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State Recognizes Turbine Noise

February 10, 2013
Neil Andersen, on right, discusses a point with Andy Brydges before meeting. Photo by Kurt Tramposch.

Neil Andersen, on right, discusses a point with Andy Brydges before meeting. Photo by Kurt Tramposch.

“There is a different quality of noise generated by turbines.” Department of Environmental Protection Deputy Commissioner Martin Suuberg is quoted by Ariel Wittenberg in her South Coast Today piece “State to consider turbine-specific noise regulations” (1/8/13).

His remarks at the municipal wind conference at UMass Dartmouth on Thursday, February 7, 2013 also acknowledged that despite widespread claims, the panel which released a draft report in January 2012 is “still reviewing commentary it received on that review and will next be looking at noise regulations.”

But while more analysis is welcome, Fairhaven’s Louise Barteau voiced concerns at the meeting that regardless of health or other considerations, the state’s goal of 2,000 MW of wind by 2020 will take precedence over the setbacks needed to protect residents from harm. Those distances are at least 4600 feet or 1.4 kilometers as established by the Nissenbaum, Aramini, Hanning study of Maine turbine impacts.

Whenever concerns are acknowledged, as Suuberg did at this pro-development meeting, state spokespeople like State Undersecretary of Energy Barbara Kates-Garnick fires back with deceptive arguments.

[Kates-Garnick] said the benefits of turbines outweigh the negatives, and that emissions from traditional fuels such as coal have other effects, like asthma and learning disabilities.

“Many of you claim health effects from turbines, but the fact is there are many health effects from more traditional energy that people are suffering from now,” she said.

The science on IWTs is just starting to come in, but it suggests health effects may range from heart disease to suicidal depression. Meanwhile coal-fired plants in Massachusetts have been shutting down and those in operation have reduced production as use of natural gas plants increases. (Unlike coal and nuclear, these are capable of ramping up and down to offset demand when wind and solar supplies are not sufficient. The shale extraction boom has lowered the cost of natural gas significantly, making these plants more economically viable. Natural gas produces minimal carbon dioxide emissions).

It is unfortunate that the people who really know something about wind turbines–the people who live among them–are never invited on the “educational” panels discussing wind development. Instead their questions, observations and concerns are tolerated and then dismissed.

Golfers rule as arbitrator makes a point about “as of right” siting

February 9, 2013

Golfers at the Granite Links course in Quincy have put the Milton turbine on pause for months at a time because of the ruling by retired judge Gordon Doerfer. Binding arbitration, ordered in the suit between Quarry Hills Associates and the town of Milton, came down to the ruling by the former state appeals court judge. Lane Lambert reported on Doerfer’s decision in the Patriot Ledger, “Judge says Milton must limit operation hours for proposed wind turbine.”

He said the turbine could be operated round the clock from Nov. 16 to March 31, but only at nighttime and predawn hours during the April 1-Nov. 15 golf season.

In his ruling, Doerfer noted

…Milton violated “taking” provisions when Town Meeting voted in 2010 that a turbine could be built on town-owned land “as of right.” He said that action sidestepped “all of the controls that a developer normally has to fulfill.”

As of right” siting is a hallmark of the Green Communities program. Developers have used the principle to avoid notifying abutters, to exempt projects from review by town boards, and to bypass public hearings. It has led to charges that turbines have been improperly sited in Kingston.

Predictable–Noise Complaints from Wind Turbines

February 1, 2013

Did you wonder why the people in Falmouth, who live near the wind turbines, are losing sleep, becoming ill and even abandoning their homes? Did you wonder why people are affected by wind turbine noise more than air plane and traffic noise? Did you wonder why people in Scituate have insisted on more stringent tests than the wind turbine owners?  Research by Stephen Ambrose and Rob Rand explain why it is no wonder that people hear and are bothered by industrial wind installations.

Ambrose2013part1graphic Ambrose2013part2graphic Ambrose2013Part3Graphic

Falmouth’s Town Turbines–Becoming History?

January 31, 2013

 

Read Sean Teehan’s article in Cape Cod Today

Selectmen in Falmouth voted 2 to 1 to send on to a special town meeting the proposal to take down the two town-owned turbines.

Speaking at the Wednesday night meeting, Selectman Chair Kevin Murphy  spoke bout the need to restore a sense of community in the town, according to Scott Giordano reporting for The Bulletin in Wicked Local Falmouth:

“The most important thing for this community, moving forward, is the fact that this is fracturing our community,” he added. “What I hope to accomplish is to bring this community back together, bring us so we can live to fight another day. … I will agree, and I will work, to be able to find a way to take down these turbines in a thoughtful process. My proposal would be that we put forth an article that would say we would go to the voters and [ask to] take down and dismantle the turbines.”

Take the poll.

 

Legislative Initiatives

January 30, 2013

Cape area residents have applauded Representative Vieira for sponsoring a bill that would relieve communities of some of the financial strain of decommissioning wind turbines. (Read Sara Mannal’s piece in the Falmouth Patch “Representative Vieira Files Wind Energy Relief Act“).

Other initiatives fund study of health effects, scrutinize costs, and ensure transparency in billing ratepayers for the surcharges used to develop wind power.

Please ask your senators and representatives to co-sponsor the following bills. Deadline to co-sponsor is Friday 2/1/13. Text of the bills can be accessed by clicking on the bill numbers. Read more…

Wind Neighbors in Falmouth Question Permit Process

January 28, 2013

Falmouth Turbine neighbors have day in court writes Sean Teehan in the Cape Cod Times about the lawsuit being heard today in Barnstable Superior Court.

[Todd] Drummey, along with Mark Cool, Brian Elder, Barry Funfar, Lawrence Worthington and Robert Laird, want a cease-and-desist order on Wind 1’s operation until it receives a special zoning permit from the town. The suit has been consolidated with one brought by Neil and Elizabeth Andersen, on the same grounds.

The article notes that a bill introduced this year may offer some relief for communities when they consider removing turbines:
Monday’s trial comes days after state Rep. David Vieira, R-Falmouth, filed a Wind Energy Relief Act at the Statehouse, which would create two funds totaling $22.5 million. The funds would go toward compensating people and businesses for detrimental effects on health or property resulting from turbines in locations chosen in cooperation with the Massachusetts Clean Energy Center. Funds would also assist towns in relocating or decommissioning turbines.
The $22.5 million will not go very far in compensating people by buying up their property, with many Cape properties valued at half a million dollars. So even if values decline by 40%, as often happens, the MassCEC funds would not be enough to dismantle turbines or compensate wind neighbors.

A Kingston Group’s Facebook Shuts Itself Down

January 27, 2013
"Independence" turbine looms over residential Kingston neighborhood.

Photo credit: Kerry Kearney

by Joanne Levesque

Several months ago a Kingston resident created a Kingston Wind Turbine group Facebook page. Its stated purpose was to provide a forum to discuss the “pros and cons” of the wind turbines in Kingston.

During the week of January 20, 2013 a great deal of information was posted to this page:

  • The 2008 Sewer Commissioner’s letter listing all the valid and legitimate concerns and stating its opposition to the wind turbine,
  • The Falmouth Wind Turbine Options report and the resulting selectmen’s meeting with related videos,
  • Information on the recently-filed “Wind Energy Relief Act ” with a call to communicate with Sen. Murray and Rep. Tom Calter (who represent Kingston),
  • The Mass CEC letter from early July 2012 stating whatever testing they will do will NOT be compliance testing, (with a request for residents to support the call for DEP compliance testing),

and more.

One impacted resident posted all sorts of information and posed very direct questions. He also added one or two negative comments about the Green Energy Chairman.

After several days of eye-opening posts, the administrator for the wind turbine Facebook page, Sarah Ciccolo Asnes, decided to shut the page down. Her rationale, posted on the Kingston Town FB page says,

To all: The Kingston Wind Turbine group is no longer available. This group was originally set up long before there were any health issues for our fellow neighbors. It’s intent was a sharing of views both pro & con, as the discussion was taking over this wonderful group. I hope that you all will continue to support your Kingston neighbors as they work tirelessly to mediate a solution to the issues with the Independence turbine.

Observers in Kingston say the Facebook page only appeared after the resident complaints began and the takedown appears to confirm the pro-wind intent of the page.

Tell Falmouth Officials–Go Solar

January 26, 2013

The town of Falmouth is accepting comments on how it should deal with its turbine problems. The deadline is 4:30 on Monday January 28, 2013.  Submit email with the subject “Public Comments” to  townmanager@falmouthmass.us, or drop off written comments at the Town Manager’s office at 59 Town Hall Square, Falmouth MA 02540.

As the Wind Turbine Options Process revealed, there is one good answer for the turbine-ravaged wind neighbors. Remove the turbines and put solar panels in their place. Continue to use MassCEC/Renewable Energy Trust funding to dismantle the turbines, just as Falmouth did to put them up. (Our electricity taxes at work).

Falmouth Folks Speak Out on Turbines

January 25, 2013

L to R Sue Hobart and Dave Moriarty of Falmouth, Virginia Irvine and Carol Platenik of Brimfield demonstrate on Jan. 23 2013. Photo Credit: Christine Hochkeppel for Cape Cod Times

Wind Wise ~ Massachusetts members from Brimfield, Florida (MA), and Fairhaven joined Cape residents in supporting Falmouth residents at the Selectmen’s hearing on January 23rd.

An afternoon demonstration by eight hardy souls braved temperatures in the low teens with wind chills below zero.

During the 6:30 pm meeting, which continued for two hours, as many as 50 people spoke, most in favor of dismantling the turbines. Sean Teehan, reporting in the Cape Cod Times, quoted John Ford (Falmouth selectmen listen to turbine foes voice their discontent):

I ask you, for just a moment, to listen,” said turbine opponent John Ford, who then paused before the packed room, which came to a hush so that only the ventilation system was audible. “That peace and quiet is what is missing in the lives of the children, women and men living in the (turbine-affected) neighborhoods.”

In the Falmouth Patch, Sara Mannal reported “Falmouth Residents: Take the Turbines Down,” citing John Ford’s statement

“I request that you join your fellow residents and neighbors and decide to remove the wind turbines and replace them with people friendly photovoltaic arrays,” Ford said.

Mannal’s piece includes a video of statements by several speakers–Eric Sockol, Richard Bowen, John Ford, and Judy Fenwick.

WTOP-Selectmens-hearing

A video recording of the entire meeting is available from Falmouth Community Television‘s video on demand site.

The Selectmen are accepting comments until 4:30 on Monday January 28, 2013 submitted by email with subject “Public Comments” to  townmanager@falmouthmass.us, or dropped off at the Town Manager’s office at 59 Town Hall Square.

Reporting in The Bulletin (“Majority say ‘Remove the turbines’”) Scott A. Giordano wrote:

Diane Funfar, of 27 Ridgeview Drive and a WTOP participant, said the selectmen have one of two options: Remove people from their homes or remove the turbines. “Buying properties would be very expensive for the town, and since the majority of people do not want to leave their homes, this is not an option that would unify our community. I ask you to do the right thing for our neighbors and our community,” she said.

Wind Wise ~ Massachusetts Tweets from Falmouth Hearing

January 24, 2013

A common theme tonight from those impacted AND non-impacted neighbors: Do the right thing – take the turbines down.

Follow WWMA on Twitter.