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NOREEN RASBACH, G&M

Phil Ridge knows a lot about energy - he works in the field - but he used to be like the rest of us: just trying to remember to turn off the lights and continually complaining about his electricity bills.

Then he decided to do something about it. In one year, his family has cut its electricity consumption by more than half - or more than $600 a year. Much of those savings came through significant purchases - a high-efficiency air conditioner, an Energy Star washing machine and dishwasher, new windows.

But Mr. Ridge, who owns a company that audits homes for energy efficiency, went one step further: He decided to tackle his home's standby power. "By investigating your home and controlling your expenditure by turning things off, you can really reduce the amount of power you use tremendously," he says.

That means turning off more than just your lights. According to the California-based Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, most of the electrical products in our homes - especially in our home offices and entertainment centres - can't be switched off unless you unplug them, which means that in most homes they're drawing power 24 hours a day.

The typical American home has about 40 of these products, the centre says, and the phantom power they use adds up to about 10 per cent of residential electricity use. "It really depends on the home," says Kevin Pegg, chief executive officer of Energy Alternatives Ltd., a renewable-energy company based in Victoria. "I've seen places [where it adds up] to 20 per cent. Some homes, people have every gadget known to humankind there, always plugged in and running." Mr. Pegg cites the example of his own satellite dish and its receiver: "It draws 30 watts of power when it's on and it draws 30 watts of power when it's off." Karen George, a project manager in energy efficiency at the North Carolina-based, non-profit Electric Power Research Institute, says there are many things that people don't realize use power. "The charger for your [mobile] phone, for example. If that's just plugged in, it's going to be drawing power. It's very small, but some homes have many plugged in at once." In Mr. Ridge's case, he bought an energy meter and got to work measuring every appliance and gadget. The stereo and one particular printer were two big offenders - the stereo alone used 300 watts on standby.

Poor wiring in the basement pot lights meant that they were using 300 watts 24 hours a day and a faulty garage door opener left a 60-watt light burning continuously as well. The stereo was burning more than $14 a month when not in use - the equivalent of leaving on five 60-watt light bulbs all the time.

Mr. Ridge fixed everything. He also figured out how to turn everything off - by plugging some things into a power bar that he could turn off or by just unplugging appliances and gadgets. It's part of his routine now when he goes to bed to turn everything off.

To guide him, he purchased a device called The Energy Detective, which measures how much energy is being used in the home at any given time. He checks it at the end of the day, and if that number is higher that 80 watts (the level of standby power Mr. Ridge allows in his home), he knows he left something on - and he goes to look for it.

Mr. Pegg says power bars are a great way to deal with standby power, but if you are doing new construction, you should consider having switched outlets. When he had his own office rebuilt, he rewired it to have one light switch for turning the lights on and off, and another that controls the computer, scanner and other office gadgets.

"So it becomes very easy as I leave my office just to switch it off." Mr. Pegg blames "lazy" manufacturers for many of the high levels of standby power in appliances and gadgets. "When someone is designing an electric component, they have choices. And with electricity being too cheap in this country, the manufacturers don't care. Whereas if you take another country, European countries that might be paying five, 10, 20 times what we are for power, that starts making a big difference. And those consumers have higher expectations of their appliances." But standby power also exists for a reason - it keeps programming in place and appliances ready for use. For example, any appliance or gadget with a remote control needs some standby power for it to read the commands of the remote.

But Mr. Ridge says that even turning off those kind of appliances and gadgets isn't hard. "I was pleasantly surprised - it's not that difficult to turn off all your computer equipment - even the Internet, your cable modem and everything. They're designed to work in a power failure.

"So when you turn it back on, it all just comes back." *** Just because you're not using it doesn't mean it's not costing you. Phantom power can lurk in any corner of your home. Here's how much a typical home theatre system might be depleting from your wallet when left plugged in (measured in approximate maximum kilowatt hours a year) MONEY DRAIN Receiver 129.4 kWh = $9.06 Game console (in ready state) 418.8 kWh = $29.31 Desktop computer (IN sleep MODE) 598.5 kWh = $41.90 TV (with remote) 67.7 kWh = $4.74 DVR (with remote) 286.5 kWh = $20.05 DVD/VCR 83.4 kWh = $5.84 Subwoofer 135.3 kWh = $9.47 TOTAL COST $120.37/YEAR Assumes 18 hours of standby or sleep mode per day and an average cost of $0.07/kWh. Source: Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory ***

Energy conservation

This is how much you could be wasting each year on phantom power.

Is it worth it to unplug? Two desktop computers $0.29 - $11.50 notebook computer $0.22 -$23.00 scanner $0.12 - $3.77 inkjet printer $0 - $1.84 game console $0 - $0.97 stereo $0.14 - $11.31 two televisions $0.28 - $9.47 set-top box with dvr $19.91 - $20.05 cable modem $0.74 - $3.04 dvd/vcr player $0 - $5.84 garage door opener $0.83 - $3.36 air conditioner $0.41 two cordless phones $0.46 - $1.66 coffee maker $0 - $1.24 microwave $0.64 - $2.25 gas range $0.32 - $0.78 graphic: trish mcalaster / the globe and mail

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Great article, my dad is all over this stuff...but I gotta say - This is impossible:

"Poor wiring in the basement pot lights meant that they were using 300 watts 24 hours a day"

So the lights were on? There is no way to send 300 watts through wires without something plugged in and drawing current...

If you want to test some of the things you have plugged in, these go on sale for $15 occasionally:

http://www.canadiantire.ca/AST/browse/3/HouseHome/2/Electrical/ElectricalTesters/PRD~0528851P/Blue%252BPlanet%252BElectronic%252BEnergy%252BMeter.jsp

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The 13-year-old Montgomery stu­dent expected to be bullied for being gay, but didn't expect his teacher to encourage it.

He said that when a teacher ridi­culed him in class, telling him to "quit acting like a girl and start act­ing like a boy," he was too stunned to react. When the local junior high school student talked to his mother about it, she hired an attorney who wrote a letter of complaint to the Montgomery school district.

The district's staff attorney re­sponded in a letter that the teacher's comment had been misrepresented and taking out of context and was not meant to be offensive.

"We wanted a written apology to my son and myself and we never got it," said La'Daytra Walker, mother of the boy. "We received the state­ment from the staff attorney at the school, but they didn't apologize.

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