SCENE
OPINION
SPORTS
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Fresh Check Day highlights the importance of mental health
Valentine’s Day is the best holiday
Track & Field closing out their indoor season
Vol. 124 NO. 6
Feburary 15, 2023
CWU investing in geothermal heating and cooling system Black History Month recognized by DEC exhibit
See Page 6 - 7
Men’s rugby rallies around Coach Thornley for upcoming road test Tre’Jon Henderson Staff Reporter CWU’s men’s rugby team looks to continue their win streak versus Saint Mary’s in this upcoming Saturday. Feb. 18 showdown. The Wildcats will be attempting to extend their win streak to five. Thornley has held the title of head coach since 2016 and has produced over 20 All-American athletes, five of whom went on to play at the professional level ranks of Major League Rugby. Sophomore 8 man Arona Tauiliili admires Thornely’s tenacity and skill as a coach. “Our coach is a dog,” Tauiliili said. “The way he just plans out practice is so strategic; it is just beautiful to be a part of.” Thornley attributes the team’s hot start to the caliber of players in the group. “This is a talented group of men we have this year,” Thornley said. “It has been a great start to the year but as cliché as it sounds, we just
want to take it one game at a time.’’ The men’s team is already off to a significant start, winning their first four games of the season, including wins over teams including Western Washington University (WWU) and University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). “Being one of the only D1 programs here at Central is cool,” Tauiliili said. “The team takes a lot of pride in it. We play with a huge chip on our shoulder because some teams like to think we are below them.” The team is gearing up to play Saint Mary’s in California on Feb. 18. The Wildcats are looking to end their losing streak against the opposing team, as last year they lost 30-27. “Another week on the road and the challenge does not get much bigger than this,” Thornley said. “We have the utmost respect for Gael Rugby, their coaching staff and the powerhouse they have been in collegiate rugby for the past decade.’’
Men’s rugby team on media day. Photo by Jacob Thompson / Thompson Sports Media
A rendered image of what the Geo Eco Plant might look like. Photo courtesy of Scott Carlson
Morgana Carroll News Editor
How geothermal plants work
heating
A geothermal heating and cooling plant is a part of the governor’s proposed package to fund the construction of a new North Academic Complex. The Geo Eco Plant is a proposed building that will utilize renewable geothermal energy to heat the new North Academic Complex (NAC) that will be located in the plaza with the nations’ flags. The Geo Eco Plant is a part of Gov. Jay Inslee’s proposal, which also included funding for the NAC. The proposal will not be decided until April. If the proposal does pass, Capital Planning Project Manager Scott Carlson said construction of the Geo Eco Plant will start in fall 2023 and is projected to be finished by fall 2025. The proposed plant would go in the southwestern corner of the Dean Nicholson Pavilion lot, where there is currently a grassy patch. According to Carlson, the plant is going to be designed as somewhere people can visit, and not just another utility building. Carlson said the plant will have an interactive panel or tablet where people can learn about geothermal power and what it can be used for. Carlson said they are designing the Geo Eco Plant to be able to connect to and support other buildings in the future, such as the proposed Art Complex and new Psychology Building.
According to Carlson, the plant will use an open loops system. This means, the water that gets taken out of the wells will never touch anything other than the pipes it interacts with. The water comes up from an aquifer(an underground water and mineral deposit), which Carlson said will be around 900 feet below ground, running through a pipe and then returning back into the ground. “You’re either taking the heat that is in the water to heat a building, or you’re taking heat and putting it into what would be cooler water, and sending it back down,” Carlson said. There will be two well locations; one will be under the Geo Eco Plant, and the other location has not been finalized yet. The current location they are considering is around the Wahle Apartments.
the system will be connected to the Central Steam Plant, which is currently used to heat the campus, in case something goes wrong at the Geo Eco Plant. The Central Steam Plant burns natural gas to heat buildings. According to Carlson, the current hope of the university is that as new buildings get built and old buildings get renovated, they will be utilizing geothermal heating instead of using fossil fuels. “If there’s anything we can do to reduce our carbon emissions, then that’s a step in the right direction,” Carlson said. “It is about the health of the community we live in.” Carlson said that using geothermal instead of natural gas for most of the campus would be years, if not decades away. To see prior reporting on the NAC go to: https://cwuobserver. com/24031/news/ll-and-farrellhall-to-possibly-see-new-construction-after-gov-inslees-proposed-budget/.
The environmental impact According to Carlson, one benefit of the new Geo Eco Plant is that it uses renewable energy. “That means we won’t be burning natural gas to heat or cool [the NAC],” Carlson said. “There will be some electricity that runs the pumps, pulls the water up and pumps it back down, but there will be no natural gas burned.” To ensure the NAC doesn’t go without heat, Carlson said
A map showing where the NAC and the Geo Eco Plant would be located. Photo courtesy of Scott Carlson