Showing posts with label bald eagles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bald eagles. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Voices in Dispute--From the Huffington Post

What follows is an article from the Huffington Post regarding the ongoing controversy on Vinalhaven Island, Maine. As I've watched this story unfold, I have been shocked and saddened by the actions of Fox Island Wind and George Baker, as well as the behavior of a few of the islanders who have gone out of their way to belittle and demean the residents who are suffering from the unexpected effects of the turbines. It is my sincere hope that this community will come together and not let this issue further divide them.

I believe that the time is up for the developer. FIW has had months to comply with the DEP. FIW has refused. FIW has thumbed its nose at the DEP and taken blatant steps to create controversy on the island, pitting neighbor against neighbor.

If you or I did not comply with the law, we'd be arrested and thrown in jail. Are industrial wind developers above the law?

Maine citizens deserve to know the answer to that question.


Wind Power Noise Dispute On Tranquil Maine Island Intensifies

A three-turbine wind farm on the island village of Vinalhaven in Maine has caused a multi-year rift that recently intensified.

While thousands of wind power enthusiasts and industry representatives gather in Anaheim Calif. for Windpower 2011, the American Wind Power Association's popular annual conference and exhibition, some 3,300 miles due east, wind power is tearing a tiny island community asunder.

In the latest turn, an attorney representing several homeowners living closest to a three-turbine wind installation on the tiny island of Vinalhaven in Maine's Penobscot Bay filed a formal complaint with the Maine Public Utilities Commission on Monday.

The complaint charges that the Fox Island Electric Cooperative, the local utility, and Fox Island Wind, the developer of the wind installation which is owned by the utility, have engaged in repeated harassment of the homeowners, who have argued since shortly after the turbines came online in late 2009 that the machines have been in violation of state noise ordinances. That assertion was subsequently supported by the state Department of Environmental Protection.

The developer has repeatedly disputed those findings, and the majority of the island's residents support the wind farm, which is seen as a source of eco-pride and sensible thrift, ostensibly saving the island from the need to import pricier power from the mainland.

But Monday's complaint states that the residents nearest the turbines have legitimate concerns that have long gone unheeded, despite multiple attempts to resolve the issue through negotiation, and that instead the local utility has recently upped the rhetorical ante by placing two separate "inserts" inside all islanders' utility bills. The inserts claim that legal expenses associated with the neighbors' noise complaints were costing the cooperative hundreds of thousands of dollars, and that as a result, a 5 percent increase in utility rates was needed.

The announcement caused the neighbors, perhaps not surprisingly, to suffer "retribution, harassment and hostility" from fellow Vinalhaven residents who are not within earshot of the turbines, according to the complaint. The utility's tactic also amounted to what the complaint called "intimidation and an abuse of the powers of a utility."

Vinalhaven became a flashpoint last year for a small but persistent backlash against industrial wind power, as residents living nearest the spinning behemoths became vocal about their experiences.

Like nearly all residents of the island, they supported the idea of a wind farm at first. Yet the Fox Island Wind Neighbors, as the loosely knit group of a dozen or so residents dubbed themselves, said they soon began to worry about the noise, being within a one-mile radius of the project site.

Representatives of Fox Island Wind assured them the noise would be minimal. But as Art Lindgren, one of the neighbors, told this reporter last year, their worst fears were confirmed once the turbines were switched on.

“In the first 10 minutes, our jaws dropped to the ground,” he said. “Nobody in the area could believe it. They were so loud.”

Lindgren's lament has been echoed in jurisdictions across the land, as an increasing number of communities come to weigh the innumerable collective benefits of wind power -- clean, non-toxic, no emissions, climate-friendly, water-friendly, renewable, sustainable -- against some of the downsides experienced by those living nearby.

Indeed, proximate residents around the country have cited everything from the throbbing, low-frequency drone to mind-numbing strobe effects as the rising or setting sun slices through the spinning blades:

Others have gone so far as to describe something called "wind turbine syndrome," arising from turbine-generated low-frequency noise and "infrasound," and causing all manner of symptoms -- from headache and dizziness to ear pressure, nausea, visual blurring, racing heartbeat, and panic episodes -- though the science on these claims is still thin.

And there are still lingering and long-standing concerns over hazards presented by turbines to migrating birds and bats.

At Vinalhaven, for example, a 28-month study conducted by ornithologist Richard Podolsky, who was hired by Fox Island Wind, the project's developer, recently declared the turbines' impacts on local eagle and osprey populations to be negligible.


But in March, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service sent a letter to attorneys representing the Fox Island Wind project, lambasting those conclusions. The letter questioned the study's methodologies for studying eagle, bat and bird collision assessment and mortality, suggesting that they needed to be more rigorous and better-defined and described.

The wildlife regulators asked that new studies be conducted before a permit necessary to allow the project to proceed -- despite the potential for incidental harm to bald and golden eagle species in the area -- is issued. Both are protected by federal legislation.

Meanwhile, the complaint filed on Monday asks the Maine Public Utility Commission to sanction the Vinalhaven utility and Fox Island Wind for the utility bill inserts, and urges them to prevent any similar communications with ratepayers in the future.

It also asks that the state commission prevent the island utility from attempting to raise rates to cover expenses from its dispute with the affected homeowners going forward -- characterizing such expenses as "the product of mismanagement, and reckless conduct."

Queries sent to officials at Fox Island Wind and the Vinalhaven electric cooperative were not immediately returned Tuesday morning. This report will be updated if they respond.

Saturday, May 14, 2011

The Quiet Voices of Gilman Pond


I wrote the following Letter to the Editor in April of 2010. At that time, Highland Wind LLC's original project application was suspended by LURC, due to incompleteness. They submitted a revised application, reducing the number of turbines to 39, in December of 2010. HW LLC withdrew that application on May 2, 2011, with 'intent to refile' at a later date. We don't know when it will be refiled, and we don't know what aspects will change, this time. All we know is that special places such as Gilman Pond are still at risk.

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For one brief summer, I was a camp owner on Gilman Pond in Lexington Township. My husband and I purchased a ramshackle cabin with a scant 50 feet of frontage on the water. We really couldn’t afford to keep the property; it was an investment. We worked away on it nights and weekends, and our two youngest children scrabbled on the rocks with their life jackets on, feeding bread crumbs to the pickerel and skipping rocks across the gentle swell of water.

Steven and I worked hard, but we made a point of enjoying the lake-front experience, too. From the camp’s deck we watched the resident loon family… gazed in awe as papa loon caught fish and swam over to mama who carried junior on her back. Watching the family share a meal was a touching experience and listening to their mournful call was the stuff of dreams. We were also treated to an ‘up close and personal’ view of bald eagles as they fished the waters of Gilman. No matter that the iconic raptor is no longer classified an ‘endangered’… seeing such a mighty bird on the wing gave an instant high.

The view from the pond is fantastic. The mountains of Highland rise above the north end and give completeness to the notion of a pristine and quiet western Maine pond. Often, we would be treated to the sight of moose as they waded the shallow north shore, dredging the pond for succulent reeds and weeds. Seeing them framed against the backdrop of our hills perfected the image.

The camp was sold, and we made a little money from the investment. But we miss those precious stolen moments with the soothing lull of the waves lapping the shore and the best of our native wildlife just a snapshot away. Now, however, that beautiful view and that feeling of communing with nature are about to be taken away. Highland Wind LLC has submitted a permit application to erect 48 forty-story industrial wind turbines along the crest of each of Highland’s mountains.

Forget that Maine already produces more energy than we need. Forget the fact that intermittent wind power is not nearly the ‘green’ product it’s touted as being. Never mind that the turbines are manufactured in Denmark and China, and that our hard-earned subsidy dollars are supporting those nations and not ours. Disregard the economic impacts created by gigantic turbines replacing firs trees as the sentinels of our Appalachians. Ignore the fact that huge and permanent roads will replace wetlands, or that precious habitat will be fragmented. Never mind that water quality may be affected and quality of place and quality of life will be forever altered for the residents living in the vicinity of Big Wind. Forget all that.

A perfect, small pond in the shadow of Highland’s mountains… if we do nothing to stop industrial wind, we might as well forget that, too.

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Photos: Top, young bull moose in Lexington Twp.
Middle, Josie and Eli enjoying a quiet Maine pond, nine years after we sold the Gilman Pond camp
Bottom, Canada geese on Gilman Stream, the outlet to Gilman Pond