Thelma & Louise are saying goodbye to Sabathani Community Center.
The twin gas boilers that heat the nearly 100-year-old building are on their last legs, and the center and its backers are hoping the DFL-controlled Legislature will help pay for a more climate-friendly replacement.
Sabathani is hoping to replace the boilers with a $21 million geothermal heat pump system, but it needs help with the funding.
“Our goal is to push Thelma & Louise over the cliff,” Sabathani CEO Scott Redd said during a state Senate committee hearing in late February. “Each year we spend $27,000 on maintenance and pray that the boilers will survive another winter.”
Redd and Sabathani supporters are hoping to get $10 million for the project from the Legislature this year, even though state lawmakers are unlikely to fund much more after passing massive energy spending in 2023. Center leaders failed to get state money last year, but two hearings early this legislative session signal the bill could be one of the few energy initiatives to get legislative cash.
Though there is no bubbling volcanic activity below Sabathani like the kind that fuels widespread geothermal use in Iceland, the large community center that hosts a food shelf, advocacy work and events is nevertheless a potential location for subterranean heating and cooling that could slash carbon emissions and help clean energy job training efforts.
The bid for the heat pump system comes while Xcel Energy and the city of Minneapolis are separately working to make Sabathani one of three sites in the “Resilient Minneapolis” project by installing battery systems to operate independently from the power grid and serve as backup power sources and emergency sites during outages.
Redd’s $10 million request has raised eyebrows among Republican lawmakers. In a bill sponsored in the Senate by Sen. Tou Xiong, DFL-Maplewood, and in the House by Rep. Athena Hollins, DFL-St. Paul, the money would come indirectly from Xcel and its customers rather than taxpayer dollars.