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Impact on Landscape
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Winds of change make battlefield center of fight
Posted by: Lisa on September 20, 2009 9:05:32 AM
A state agency has joined the fight against a wind farm in Highland County that could affect a Civil War battlefield. Developers say it's a nonissue, but longtime opponents of the wind farm say they want to preserve the area's beauty.
Note : The Roanoke Times
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Impact on Wildlife
| Impact on Landscape
| West Virginia
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Hearing Scheduled on Highland New Wind Compliance with SCC Order
Posted by: Lisa on September 04, 2009 6:20:40 PM
Highland New Wind Development (HNWD), the self-touted "Greenest Wind Farm in the World," has initiated clearing, road work, and excavation for its 19-turbine project in the remote Allegheny Mountain, Laurel Fork area along the Highland County-Pocahontas County, Virginia-West Virginia border. ...The SCC has scheduled a hearing to be convened on September 23, 2009 to receive evidence and testimony from the Virginia Department of Historic Resources (DHR) and HNWD concerning the wind energy developer's compliance with the SCC's December 2007 order
Note : http://www.vawind.org/#noncomply
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Impact on Views
| West Virginia
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Got wind turbines? Helpful website provides custom viewsheds
Posted by: Lisa on August 12, 2009 12:57:12 AM
Giant wind turbines are coming close to Pocahontas County and many residents are curious if the windmills will be visible from their homes.
A helpful website with a strange name lets you find out with just a few clicks of the mouse.
Heywhatsthat.com works in conjunction with Google Maps and provides custom viewsheds from any point on the globe.
Note : http://www.pocahontastimes.com/index.php?id=886
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Impact on Landscape
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Preservation group voices opposition to windmill project
Posted by: Lisa on March 29, 2009 3:11:10 PM
Six weeks ago, Ann Robinson of Falls Mills, Va., had never heard of wind turbines, but on Sunday afternoon, she was expressing her concerns over a BP Dominion's proposed wind turbine farm on East River Mountain in Tazewell County, Va.
"At first I thought, oh well, wind energy, this is green ... this is a good thing, but then I started researching wind turbines and learned differently," Robinson said to a crowd.
Note : http://www.bdtonline.com/local/local_story_088212801.html
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Impact on Landscape
| Maryland
| West Virginia
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P.A.T.H. hearing draws crowd
Posted by: Lisa on February 10, 2009 9:01:20 AM
Residents filled the auditorium of Washington High School on Monday evening in hopes that their voices would be heard and a change would be made to the proposed route for a high-voltage power line slated for construction in the area.
Nearly 150 people turned out for a public hearing about P.A.T.H., which stands for Potomac-Appalachian Transmission Highline, and is a joint venture of Allegheny Energy and American Electric Power that was announced last year.
Note : http://journal-news.net/page/content.detail/id/515582.html
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Impact on Landscape
| Zoning/Planning
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Windmills stir up controversy
Posted by: Lisa on December 27, 2008 10:54:10 AM
David Anderson, the Eastern District member of the Tazewell County Board of Supervisors, has been busy in recent days answering phone calls and e-mails from supporters and opponents of a proposed large-scale windmill project. ..."Don't get me wrong, I've heard a lot of positive, and I've heard a lot of negative," Anderson said Tuesday. "There are still people who are very pro-windmill. But the majority of the feedback I've received have been real concerned about the natural beauty of East River Mountain."
Note : http://www.bdtonline.com/local/local_story_362195703.html
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Impact on Landscape
| West Virginia
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Wind company, state disagree on view study
Posted by: Lisa on September 04, 2008 11:34:31 AM
Is it too expensive to survey historic resources before Virginia's first wind energy plant is constructed? Highland New Wind Development says it would have to fork over between $50,000-$75,000, or more, to do what state officials have been steadily requesting for two years. ...DHR archeologist Roger Kirchen, however, told The Recorder his agency needs the results of these surveys before a review of the project is completed. "The final SCC order directs the applicant to work toward providing us with information," Kirchen said Monday. "The SCC order has the authority. We've exchanged some documents (with HNWD) ... but none of these issues have been resolved. At this point, we're just trying to identify the potential effects."
Note : http://www.therecorderonline.com/news/2008/0904/news/004.html
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Impact on Wildlife
| Impact on Landscape
| West Virginia
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Blowing in the wind: Alternative energy may be on horizon for Shenandoah Valley
Posted by: Lisa on April 09, 2008 4:07:00 PM
Freedom Works is planning the project to span the ridge line running along the border between Va. and West Va. The line runs from approximately five miles north of Woodstock to about five miles South of Mount Jackson, along the Western horizon. This would cover eighteen miles of ridgeline, in two states (Virginia and West Virginia), and three counties (Hardy in West Virginia, and Shenandoah and Rockingham in
Virginia.)
The timeline for the project runs from as short as a two-year, permit-gathering phase (followed by one to two years of construction) to a completion date as far off as the year 2040. When asked about a reported 2010 completion date for the project, Jim Smalls, district ranger for the Lee Ranger District within which the project is being planned, simply said, "I find that optimistic."
Note : http://www.rocktownweekly.com/svh_details.php?AID=16110&CHID=43
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Impact on Wildlife
| Impact on Landscape
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Turbines fan controversy; Proposed wind farm site is home to endangered wildlife
Posted by: Lisa on March 02, 2008 8:51:47 AM
In addition to killing birds, wind turbines at other sites have been found to kill bats, said Rick Lambert, a member of the Virginia Highlands Grotto of the National Speleological Society and local bat enthusiast.
At the Mountaineer Wind Energy Center in West Virginia, 47.5 bats were killed per turbine annually, he said.
In addition to common bats, there are 41 Indiana Bat caves within 50 miles and 23 Virginia Big-eared Bat caves within 30 miles of the proposed wind farm, Lambert said. Both species of bats are endangered and the turbines will be well within their migratory distance, he said.
Note : http://www.newsleader.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080302/NEWS01/803020331/1002
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Impact on Wildlife
| Impact on Views
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State approves wind plant permit; Residents, supervisors consider next moves
Posted by: Lisa on January 03, 2008 6:43:53 PM
HNWD attorneys Brian Brake and John Flora declined to make any comment on the SCC's decision or answer questions about how the company will proceed from here.
At this point, Bailey said he doubted the SCC would reconsider its permit order. "Legal arguments at the SCC are always edgy, and here, it's so clear how seriously they have taken the environment. The chances (of an appeal) prevailing are remote ... This has set a wonderful precedent for Virginia, and I can't see wind turbines exploding in this state now."
And, before construction can begin, HNWD is required to submit a final site plan. The company cannot do anything, including storing equipment on site, until that site plan is approved. Before HNWD can get a county building permit, it must also file a performance bond. For the first partial year and five subsequent years, that bond must be for $2,500 per turbine tower; for the remaining years, the amount is $6,000 each.
Note : http://www.therecorderonline.com/news/2008/0103/News/001.html
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Impact on Wildlife
| Zoning/Planning
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Virginia Approves First Wind Farm
Posted by: Lisa on December 20, 2007 6:06:16 PM
The first wind-powered electric generation project in Virginia will be permitted on the remote ridges of Highland County, the State Corporation Commission said Thursday.
The commission granted conditional approval to Highland New Wind Development's $60 million proposal to place 19 turbines more than 400 feet tall on a 4,400-foot ridge near the West Virginia border.
The company must spend up to $150,000 a year to monitor and mitigate harm to birds and bats that could be caused by the whirling turbine blades, the SCC said. Environmentalists have contended many endangered species would be threatened by the project, and an SCC hearing examiner concluded that the turbines were a "significant risk" to bats and "a lesser risk" to birds.
Note : http://www.myfoxdc.com/myfox/pages/News/Detail?contentId=5278793&version=2&locale=EN-US&layoutCode=TSTY&pageId=3.2.1
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Impact on Wildlife
| Impact on Landscape
| Tourism
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Turbulence over turbines at Virginia's first planned wind farm
Posted by: Lisa on September 16, 2007 8:36:16 AM
The ferocity of local opinions against the project has raised questions about Virginia's future as a wind-energy producer, with surrounding counties unsure about opening their mountaintops to investors, too.
The debate also comes as entrepreneurs in other states are rushing to erect turbines, take advantage of federal tax credits and create electricity without the emissions linked to global warming.
Note : http://content.hamptonroads.com/story.cfm?story=132585&ran=2037
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