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Recall petition targets three Kittitas County commissioners
October 11, 2007 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
October 11, 2007 by Mike Johnston in The Daily Record
Ellensburg area businessman Desmond Knudson late Wednesday filed with Kittitas County a petition calling for an election to recall all three county commissioners: Alan Crankovich, David Bowen and Mark McClain.
Knudson, who said he was the sole person behind the petition, alleges that the commissioners knowingly broke state law when they approved on July 19 an update of the county development regulations that contained a new county wind farm zone that takes in part of the U.S. Army's Yakima Training Center lands on the east end of the county. ...
Word about the recall petition spread Wednesday afternoon. Kittitas County Republican Party Chairman Matt Manweller said the public shouldn't take Knudson seriously, and that his action was "a PR stunt, not a serious attempt to engage in a legitimate political process."
The reaction to the Monday announcement that Kittitas County commissioners will mount a legal appeal against Gov. Chris Gregoire's approval of the 65-turbine Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project was not surprising: project supporters are disappointed, but those against the location of the 6,000-acre wind farm like the challenge.
Others indicated the legal action is welcome in that the state Supreme Court may answer, once and for all, whether land-use decisions made by local governments and their elected officials have a stronger legal standing than state actions to overrule those decisions.
Kittitas County commissioners on Monday agreed to take Gov. Chris Gregoire to the state's highest court to challenge her Sept. 18 decision approving the controversial 65-turbine, $150 million Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project, a wind farm proposed for 12 miles northwest of Ellensburg.
Commissioners, after a closed executive session, instructed the county Prosecutor's Office to file the appeal in Thurston County Superior Court, the first step before going to the state Supreme Court. ...the commissioners rejected the wind farm because environmental impacts were not adequately mitigated or lessened.
The Kittitas County Board of Commissioners will challenge Governor Christine Gregoire's decision to approve the Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project.
Wind farm critics consider legal responses to ruling
October 5, 2007 by Deirdre Gregg in Portland Business Journal
October 5, 2007 by Deirdre Gregg in Portland Business Journal
Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire's approval of a controversial wind farm opposed by Kittitas County commissioners may spark a reaction, such as litigation or possibly legislation.
Wind power no longer an energy anomaly
September 12, 2007 by Lisa Stiffler in Seattle Post-Intelligencer
September 12, 2007 by Lisa Stiffler in Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Yet, even with the new push, wind power still meets strong resistance.
Opposition over turbines has surfaced for projects scattered around the nation - a trend that could intensify as remote sites quickly are snatched up.
Gov. Chris Gregoire any day will announce her widely anticipated decision about whether to permit a controversial wind power project near Ellensburg that previously was rejected by Kittitas County commissioners.
The decision may have statewide implications. For some, project approval would amount to an egregious case of Olympia trampling over a local government's legal rights to make its own decisions about land use.
"I think it's huge," said Benton County Commissioner Leo Bowman. "It's bigger than what most of us have thought about."
For others, approving the Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project is the only practical solution in a state where voters have approved an initiative requiring more environmentally friendly power plants.
Lumber company will apply to build Skamania wind farm
September 4, 2007 by Kathie Durbin in The Columbian
September 4, 2007 by Kathie Durbin in The Columbian
SDS Lumber Co. plans to apply for a permit before year's end to build a wind farm in Skamania County that would produce up to 70 megawatts of power.
The project would be on a north-south ridge at elevations of 2,000 to 2,200 feet between Underwood Mountain and Whistling Ridge. The remote property lies east of the old mill town of Willard and about a mile north of the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area boundary. ...Dennis White, an environmental activist who lives in the Klickitat County community of Husum, said a regional discussion needs to take place about the cumulative effects of wind generation facilities in the Columbia Gorge.
"Wherever there's a BPA line, we're going to have these wind farms just outside the scenic area, up and down the gorge," White said.
Also filed under [
Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on People]
Judge rejects attempt to halt wind farm project
September 1, 2007 by Carrie Chicken in Union-Bulletin
September 1, 2007 by Carrie Chicken in Union-Bulletin
Walla Walla County Superior Court Judge Donald W. Schacht denied a petition Friday for review of a Columbia County conditional use permit for construction and operation of a 90 megawatt wind farm project.
Petitioners Eric and Elizabeth Thorn, Gary and Joann Grendahl and James Peterson filed the petition in the Walla Walla court May 23.
Congressman Doc Hastings told Gov. Chris Gregoire on Friday he's concerned that a final approval by her of a controversial wind farm in Kittitas County will set a negative precedent that says county government's wind power project review process is of no value.
Hastings, a Republican from Pasco who represents Kittitas County as part of the 4th Congressional District, sent a letter Friday to Gregoire addressing his concerns centered on the Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project, a 65-turbine wind farm planned for 12 miles northwest of Ellensburg and sought by Houston-based Horizon Wind Energy.
Hastings urged Gregoire, a Democrat, to consider "the potential implications of setting aside the lawful policies of locally elected officials - not only for future wind farm development, but also for power project siting in Washington generally," according to a news release and a statement from Hastings.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
Zoning/Planning]
Wind power catches on; towers not so popular
August 16, 2007 by Lisa Stiffler in Seattle Post-Intelligencer
August 16, 2007 by Lisa Stiffler in Seattle Post-Intelligencer
Technical glitches remain a major hurdle to the spread of wind power.
The turbines need to be connected to electrical companies and people and businesses through power lines -- like the ones that link your house to the pole on the street, but bigger.
The trouble is, these transmission lines often don't extend into the isolated places where the wind blows most strongly. Or if they do, there's not enough room in them to carry all the juice.
And while technology has made wind turbines more efficient at squeezing power out of gentler breezes, it can't make the wind blow all the time. So energy from wind turbines must be paired with energy from more reliable sources such as dams, coal or gas plants.
New energy sources could easily overload power network
August 14, 2007 by Tom Paulson in Seattle Post-Intelligencer
August 14, 2007 by Tom Paulson in Seattle Post-Intelligencer
There's a big obstacle to creating a shiny techno-green future by adding wind, sun and wave energy to our power system: the grid.
The nation's electric power transmission system, aka the grid, could be imagined as an overworked tangle of fraying household wires repeatedly spliced together by your grandfather, who refuses to call the electrician. It is based on century-old technology and, from a modern management perspective, is dumb.
Often, it's likened to the nation's highway system. But one local utilities executive said that is wishful thinking.
"More like a collection of New England country lanes," said Roger Garratt, resource acquisition manager for Puget Sound Energy.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
USA]
For a second time, a Washington state agency has recommended that the governor approve a proposed central Washington wind farm over the objections of Kittitas County citizens and officials.
The state Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council had recommended that Gov. Chris Gregoire approve the Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project in March, but Gregoire asked the council to reconsider whether the turbines should be set farther away from land owned by others.
Neighboring landowners and local officials have argued against the project for five years, saying it will have negative environmental and visual impacts.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
A state energy council on Wednesday agreed to tell Gov. Chris Gregoire that a wind farm planned northwest of Ellensburg must make as its "highest priority" efforts to lengthen the distance between turbines and homes of people not leasing their land to the wind power company.
The effort would come when the company decides on the exact location of each tower in a process called micro-siting, which occurs prior to construction.
The governor, when she receives the council reply early next week, will have 60 days to make a final decision on the controversial 65-turbine, $150 million Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project planned by Houston-based Horizon Wind Energy for 12 miles northwest of Ellensburg.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
A controversial wind farm in Kittitas County is one step closer to generating energy.
Today the State Energy Facility Site Evaluation Council (EFSEC) recommended the Horizon Wind Project go to the governor.
But construction can't begin just yet, Governor Christine Gregoire still has to sign off on the project, which is strongly opposed by several local groups and the Kittitas County Commissioners, who have voted in the past to deny Horizon's building permit.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
ELLENSBURG - Gov. Chris Gregoire on Wednesday will get the answer to her question on the controversial Kittitas Valley Wind Power Project, a wind farm planned for 12 miles northwest of Ellensburg.
The governor wants to know if the setback distances between turbine towers and landowners not leasing land for the project can be lengthened without harming the economic viability of the 65-turbine wind farm planned by Houston-based Horizon Wind Energy.
At this time, the distances range from a minimum of 1,320 feet to a maximum 1,640 feet.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Seattle City Light Wants You to "Green Up" by Paying Extra
August 1, 2007 by Brian Miller in Seattle Weekly
August 1, 2007 by Brian Miller in Seattle Weekly
You already drink shade-grown coffee, drive a Prius, and shop strictly organic at PCC. So naturally you're the best kind of customer-indeed a captive customer-for the ad blitz Seattle City Light has recently devised for its two-year-old "Green Up" program. Your latest billing envelopes have encouraged you to Green Up by adding a voluntary premium of as much as $12 to your monthly bill. For what purpose? To buy an amount of wind power equal to a percentage of your household's usage of cheap hydropower.
"Participating in the Green Up program demonstrates your preference and support for clean energy and a healthy environment in the Northwest," says the city's Web site. "It helps promote economic development in rural parts of the region, improves our energy security, and reduces pollution."
Really?
Also filed under [
Tax Breaks & Subsidies|
Energy Policy]
Puget Sound Energy officials earlier this week unveiled a proposed, public access plan for Beacon Ridge Road that runs through the company's Wild Horse Wind Power Project 17 miles east of Ellensburg.
The plan, which requires state approval, offers the general public controlled access to the 9,000 acres encompassing the wind farm, according to Brian Lenz, manager of community and local government relations for PSE in Central Washington.
Beacon Ridge Road is currently closed to the public due to construction of a demonstration solar project and final work on the wind farm that began full operation in December 2006.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
A Mighty Wind Is Pushing U.S. Renewable Energy Success
July 24, 2007 in Consulting-Specifying Engineer
July 24, 2007 in Consulting-Specifying Engineer
The United States is expected to be home to an anticipated 49,000 MW of installed wind-power capacity by 2015, making it the world's largest wind-power producer, according to a recent report. Developers are expected to invest more than $65 billion between 2007 and 2015 in wind-power facilities, researchers say.
Some people feel they just want to get the process over with, while others see no need for the project at all.
"I really think the majority of the approximate 38,000 residence of Kittitas County care little about who decides this issue. As long as we use a little objectivity and common sense," an audience member said at the forum.
"All I can find is that there is no benefit to our community, other than specific people that will be payed to put windmills on their property," explained Bill Fitzgerald, who owns property near where the proposed wind farm would go.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]