Category:
Pennsylvania
Another wind farm is planned for Schuylkill County. The proposal will come up Wednesday night at a zoning meeting at the North Schuylkill High School.
There is opposition from people who live near the proposed site for the giant windmills.
Even from a few miles away wind farms are hard to miss. They're usually located on mountaintops.
Also filed under [
General|
Impact on People]
Zoning and changing times a backdrop to neighbor against neighbor
November 13, 2009 by Bob Keeler in Montgomery News
November 13, 2009 by Bob Keeler in Montgomery News
David Yoder's been farming for more than a third of a century.
He's at least the fourth generation of his family who have lived and worked on the land on Cowpath Road near the border of Franconia and Salford townships that has been farmed "forever," Yoder said.
Adding a 140-foot cellular tower and a power-generating wind turbine with a blade that reaches to a height of 163 feet will give the farm reduced electric bills and rental income from the cell tower and is similar to adding animals, crops or farm buildings, he said.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Construction of wind turbine OK'd in Bell Acres; Conditions added for energy center
November 12, 2009 by Rachael Conway in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
November 12, 2009 by Rachael Conway in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Bell Acres council has approved construction of an alternative energy center that will include a 60-foot wind turbine, but not without a few conditions.
Several of the stipulations involve possible noise issues, while others are intended to address residents' concerns for dozens of great blue herons that nest about half a mile away on the Bell Acres-Economy line.
In a 5-0 vote Monday, council gave the Alternative Energy Center permission to create an 80-by-80 foot display site for three alternative energy products.
Also filed under [
General]
A week after the Black Creek Township Zoning Hearing Board gave more time to a Sunbury firm looking to build wind turbines on Tomhicken Mountain, dozens of residents attended a township supervisors' meeting to both speak for and against Penn Wind's plans.
Supervisors, however, discussed very little about Penn Wind's plans during the Friday meeting, which was rescheduled from Oct. 6. ...Sean Purdy of Penn Wind did not speak during the meeting. His company wants to install four turbines in Black Creek and 18 in neighboring Beaver Township, Columbia County.
Also filed under [
General]
Despite a recent report indicating Pennsylvania's significant growth in wind energy, local projects that once seemed imminent are all either dead or at a standstill.
The state ranked second in growth with 29 percent, according to the American Wind Energy Association's report on the market for the third quarter of 2009. ...Two Luzerne County projects have withered on the vine, one dying after a very public legal fight and the other quietly.
Also filed under [
General]
The large wide load grounded Monday remained in town Tuesday, awaiting a part needed for repairs before it continues to West Virginia.
Front Street remained closed from Route 54 to Mill Street, where the 150-foot-long, 100-ton windmill base sat on a trailer.
The part for a damaged rear turning axle was ordered from Alabama and is expected to be delivered today, Danville Police Chief Eric Gill said.
Also filed under [
General]
Traffic on the Danville-Riverside Bridge was tied up for six hours Monday after a tractor-trailer carrying a wide load turned onto the bridge and got stuck.
A crane was called in to move the trailer, which was hauling a section of a wind turbine tower.
The truck became stuck at about 11:30 a.m. and was cleared from the bridge at about 5:30 p.m.
Also filed under [
Safety]
A Sunbury firm that wants to build wind turbines on Tomhicken Mountain now has more time to complete the project.
Thursday night, the Black Creek Township Zoning Hearing Board voted 3-0 to grant Penn Wind LLC an extension from Dec. 31, 2010, to Dec. 31, 2011, to complete construction of four wind turbines in Black Creek Township. Penn Wind is building 18 additional windmills in neighboring Beaver Township, Columbia County.
Also filed under [
General]
Fayette County commissioners took no action following a hearing to make revisions to an ordinance that permits commercial and residential windmills and wind turbines as a permitted use, rather than by special exception, in areas zoned agricultural, light industrial or heavy industrial.
Commissioners had approved the ordinance in June, but attorney Richard Bower, representing Iberdrola Renewables of Portland, Ore., said the ordinance required some minor revisions.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Also filed under [
Impact on Views]
As has been the case for more than six months, the issue involving wind turbines again dominated the Butler Township supervisors meeting Tuesday evening.
The township municipal building was again filled to standing-room only with township residents and others who oppose the proposed project planned by Broad Mountain Development Co. LLC, a Rich family company.
Broad Mountain has a proposed locating 27 wind turbines in the Fountain Springs area, a plan strongly opposed by local residents.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
In Clearfield ... Planners hear concerns about turbine project
October 20, 2009 by Josh Woods in The Progress News
October 20, 2009 by Josh Woods in The Progress News
Clearfield County Planning Commission listened to a pair of concerned citizens at its meeting last night who shared information about a proposed wind energy project. Brady Township resident Gary Swope shared information about the 43-turbine project projected for Brady, Bloom and Penn townships by Iberdrola Renewables. Swope reported the project area would contain industrial-sized wind turbines measuring 300 feet across its blades and 400 feet from the ground to its highest point.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Riverside officials consider wind turbine project
October 19, 2009 by Shari Sanger in The Times-Tribune
October 19, 2009 by Shari Sanger in The Times-Tribune
Officials with the Riverside School District are considering a feasibility study for a wind turbine project to reduce electricity costs.
At a committee meeting Monday, a handful of board members heard a presentation from Frank Smollon, president of Electric City Wind Power Corp., a licensed manufacturer and distributor of vertical wind power technology. ...A megawatt unit would produce more than 3 million kilowatt hours of electricity a year, or enough to power about 300 average households, Mr. Smollon said.
"But you have to remember wind is an intermittent resource and it is a natural source," he said.
Also filed under [
General]
Hearing shows conflicts over reaching clean energy goals
October 19, 2009 by Don Hopey in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
October 19, 2009 by Don Hopey in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Clean energy and the "green jobs" attached to it enjoyed wide support in testimony at a Senate hearing in Pittsburgh today but differences remain about how and how quickly federal policies should push those goals.
Sen Arlen Specter, D-Pa., who hosted the hearing, acknowledged those tensions between "competing interests" in Pennsylvania coal, natural gas and alternative energy industries.
Also filed under [
General]
DEP to Hold Public Meeting, Hearing on Sandy Ridge Wind Project's Stormwater Permit Application
October 18, 2009 in Gant Daily
October 18, 2009 in Gant Daily
The Department of Environmental Protection will hold a public meeting at 6:30 p.m. followed by a public hearing at 8 p.m. on Monday, Nov. 23, to discuss and accept testimony on a National Pollution Discharge Elimination System permit application by Sandy Ridge Wind LLC for a wind turbine project in Blair and Centre counties.
The NPDES permit would address stormwater runoff from the construction of gravel roads, parking areas and concrete pads associated with 28 wind turbines, transmission lines and a substation.
Also filed under [
General]
Wind turbine demonstration site raises concern for nesting herons
October 15, 2009 by Rachael Conway in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
October 15, 2009 by Rachael Conway in Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Lane Johnson said the great blue herons that perch on and near his property in Bell Acres are like an annoying little brother that you wish would go away, but you also feel obligated to protect. ...he spoke during a public hearing Monday night against the proposed erection of a 60-foot wind turbine that would go up about a half-mile away from the herons' nesting spot -- or rookery -- because it might endanger the birds.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on Birds]
Bell Acres residents question windmill plan
October 12, 2009 by Bill Utterback in Beaver County Times
October 12, 2009 by Bill Utterback in Beaver County Times
Opposing perspectives rose from residents who gathered Monday to probe the proposed alternative energy development site along Big Sewickley Creek Road in Bell Acres.
Many borough residents questioned the potential noise level and electromagnetic presence of the site, which would include a 66-foot wind turbine. Others questioned the potential threat to great blue herons that nest along Big Sewickley Creek. Some questioned the visual impact on the borough's landscape.
Also filed under [
Impact on Landscape|
Impact on People]
Noise concerns, bird habitat hold up alternative-energy plans
October 11, 2009 by Bill Utterback in Beaver County Times
October 11, 2009 by Bill Utterback in Beaver County Times
Bell Acres Council will soon decide whether one more footprint will disturb the great blue herons and other residents.
An alternative-energy demonstration site - involving a single 66-foot-high wind turbine, a 15-foot-high turbine, some solar panels and a trailer - has been proposed by a collaboration of Metal Foundations (Ambridge), Vox Energy (Allison Park) and Jet Industries (Ellwood City) for a site near the intersection of Big Sewickley Creek Road, also designated as the Red Belt, and Turkeyfoot Road.
Fayette officials give conditional approval for windmills
October 10, 2009 by Mary Pickels in Tribune-Review
October 10, 2009 by Mary Pickels in Tribune-Review
The Fayette County Planning Commission Thursday conditionally approved plans to build 22 wind turbines along Chestnut Ridge in Georges and Springhill townships.
Iberdrola Renewables of Portland, Ore., has sought approval for the project from the county zoning hearing board for several years, without success.
Action by county commissioners in June to amend the county zoning ordinance eliminated the need for a special exception for wind turbines.
Also filed under [
General]
Brady Township Board of Supervisors heard a wind energy presentation at its meeting last night provided by Laura Jackson of Save Our Allegheny Ridges. ...Noise is a key factor to consider when determining a setback distance, she said. "In my experience it is very hard to prove a noise case in court and a noise study costs 30, 40, $50,000 which a township could not afford."
Also filed under [
General]
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