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Scores of neighbors oppose wind project 

Credit:  Brattleboro Reformer | 09/27/2016 | www.reformer.com ~~

These comments are in response to a recent oped in the Reformer (“What kind of community will Windham Be? Aug. 20).

As a member of the Select Board in Windham, I responded to the oped at the Sept. 6 Windham Select Board meeting. I did that with the full intent that any of our residents who were unable to attend, would still be able to view/hear my comments online, as our meetings have recently begun being commercially recorded. Unfortunately, there were technical difficulties with the recording and it picked up the meeting just after I ended my remarks.

It concerns me greatly that the writer says negotiations are underway between knowledgeable Windham residents and the developer. First and foremost, no group in Windham, aside from the current Select Board has the legal authority to negotiate with the developer and we will determine if any illegal activity has taken place. That said, the Select Board’s stance on negotiation has been consistently clear: The proposed site is not right for an industrial-scale turbine project, for numerous reasons, which have been detailed in public many times. Our town is not for sale; there is no amount of money that will make us agree to this project, which will harm the environment, animal habitat and most importantly human population.

Somehow the writer has misconstrued this by saying that we fear negotiations will make the developer’s proposal more appealing to residents.

The writer goes on to say that it’s the “just say no” approach that fuels the divisiveness and hard feelings in Windham. I think she forgets that there was no divisiveness before the proposal was made. Is it possible that Iberdrola’s standard operating procedure of divide and conquer, documented in every community they have touched, might have contributed to the divisiveness in Windham?

The writer talks about the town’s past as a resource to be well-managed, but at the same time references it having been denuded for farming as well as mined in two quarries. Is she glorifying that? I’m sorry, but I cannot.

The writer further mentions the “people providing services for others who come here to enjoy the mountains,” as if those same people don’t or even cannot enjoy them, too. This surprises me, as I know many locals, Vermonters and flatlanders alike, who love living here and take pride in a community such as ours and all it has to offer, including hiking, kayaking, beautiful scenery and quietude. I don’t understand how any full-time resident, whether they have been here six months or 60 years can condone activities the likes of what we’ll see if this project is approved. The mountains, which took millions of years to form, will be devastated in an irreversible, ecological blink of an eye.

I say blink of an eye, but in reality, this will take years of noisy construction vehicles lumbering through town, building roads and blasting on the mountaintops. This does not fit my definition of enjoying the mountains.

The writer makes the point that even if she lived closer to the proposed site, she would still favor this project. In all sincerity I hope she never has to make that decision.

Lastly, the writer hopes that the “no” neighbors will accept the validity of others’ opinions and the importance of negotiations for a fair vote. I ask that the writer and the others listen to their neighbors (scores of them) who have taken the time to individually write to the Select Board and emphatically request that no negotiations take place.

Maureen Bell, Windham, Sept. 20

Source:  Brattleboro Reformer | 09/27/2016 | www.reformer.com

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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