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News Watch Home

Ready to fight 

Credit:  By Jeff Labine, www.tbnewswatch.com 16 May 2011 ~~

Residents against the proposed Horizon Wind Inc. wind farm have a message for Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty and the city’s two MPPs – no Liberals, no turbines.

More than 200 residents attended the Wind Concerns Ontario rally at the Nor’Wester Hotel Monday night. The rally was a chance to give residents more information on the Horizon Wind development of a wind farm on top of the Nor’ Wester mountains.

The rally was held a day before Horizon Wind will hold its pair of open houses on May 17 and 18, as required under the REA application process.

John Laforet, president of Wind Concerns Ontario, rallied Thunder Bay residents to fight for their mountain and led the crowd in a chant against Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty.

“Why don’t we send Dalton McGuinty a message – no Liberals, no turbines,” Laforet said. “We want to send a message to the MPPs that they will be accountable in the fall if this project is still on the table when the ballots are passed around on election day. I think they what they will have to decide is, do they like being members of provincial parliament or are they going to toe the party line.”

He said the election could focus on renewable energy and that’s a battle the MPPs will lose if they stick with their party. The only hope for them to be re-elected is to stand up to McGuinty, he said.

Laforet called the proposal presented by Horizon Wind irresponsible because of the amount of environmental damage the construction of the wind turbines will cause.

“Those lands have a legacy of being protected,” he said. There’s a hundred years of water shed protection and there’s very strict rules about tree cutting. These guys have been given a free pass to clear cut and blast 150 acres of land up there.”

Mike Payne, co-chairman of the Nor’Wester Mountain Escarpment Protection Committee, said he wanted to ensure the public was informed if they attended the public consultations held by Horizon Wind.

“Chances are you aren’t going to get any answers (at the open house),” Payne said. “None of the open houses (Horizon Wind) has had so far have answered any questions that we have had. They have dodged around the answers. Hopefully, this will give people some ideas on what’s going on.”

City council voted 8-4 in favour of an amended agreement with Horizon in April, a deal that saw two turbines moved further away from residential areas. Payne said the approval is only a one of many steps before the project is approved with the next big fight being with the provincial government.

He said the only way to make the project any better in his mind is if the wind farm went somewhere else.

“They moved some of them back but those were just the ones closest to the ski hills,” he said. “They moved them back and put them in environmentally sensitive areas.”
|
Mike Parisien has lived in the Neebing area for five years and he said what concerned him the most was the potential health issues.

“I’m concerned about the location being so close to the school,” Parisien said. “There’s been world wide studies done over the last 20 years, in terms of high power lines and the exposure to children and it doubles the rates of cancers, brain tumours, lymphomas and leukemias.”

Gary Armstrong moved into the Neebing area 30 years ago for the scenic view. The retired AbitibiBowater employee said if the province approved the wind farm, it would mean that he and his wife would probably leave the city.

“The city has handle this poorly, we never really had any input into this until after the fact,” Armstrong said. “I’m retired so if I can’t sleep at night because of the noise or the vibrations or I don’t want to look at them then I’ll move out of Thunder Bay.”

The first Horizon Wind open house will start at 6 p.m. at the Blake Community Hall. The second will be at Fort William Country Club.

Source:  By Jeff Labine, www.tbnewswatch.com 16 May 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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