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My name is Karen Bessey Pease and I am a resident of Lexington Township.
On Thursday, July 7th, the Bureau of Environmental Protection will hear technical and lay testimony regarding industrial wind turbine noise. I thank you for allowing me the opportunity to comment on the proposed noise rule amendment.
In the pre-filed testimony submitted by Juliet Browne of Verrill Dana LLP, Ms. Browne states “These limits are fully protective of human health and there is no credible scientific evidence to the contrary.”
I am acquainted with many Maine citizens who are suffering from the effects of wind turbine noise, and they are very ‘credible’ people. Many of them are citizens who, at the outset, fully supported the wind developments proposed for their communities. It was not until they were subjected to the sounds produced by the turbines that they began to attempt to seek relief. They did not have an agenda and they did not expect that their lives would be turned inside-out; but once the facilities went online, they began to suffer in many ways. Their health and their finances have been negatively impacted and their quality of life is diminished.
“Credible scientific evidence…”
We cannot ‘prove’ pain, but we know it exists. Doctors routinely treat their patients when they complain of acute or chronic pain. They don’t dismiss them because they cannot see or hear or feel their pain. The patient’s complaint is sufficient ‘credible evidence’ for the doctor to provide relief. When a man complains of numbness or tingling, or ringing in his ears, or phantom shadows in his vision, he is not ignored. These complaints, while not able to be proven, are treated. Why, then, are complaints of health problems due to turbine noises given little or no credence?
The fact that dozens of Mainers are negatively affected by wind turbine noise should be enough—and in fact, by standards of humanity, it IS enough—to make this issue one which must be addressed and alleviated.
Ms. Browne states “…the question before the Board is what level of sound impact is reasonable and strikes an appropriate balance between allowing development, including wind power, and protecting existing uses.”
The ‘existing uses’ she speaks of are Mainers’ homes. For many of the victims, their homes are their major (or only) investments—investments of money, time, and emotion. These ‘existing uses’ are absolutely worthy of protecting. When a citizen is not able live in good health and with enjoyment of ‘home’, there is no impact that is ‘reasonable’ and no ‘balance’ that is ‘appropriate’. Wind developers do not have the right to initiate a ‘taking’ of citizens’ properties. They do not have the right to cause a citizen to suffer serious health problems.
Ms. Browne directs the Board by saying you “must consider the benefits of that type of development. Wind energy provides not only energy and environmental benefits, but substantial economic benefits to the people and businesses in the State of Maine.”
The citizens who petitioned for this hearing have intended to stay ‘on topic’; realizing that this venue is not the proper one to debate the pros and cons of industrial wind development. However, since Ms. Browne has opened that door, it is important to mention that last month the Legislature passed LD 1366, “And Act to Update the Maine Wind Energy Act…” The Energy, Utilities and Technology Committee, the same committee of which Ms. Browne’s husband is a member, voted “Ought To Pass” on this bill, which directs the Governor’s Office of Energy Independence and Security to undertake an assessment of progress on meeting the wind energy development goals pursuant to PL 2007, chapter 661, section A-8. Due to many serious issues raised in public hearings during the spring Session of the 125th Legislature, the OEIS is charged with considering several specific issues regarding wind development, including, but not limited to: an evaluation of the accuracy of the estimates generated by State agencies and wind energy developers for greenhouse gas reductions that are a result of wind energy development in Maine; and the number of turbines necessary to meet the goal, market conditions, development trends, emissions goals, siting policies, cumulative impacts or other factors that may indicate it is necessary to amend the wind energy development goals. The OEIS is also charged with considering whether places should be removed from the expedited permitting area, including, but not limited to, mountain area protection sub-districts, as defined by the Land Use Regulatory Commission rules, Chapter 10. Also, the OEIS will study the economic impacts of wind energy development on the tourism industry, and evaluate the costs associated with transmission upgrades for the purpose of transmitting wind energy, as well as decommissioning plans and visual impacts.
As you can see, the ‘benefits’ Ms. Browne extols are presumptions, only. Whether or not they actually exist is not yet proven.
Ms. Browne states “Pursuant to their home rule authority, municipalities may adopt local ordinances regulating sound emissions and other aspects of wind energy development.”
Ms. Browne is correct, and many Maine communities have, in fact, done exactly that. They have enacted protective wind ordinances. One point of significance is that wind developers—including First Wind, which Ms. Browne recently represented in the Bowers/Champlain Wind Public Hearings in Lincoln—routinely oppose protective wind ordinances in every town they target for grid-scale wind facilities. Their actions as they attempt to ‘control the scene’ often create divisiveness within these communities, and it is disingenuous for Ms. Browne to imply that ‘home rule’ (unless it works in their favor) is something which wind developers espouse.
Even as Maine municipalities are taking proactive measures to protect their residents and define their communities, it is reasonable to assume that most town Select Boards, Assessors and Planning Boards do not understand the science of ‘noise’—whether it is of high, low, or ultra-low frequency. Just as the State sets minimum standards for shore land zoning, allowing towns to enact more stringent standards within their borders; so do communities look to the professionals at the State level for guidance on complicated topics such as ‘sound’. By invoking the ‘home rule’ argument, Ms. Browne is attempting to divert the Commission’s attention with a reasonable-sounding argument about the basic rights of municipalities to self-govern. Such statements might be credible if wind developers stepped back and allowed communities to adopt wind ordinances without their ‘input’, and without those developers exerting unwarranted pressure on the voters in those communities.
While reasonable individuals anticipate and expect some level of disturbance from industrial development, I believe it is fair to say that none of the current victims of wind turbine noise could foresee the huge impact this phenomenon would have on their health and quality of life. They did not expect to suffer through endless nights of sleeplessness. They did not anticipate living lives wherein they craved moments of stillness in which no breeze blew. They had no idea that their homes would become prisons instead of sanctuaries.
In her argument, Ms. Browne invokes the Freedom, Mars Hill and Vinalhaven wind projects and directs the Board to dismiss the complaints which have resulted from those wind facility sites. In the case of Freedom, she accurately states that the Beaver Ridge development was not subject to Site Law permitting. That does not make Freedom residents’ suffering acceptable. In Mars Hill, she is correct in stating that a variance was granted. That ‘granting’ does not make the Mars Hill residents’ suffering acceptable. And on Vinalhaven Island--because Fox Island Wind has already been determined by the DEP to be out of compliance--she disregards those citizens’ complaints, as if their grievances have been redressed. They have not.
I am not an expert on sound. However, I have had the opportunity to talk to many of the residents of Maine who are now victims of noises and vibrations which cannot be predicted, and which cannot be controlled or alleviated when they become unbearable. If the Wind Energy Plan ordained for Maine comes to full fruition, there will be countless citizens of this State who will become victims of this phenomenon.
I ask that you listen to the People of Maine and enact stringent sound standards which will protect their health, their property values, and their quality of life.
Thank you.
Karen Bessey Pease
Lexington Township, Maine
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