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Wind energy discussions at Porter Board session 

Credit:  By Terry Duffy, www.wnypapers.com 22 January 2011 ~~

The Town of Porter opened 2011 with more discussion on a growing interest item among residents, as recent proposals for windmills in the town occupied the leadoff portion of the Town Board’s Jan. 10 regular meeting.

The topic of wind energy – growing in interest and popularity of late among private landowners, municipalities and utility companies – resurfaced with new curiosities and some concerns aired by residents. The town first considered the issue last January following an offer by wind energy consultant Tom Fleckenstein of Niagara Wind and Solar of Niagara Falls to pursue government grant funding with an eye toward possible construction of windmills at Porter Town Hall and at the Town Highway Department garage on Braley Road.

Last year, the Town Board approved pursuing up to $319,000 in application grants authorized under the 2009 federal stimulus bill and administered through the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority, but as of yet it has not finalized the application process. Despite availability of full government grant funding, various board members and Supervisor Mert Wiepert expressed reservations at past sessions on the wind energy proposals. Issues include possible conflicts with town code and variances to questions over the wind energy systems’ performance, their durability and long-term maintenance issues.

In fact the wind energy issue on the whole in Porter has seen its share of interest and skepticism among residents over the past year. Last fall Youngstown residents and the Niagara County Legislature had questions over state Power Authority plans for windmills off Niagara County shorelines in Lake Ontario. And Porter residents of late are asking questions of the latest proposals for Town Hall and the highway garage, citing cost issues and maintenance concerns, among others.

But board members also heard new curiosity and a desire for the facts by attending residents. “I’d really like to see a public informational meeting on this,” said Youngstown resident Wendy Swearingen.

Fleckenstein, who provided a detailed response in the Jan. 8 Sentinel to Porter resident Mark Daul’s earlier letter, recommended the town, at least for the time being, take a step back on the matter. He told the Town Board of a new Remote Metering Bill, introduced in the State Assembly and expected in the State Senate that provides for the siting of wind turbines in distant areas with financial inducements to allow connections of units for service to the power grid. “It gives you another choice, would give you another option, say if you wanted one on Balmer Road,” said Fleckenstein.

He recommended that for now, it would be best for the board to table the matter to enable the town to better fully investigate the wind energy options, particularly with regards to turbines, and ongoing questions the board has had over sizes and outputs – 10kw or 20kw. Fleckenstein also said it also would be to the town’s benefit for the Remote Metering legislation to be passed and signed into law. And he said the time for completion of the request for proposal of 10 NYSERDA grants is March 2012, so there was sufficient time for the town to wait for a final decision on this draft.

The matter closed with Wiepert and the board conveying their intent to have a fully detailed informational session on the wind energy issue, with participation and input requested of Fleckenstein, but no date was announced that night.

Source:  By Terry Duffy, www.wnypapers.com 22 January 2011

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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