feel warm and fuzzy. But it’s the truth. All lawyers are not created equal. Just because someone graduated from law school and passed the bar, does not mean they are a great lawyer. Most law school classes don’t teach the law of the state or jurisdiction that a person practices law in, and most law school classes don’t pertain to the area of law someone practices. Not only that, the bar exam is a standardized test. It can’t possibly capture the complexities of the real world or all of the skills it takes to be a great lawyer.

So, what does that mean for you?

It means that, like with everything else in life, you can make better decisions on behalf of yourself or your company if you do your homework and are scrutinizing. When you are hiring a lawyer, don’t just pick the only lawyer you happen to know. Dig deeper. Research their firm’s website. Find references. Interview them (they shouldn’t charge you to do this). Familiarize yourself with the issues, and then try to get your potential lawyer to demonstrate that he or she understands them far better. Once you are working with a lawyer, make sure that you continue to scrutinize. And if you ever start to get a hint that you aren’t getting the legal advice you should be, don’t hesitate to say goodbye.

Lawyers have credentials, yes. But that does not mean that they are special, or that they are always right. Always question, always scrutinize, and always look for the lawyer who you “trust with your life.” Because there are lawyers out there who you should. And they are absolutely the person you want on your side when it is all on the line.

Katie Treadway is the Head of Regulatory Affairs at One Energy.

Learn more about Katie and the One Energy team.

At One Energy, our interns are given real tasks and responsibility from day one. They get hands-on 🖐️ experience and training side-by-side full-time employees.

This week’s Wind View shows OE intern, Will, and technician, Kerry, performing civil work. As Kerry breaks up the ground with the bulldozer, Will flattens behind her with the road roller. 🚜🚧 That is some impressive teamwork!

We were excited to have Jon Monk of WTOL11 join us for celebrating students as part of this year’s megawatt scholarship program at Whirlpool Corporation in Findlay. Each year, One Energy awards a $5000 STEM scholarship for each of the turbines that we have built. In the seventh year of the program, we have awarded over $500,000 and are up to 27 turbines.

Click here to check out the coverage to hear the award winners talk about what this program means to them.

As a Utility 2.0 company building the customer-centric power grid ⚡ of the future, One Energy regularly confronts new challenges. This means sometimes we have to modify equipment that currently exists on the market to problem solve unique solutions. In this week’s Wind View, you see this process in action as One Energy Technician, Justin, welds a piece of equipment so it can better suit our needs.

Being a vertically integrated company means One Energy keeps projects in-house from initial evaluation through final construction and maintenance. This week’s Wind View is a glimpse into this integration. James, senior counsel, collaborates with field engineer, Duncan, at OE headquarters on the North Findlay Wind Campus. ‍‍

Building Utility 2.0 demands rethinking the way things have been done in the past. This requires overlap between departments and regular teamwork between employees as we share our expertise and learn from each other to problem solve solutions.

June 23, 2022 – Safety Minute | Truck Safety

At One Energy, safety is built into everything we do. From our people to our equipment, we believe that when safety is a built-in given, then safety really just is. This culture of safety means making sure our employees have any and everything they might need in an emergency.

Today’s Safety Minute is all about how we promote this culture of safety when outfitting our trucks. OE field engineer Jarrod Carney shows how we equip our trucks: from built-in hardware and design features to the stocking of our EMT bags. This helps ensure our employees’ well-being under various conditions.

Watch the video below, and be sure to subscribe to our YouTube channel so you don’t miss a minute.

 

One Energy recently had the chance to honor six more Megawatt Scholarships winners in our backyard at Ball Corporation. These scholarships were awarded to local graduating high schoolers in the Findlay community as part of our Wind for Industry projects. To date, the total amount awarded is over $510,000 for students pursuing degrees in STEM.

Thank you to The Courier for helping celebrate these students and this scholarship program! Check out their coverage here.

This week’s Wind View is a glimpse of the back of a wind turbine as it watches over our blades in the laydown yard at the North Findlay Wind Campus.

Here you can see how the nacelle, the generator, and the rotor (hub + three blades) fit together once finished. Motors in the nacelle allow it to yaw (rotate) vertically in order to face the wind. 💨 As it rotates, it moves the generator and rotor into the optimal position for energy generation. ⚡