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Freedom wind site neighbors not entitled to equal protection 

Credit:  Steve Bennett, www.onlinesentinel.com 28 May 2011 ~~

Beaver Ridge Wind in Freedom is the only non-regulated industrial wind site in the state of Maine and the only one not approved by the Department of Environmental Protection.

In 2008, the DEP decided, I believe, that a three-turbine project in Freedom was too small to be concerned about. We tried many times to get the DEP and the state of Maine to do their jobs, but it seemed as if we were up against too much money and the influence that is gained by that money.

I continued trying to get someone at the state level to pay attention, however, and on a sunny September day last fall, I convinced Dr. Dora Mills, who at the time was director of the Maine Center for Disease Control, to visit Freedom.

Mills, along with Andrew Fisk of the DEP and John Piotti, our state representative at the time, came to listen to about 20 Beaver Hill neighbors talk about our experiences living with the noise from the turbines and the blade flicker that invades our homes.

Sitting on Jeff and Stacey Keating’s front lawn about of 1,700 feet from the turbines, they also experienced the noise firsthand.

Before that visit, Mills had repeatedly been quoted by wind developers as saying that because no peer-reviewed reports regarding the ill effects of industrial wind exist, concerns about the health impact of noise from wind turbines were greatly exaggerated.

At this legislative session, Rep. Ryan Harmon, R-Palermo, at my request, submitted L.D. 711, which would have required the noise control rules within the Site Review Law be applied to Beaver Ridge Wind. These are the same noise rules that have been in effect in Maine for more than years, and the same noise rules that apply to every other wind site in Maine.

At least 20 people from Freedom and elsewhere in the state testified in favor of the bill at the hearing before the Energy Committee. Many others, including Mills, testified in writing. Her testimony, in part, reads:

“While I believe wind power adds an important and needed diversification of our energy resources, I feel that state noise regulations should be the statewide minimum for all wind power projects.”

When she visited the site last fall, she said, several homes appeared to be within 1,700 feet of the turbines, and “from reported measurements and from the experience we had visiting there, it appeared the state noise standards, as set by Maine DEP regulations, are often exceeded.” Because of the project’s small footprint and lack of a municipal ordinance, ” a simple building permit was all that was required of the wind project developers.”

Mills said she had “visited other wind project sites that are in compliance with state regulations” and studied the issue. She said, “I believe all wind projects, no matter how large or small their footprint is, should be in compliance with the minimum standards as set by state DEP regulations. I believe L.D. 711 tries to address this issue. I also hope that the Beaver Ridge project can be included retroactively.”

I thought, given the testimony, that L.D. 711 had a chance. But then Beaver Ridge Wind requested a behind closed-door meeting, first with a member of the administration and then with the co-chairman of the Energy Committee. Pressure apparently was applied, and L.D. 711 was the first of the committee’s wind measures that was killed.

So, once again, we are told that the people in the Beaver Ridge neighborhood are not entitled to equal protection. Once again, it’s apparent to me that money, not people, has the deciding influence in Augusta.

Steve Bennett of Freedom is a retired teacher. He owns an insurance and financial services business “Freedom Financial Group” in Unity. At one time or another, he has been a town selectman and a member of the town’s budget committee and planning board.

Source:  Steve Bennett, www.onlinesentinel.com 28 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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