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        <title>www.windaction.org</title>
        <subtitle>facts, analysis, exposure of wind energy's real impacts</subtitle>
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        <link href="http://www.windaction.org/articles/c82+46?theme=atom" rel="self"/>
		<author>
			<name>Windaction</name> 
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		<id>http://www.windaction.org/articles/c82+46?theme=atom</id>
        <generator uri="http://www.xaraya.com" version="1.00">Xarayar</generator>
		<updated>2006-06-12T02:16:27Z</updated>
		            <entry>
	<title>New Englandâ€™s largest wind farm is whipping up dissent</title>
	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.windaction.org/articles/8258" title="New England&#226;€™s largest wind farm is whipping up dissent"/> 
	<id>.8258</id> 
	<updated>2007-02-21T12:34:57Z</updated> 
	<published>2007-02-21T12:34:57Z</published> 
	<summary type="text">MARS HILL, Maine &#226;€” Something has turned terribly sour for about 18 homeowners who live along the mountain roads where the state&#226;€™s first and only wind farm has recently gone on line. To a man and to a woman, they feel betrayed, cheated, used, ignored, and dismissed. Put them in a room and they are spitting mad. Collectively, as they gather on a Saturday morning inside a home that sits in the shadow of the turbines, their anger is barely palatable. Since the turbines started up, they say, silence has become a luxury. 

</summary>
	<content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.windaction.org/articles/8258">
		<![CDATA[ MARS HILL, Maine &#226;€” Something has turned terribly sour for about 18 homeowners who live along the mountain roads where the state&#226;€™s first and only wind farm has recently gone on line. To a man and to a woman, they feel betrayed, cheated, used, ignored, and dismissed. Put them in a room and they are spitting mad. Collectively, as they gather on a Saturday morning inside a home that sits in the shadow of the turbines, their anger is barely palatable. Since the turbines started up, they say, silence has become a luxury. 

 ]]>
	</content>
</entry>            <entry>
	<title>Civil Suit filed in Maine Superior Court regarding First Wind's Mars Hill wind energy facility</title>
	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.windaction.org/articles/22650" title="Civil Suit filed in Maine Superior Court regarding First Wind's Mars Hill wind energy facility"/> 
	<id>.22650</id> 
	<updated>2009-03-27T09:50:52Z</updated> 
	<published>2009-03-27T09:50:52Z</published> 
	<summary type="text">On March 27, 2009, the residents of Mars Hill living within 3600 feet of First Wind's wind energy facility filed a civil complaint in Maine Superior Court seeking relief from the &amp;quot;significant harm&amp;quot; caused by the First Wind and others by the construction and operation of the site. The full complaint can be accessed by clicking on the link below.</summary>
	<content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.windaction.org/articles/22650">
		<![CDATA[ On March 27, 2009, the residents of Mars Hill living within 3600 feet of First Wind's wind energy facility filed a civil complaint in Maine Superior Court seeking relief from the &amp;quot;significant harm&amp;quot; caused by the First Wind and others by the construction and operation of the site. The full complaint can be accessed by clicking on the link below. ]]>
	</content>
</entry>            <entry>
	<title> From a Maine region that stopped the turbines</title>
	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.windaction.org/articles/9851" title=" From a Maine region that stopped the turbines"/> 
	<id>.9851</id> 
	<updated>2007-05-31T12:08:19Z</updated> 
	<published>2007-05-31T12:08:19Z</published> 
	<summary type="text">As a tourist who visits the area, I notice what is transparent to most locals, and for me the skyline of Fairhaven is priceless. If the citizens of Fairhaven allow the wind power project to be built at the current proposed location, I believe you will be making a terrible mistake. The town may gain some money in taxes and offset some electrical energy costs, but it will not offset the loss in green space and, more importantly, the beauty of Fairhaven's historic charm.</summary>
	<content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.windaction.org/articles/9851">
		<![CDATA[ As a tourist who visits the area, I notice what is transparent to most locals, and for me the skyline of Fairhaven is priceless. If the citizens of Fairhaven allow the wind power project to be built at the current proposed location, I believe you will be making a terrible mistake. The town may gain some money in taxes and offset some electrical energy costs, but it will not offset the loss in green space and, more importantly, the beauty of Fairhaven's historic charm. ]]>
	</content>
</entry>            <entry>
	<title>Testimony of Wendy Todd before the Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry Committee of the Maine Legislature</title>
	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.windaction.org/articles/9373" title="Testimony of Wendy Todd before the Agriculture, Conservation and Forestry Committee of the Maine Legislature"/> 
	<id>.9373</id> 
	<updated>2007-04-30T10:37:45Z</updated> 
	<published>2007-04-30T10:37:45Z</published> 
	<summary type="text">Thank you for allowing me to speak. My name is Wendy Todd. I am from Aroostook County. I am a resident of Mars Hill and live approximately 2600 feet from the Mars Hill Wind Project. I am here today to offer testimony that residents around the project are suffering. There are 18 families that I know of that are negatively impacted on a regular basis from the noise, strobe effect and shadow flicker from the turbines. Most of these 18 families live less than 3000 feet from the turbines. There is no one that I know of from 425 East Ridge Road to 212 Mountain Road that does not agree that there are issues with noise. Issues that are changing the way residents view life around the mountain. We have formed a group called the Mountain Landowners Association in an attempt to share information and come up to speed on the issues of living this close to turbines of this size and generation. We have had to struggle through massive amounts of documentation from the Internet and from other towns that are dealing with the same issues.</summary>
	<content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.windaction.org/articles/9373">
		<![CDATA[ Thank you for allowing me to speak. My name is Wendy Todd. I am from Aroostook County. I am a resident of Mars Hill and live approximately 2600 feet from the Mars Hill Wind Project. I am here today to offer testimony that residents around the project are suffering. There are 18 families that I know of that are negatively impacted on a regular basis from the noise, strobe effect and shadow flicker from the turbines. Most of these 18 families live less than 3000 feet from the turbines. There is no one that I know of from 425 East Ridge Road to 212 Mountain Road that does not agree that there are issues with noise. Issues that are changing the way residents view life around the mountain. We have formed a group called the Mountain Landowners Association in an attempt to share information and come up to speed on the issues of living this close to turbines of this size and generation. We have had to struggle through massive amounts of documentation from the Internet and from other towns that are dealing with the same issues. ]]>
	</content>
</entry>            <entry>
	<title>Maine Letters Critical of Proposed Redding Wind Plant</title>
	<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.windaction.org/articles/6213" title="Maine Letters Critical of Proposed Redding Wind Plant"/> 
	<id>.6213</id> 
	<updated>2006-11-08T13:33:59Z</updated> 
	<published>2006-11-08T13:33:59Z</published> 
	<summary type="text">Let&#226;€™s be honest and admit that wind power plants on mountains will amount to an industrialization of the fragile high landscape of Maine. These plants cannot fail to change forever the character&#226;€“including the ecosystems&#226;€“of some of the most beautiful parts of our state. 

</summary>
	<content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://www.windaction.org/articles/6213">
		<![CDATA[ Let&#226;€™s be honest and admit that wind power plants on mountains will amount to an industrialization of the fragile high landscape of Maine. These plants cannot fail to change forever the character&#226;€“including the ecosystems&#226;€“of some of the most beautiful parts of our state. 

 ]]>
	</content>
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