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Sierra Club supports wind farm; Vote on Poor Mountain project has divided the group’s leadership 

Credit:  By Laurence Hammack, The Roanoke Times, www.roanoke.com 15 October 2010 ~~

A proposed wind farm atop Poor Mountain has won the support of the Sierra Club, while opening a rift in the organization over the project’s environmental impact.

By a 4-2 vote Wednesday, the executive committee of the Sierra Club’s Roanoke chapter voted to conditionally endorse a plan to build up to 18 turbines on Roanoke County’s tallest mountain.

Shortly afterward, Vice Chairwoman Holly Hartman resigned in protest, complaining that the group’s leadership stifled dissenting opinions during four months of deliberation.

It was the latest sign of internal strife as the Sierra Club deals with an environmentalist’s conundrum: Wind farms are seen as a vital source of nonpolluting energy, yet their placement on ridgelines can threaten the natural resources the club seeks to protect.

Club officers who voted for a resolution supporting the wind farm said it came with key conditions, including approval by regulatory bodies and requirements that the project will not kill endangered wildlife or pollute the waters of nearby Bottom Creek with mud and silt.

“These conditions identify our main concerns, and we think the developer can address them if proper measures are taken,” said Bill Modica, chairman of the local chapter.

While acknowledging some environmental concerns, the club said that the giant windmills will reduce carbon emissions by 98,000 tons a year, replacing some of the electricity produced by coal-fired power plants. The wind farm is expected to produce enough electricity to power about 10,000 homes.

Dan Crawford, a member of the executive committee who voted to support the wind farm, said opposing views were taken into consideration.

“We bent over backwards, and while there may have been times when the feelings were less than cordial, the opposition definitely had a voice with the executive committee,” Crawford said.

Hartman disagrees, and filed a complaint with the Sierra Club’s state organization that asserts the “domineering tactics” of a majority that backed the wind project from the start.

“I didn’t feel like I could support a group that had become anti-environment and was being run in a ridiculous manner,” Hartman said Thursday in explaining her resignation.

Hartman said she fears the 443-foot-tall turbines will kill birds, bats and other wildlife, and that erosion from their construction will impair the waters of Bottom Creek – concerns that have been raised by some residents of Poor Mountain, who also see the giant windmills as an eyesore.

“While there is opposition to the site from some local residents, it was deemed to be acceptable due to its good wind resources, ready access to power transmission lines and proximity to a population area where there is significant demand for electricity,” the Sierra Club said in a statement announcing its support.

The club – which has a national policy of supporting wind farms in appropriate locations – is the latest of about a half-dozen local and state organizations to back the wind farm proposed by Invenergy Inc. of Chicago. Sierra Club says it is the oldest and largest U.S. grass-roots environmental organization.

Invenergy is awaiting word from the Federal Aviation Administration, which is evaluating the impact the towers might have on airplanes approaching and departing the Roanoke Regional Airport. If the FAA approves the project, Invenergy will then seek a special use permit from the Roanoke County Board of Supervisors.

State approval from the Department of Environmental Quality is also required.

In recent months, friends and foes of the wind turbines have been gathering huge amounts of often conflicting data to support their arguments. The debate has turned personal at times, with Hartman taking issue with the way Modica has moderated discussions at Sierra Club meetings.

In her complaint to the state organization, Hartman cited Modica’s “over-the-top socially unacceptable aggressive tactics” – a characterization he disputed.

“As far as my being disrespectful to her, no, that was never the case,” Modica said. “I did challenge some of her assertions, but I did it in a very businesslike way.”

Source:  By Laurence Hammack, The Roanoke Times, www.roanoke.com 15 October 2010

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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