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Noise and New York
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Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on Views]
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on Views]
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Impact on Landscape|
Impact on Views]
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Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
The Clayton Town Council agreed to keep the sound limitations and most of the setback recommendations from the Wind Committee and forward them to the town attorney to begin writing a new zoning law for wind power development.
The council, meeting Wednesday night, held voice votes on all 16 recommendations forwarded from the committee. The only point dropped by the council was a recommendation to site turbines so there would be no flicker effect falling at road intersections.
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Impact on People|
Zoning/Planning]
Prattsburgh: sound expert may be tapped for noise ordinance
July 25, 2009 by Mary Perham in The Courier
July 25, 2009 by Mary Perham in The Courier
Prattsburgh town officials will meet Tuesday to consider hiring a sound expert to draft a general noise ordinance aimed at regulating wind turbines.
The board's action followed an initial report by Seth Waltz, president of Avl Designs, Inc. of Pensfield, on his preliminary study of noise in Prattsburgh, the neighboring town of Naples and wind farm in Cohocton operated by First Wind.
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Zoning/Planning]
Debate continues looming over a plan to put wind farms up in one Southern Tier town.Community members in Prattsburgh have one main concern when it comes to wind turbines going up in their neighborhood.
That concern is the noise the turbines will make.
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Impact on People|
Zoning/Planning]
The noise you can hear may be a problem for some individuals living near wind farms, according to Rochester- based acoustician Seth Waltz.
But the noise you can't hear may be more troublesome and difficult to predict, Waltz, of avi designs, inc., told the Prattsburgh town board recently.
"There is no way to guarantee you won't have a problem," Waltz told board members.
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Impact on People|
Zoning/Planning]
Cohocton Wind Farm leaseholder Hal E. Graham told north country residents Wednesday night about the noise and other effects the 50-turbine wind farm has had on his and his neighbors' lives.
Mr. Graham has one turbine on his property, 2,000 feet from his house. A neighbor has one 1,050 feet away from Mr. Graham's house. ...
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Impact on People|
Lighting]
Laws regulating wind farms and a presentation on noise issues highlighted the special Prattsburgh town board meeting Tuesday night, July 7.
The town is the site of proposed wind farms by two energy companies, Ecogen and First Wind.
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Zoning/Planning]
The new study was done by Paul D. Schomer of Schomer & Associates Inc., Champaign, Ill. Mr. Schomer is chairman of the International Organization for Standardization working group on environmental noise and chairman of the American National Standards committee on noise, among other leadership roles in noise measurement.
The finding contradicts the studies done by Hessler Associates Inc., Haymarket, Va., for the draft environmental impact statement of BP Alternative Energy's Cape Vincent Wind Farm and supplemental draft environmental impact statement of Acciona Energy North America's St. Lawrence Wind Farm.
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Impact on People]
Ontario eyeing setbacks; Province's proposal based on distance, noise from turbines
June 13, 2009 by Nancy Madsen in Watertown Daily Times
June 13, 2009 by Nancy Madsen in Watertown Daily Times
Under the proposed regulations, noise levels also would need to fall to 40 decibels at receptors, such as dwellings or businesses.
The ministry said a turbine with a sound power level of 106 decibels would have to meet a setback of 950 meters, or about 3,100 feet, from the nearest house or business.
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Impact on People|
Canada]
Wind turbine noise is rattling some residents in Michigan's Thumb
June 11, 2009 by Jeff Kart in The Bay City Times
June 11, 2009 by Jeff Kart in The Bay City Times
The big blades have been welcomed by many, including Gov. Jennifer Granholm, as they've gone up in the farm fields of Huron County in recent years.
But a handful of people who live near some of the 46 turbines at a wind park in Bingham and Sheridan townships are now complaining about ongoing noise and rumble from the 300-foot-tall renewable energy generators.
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Impact on People]
The company has a detailed complaint resolution process which it made available Thursday to The Daily News. It also has a 24-hour telephone hotline for reporting turbine issues.
"We encourage people if they have a concern that they should call that number, and we check it daily," said Project Manager Eric Miller. "We keep a log of who calls."
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Impact on People|
Shadow flicker]
"Since we've owned this home, I had no health problems previously," says a somewhat sleepless Jessica Nuhn. "I'm a registered nurse -- a critical care nurse. I've got my bachelor's degree and I know about health.
"Since the turbines have been spinning, I've had headaches ... The noise has kept me up at night, the noise gives me headaches, the noise crushes my sinuses."
Nuhn says she's never had sinus problems before, and now she sees floating spots, for which she's seeing a doctor.
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Impact on People|
Shadow flicker]
Members of the Orleans Wind Committee discussed possible enforcement mechanisms at their meeting Tuesday night.
One aspect is noise level enforcement. The committee agreed April 28 that audible and low-frequency noise should not exceed five decibels above ambient noise at nonparticipating property lines.
The members asked if there could be an automatic monitoring system.
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Zoning/Planning]
The Town of Lyme wants the state Department of Environmental Conservation to consider the possibility that noise from Galloo Island Wind Farm could annoy town residents on Point Peninsula.
"Whereas the Impact Statement declares the noise generated by this project poses no significant noise impact, the Town of Lyme respectfully submits this letter expressing its concern to the contrary," states an April 29 letter from the town to DEC and the town of Hounsfield.
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Impact on People|
Zoning/Planning]
In an effort to make the Naples Town Board aware of the possible impact of Prattsburgh's wind turbines, two local residents were invited to present information about the Cohocton and Prattsburgh wind farms to the board during its April 13 meeting. The reports from Hal Graham and John Servo raised perennial questions about the hazards of wind turbines and the abrogation of property rights.
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Impact on People]
Wind Development: Studies try to determine if an ill wind blows
April 7, 2009 by Mary Perham in Corning Leader
April 7, 2009 by Mary Perham in Corning Leader
Attention over the sound made by wind turbines recently erected in Cohocton has alerted those in nearby towns considering wind projects to the potential effects of noise.
But questions remain about what action - if any - towns affected by the turbines should take to protect their citizens. One wind farm has been completed in Cohocton while projects are being considered in the towns of Prattsburgh, Hartsville and Howard.
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Impact on People|
Zoning/Planning]
In early January, the blades in the 53-turbine First Wind project in the town of Cohocton began to spin. It was the first project in Steuben County to generate renewable energy and one of five under consideration in the county.
Within weeks, dozens of Cohocton residents went to the town board in neighboring Prattsburgh to warn that the machines were proving to be noisy and harmful.
"Don't let (the developers) buffalo you," Cohocton resident Hal Graham told the Prattsburgh Town Board in late February.
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Impact on People]
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