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Two months after re-election, Somerset supervisor resigns to take job in Florida 

Engert was front and center during the town's five-year fight against a major wind power project proposed by Apex Clean Energy, a Virginia company. The company sought to erect 47 wind turbines, each nearly 600 feet tall, in Somerset and neighboring Yates. The towns surveyed residents and both found that about two-thirds of them opposed the project. Somerset spent about $300,000 in fees for lawyers and expert consultants in the battle against the wind project. Last spring, Apex closed its local office, leading Engert to declare the project dead, although the company has not acknowledged that. "I will be providing consulting if Apex decides they're going to come back into the town," Engert said. "I'm proud of my record here."

Credit:  By Thomas J. Prohaska | The Buffalo News | Published Thu, Jan 9, 2020 | buffalonews.com ~~

Somerset Supervisor Daniel M. Engert turned 50 Monday, and marked the occasion by retiring from the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office, where he was deputy chief of the County Jail.

The next day, he resigned the town supervisor post he has held for eight years, to which he was re-elected two months ago.

Engert said Wednesday he’s moving to northeastern Florida, where, starting Monday, he will earn $96,000 a year as chief of detention and court services for the Flagler County Sheriff’s Office.

In Niagara County, Engert worked 29½ years at the Sheriff’s Office. He had been deputy chief of the County Jail since 2014. He said he was one of 60 candidates who applied for the Flagler County post in a nationwide search last fall, and was offered the job in December.

Engert said he will serve as a consultant to Somerset this year, receiving $9,097, or half of the supervisor’s budgeted salary, to administer grants the town has received for park development and Lake Ontario shoreline protection.

The other half of the money goes to Jeffrey M. Dewart, the councilman who was appointed supervisor by his Town Board colleagues Tuesday.

Engert was front and center during the town’s five-year fight against a major wind power project proposed by Apex Clean Energy, a Virginia company.

The company sought to erect 47 wind turbines, each nearly 600 feet tall, in Somerset and neighboring Yates. The towns surveyed residents and both found that about two-thirds of them opposed the project.

Somerset spent about $300,000 in fees for lawyers and expert consultants in the battle against the wind project.

Last spring, Apex closed its local office, leading Engert to declare the project dead, although the company has not acknowledged that.

“I will be providing consulting if Apex decides they’re going to come back into the town,” Engert said. “I’m proud of my record here.”

Besides fighting Apex’s Lighthouse Wind project, Engert leaves behind a plan in which a town park and a data center would be sited on the property of Somerset Operating Co., which just mothballed a coal-burning power plant on the lakeshore.

Engert was paid almost $99,000 last year by the Niagara County Sheriff’s Office, but he said the Flagler County job, despite slightly lower pay, is a better deal because Florida has no state income tax. In addition, he will collect a pension from New York State.

Source:  By Thomas J. Prohaska | The Buffalo News | Published Thu, Jan 9, 2020 | buffalonews.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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