OK. So a fast idle solenoid is what you need? I thought some shop was trying to take you for a long expensive ride by your first post.
Are you sure the solenoid is bad? They don't have the power to open the throttle by themselves. You have to push the throttle down to around half way and let go once the key is on and the coolant temp is below 94° to allow the sensor to send power down the green wired described above to the solenoid.
If with a cold engine, you are getting 12 volts at the solenoid on the green wire and nothing happens when you open the throttle. Make sure the plunger isn't seized somehow in the solenoid. If it is good. Peel back the rubber boot. You will see the super thin cooper wires going from the power plug and to the case for a ground. Very, very gently use a small screwdriver to push on them. The plug where the green wire goes isn't all that solidly mounted and moved most the time people get within a few feet of it causing the wire to the coil to break. I have had several with this problem. I just solder them back together and all is well.
I guess an Ohm meter between the plug blade and the case would be a more exact way of testing for an open circuit, but if you can't see it to fix it. Knowing the circuit is open doesn't really help all that much in my opinion. That is why I suggest the screwdriver push test.