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The West Virginia public service commission has rejected "U.S. Wind Force's" application to build wind turbines along Jack Mountain.
"I would say the basic majority are opposed to 'em because of the beautification issue," Mary adds.
And now the mountains that reign high above Pendleton County will remain clear.
"Good ridance...good ridance to a bad idea."
So it looks like the battle is over for now, the wind farms not going up here in Pendleton County however the developer U.S. Wind Force says they're going to review their options.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
PSC Denies Permit for W. Va. Wind Farm
June 22, 2007 by Pam Ramsey, Associated Press in Houston Chronicle
June 22, 2007 by Pam Ramsey, Associated Press in Houston Chronicle
CHARLESTON, W.Va. - The state Public Service Commission says a developer can't build a wind farm in Pendleton County because its application lacks information on several key issues, including the project's impact on cultural resources and noise.
In an order released Friday, the PSC rejected Liberty Gap Wind Force LLC's application for a permit for the proposed 50-turbine Liberty Gap wind farm. It was the second setback for the wind industry in West Virginia in less than a month.
On June 8, the state Supreme Court revived a lawsuit challenging a wind farm proposed for Grant County.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Grant County turbines going up as lawsuit proceeds
June 21, 2007 in West Virginia Public Broadcasting
June 21, 2007 in West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Earlier this month the State Supreme Court sided with local residents in Grant County who are trying to stop a wind power project on Mount Storm.
The Supreme Court sent the lawsuit back to Circuit Court where the case had been dismissed. But even as the lawsuit moves forward, the wind power project is taking shape.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Wind-power companies have gotten a stormy reception in West Virginia, but they say they have no intention of giving up on the state.
"We've had long delays before" in other states, says Dave Groberg of Invenergy LLC, whose plans to build in Greenbrier County have been held up for 2 1/2 years. "This is up there with the top two or three, and before we're done I'd expect it to be the longest."
Despite all that, Groberg said, the wait will be worth it.
"West Virginia is a very good site for a wind project," he said. "And we believe that once the process has run its course, we'll see the project running."
State’s highest court overturns Grant County wind decision
June 9, 2007 by Mona Ridder in Cumberland Times-News
June 9, 2007 by Mona Ridder in Cumberland Times-News
The high court heard the appeal during its LAW Day program in Hampshire County in late April when attorney Richard Neely of Charleston argued on behalf of the residents and Samuel Brock of Charleston argued on behalf of NedPower.
Supreme Court Justices Robin Davis, Elliott Maynard, Larry Starcher and Joseph Albright disagreed with Jordan, saying in the opinion, written by Maynard, that the residents were entitled to their day in court on the nuisance complaint and that the PSC's only jurisdiction was in siting the project.
Supreme Court Clerk Rory Perry said that the case will return to the circuit court jurisdiction where new proceedings will be held.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
In a 4-1 decision, state Supreme Court justices said a Grant County judge was wrong to dismiss a complaint filed by a group of homeowners opposed to a huge wind power facility planned for a site nearby.
Now a nuisance case against two companies that want to build the $300 million wind farm can go forward after a circuit judge dismissed the case last year.
"Our decision in this case is merely that the (homeowners) have alleged sufficient facts to avoid dismissal on the pleadings," wrote Justice Spike Maynard for the majority in the opinion released today.
"In other words, the (homeowners) should have their day in court. Beyond this, we offer no opinion on the ultimate success or failure of the (homeowners') claim."
The state Supreme Court has breathed new life into a lawsuit challenging a $300 million wind farm in the Eastern Panhandle.
In a ruling issued Friday, the court said a Grant County Circuit judge had no legal basis to dismiss the suit and sent it back for more proceedings.
The decision is a victory for the plaintiffs, a group of homeowners who live near the proposed NedPower Mount Storm wind farm in the Grassy Ridge area. The homeowners contend their property values will plunge if the 10-mile string of 330-foot-high-turbines is completed. The Supreme Court's action gives them a chance to prove that claim.
AEP gets several bids for wind power
May 8, 2007 by George Hohmann, business editor in Charleston Daily Mail
May 8, 2007 by George Hohmann, business editor in Charleston Daily Mail
American Electric Power has received more than a dozen bids from companies offering to construct wind farms under long-term power purchase agreements, spokeswoman Jeri Matheney said.
"We're very pleased with the response that we got, and the variety," Matheney said. "We got quite a few bids - more than a dozen - from several states.
"It will take at least a few weeks to pore through and analyze all of them," she said. "Then we'll go from there in making our decision."
Proponents and advocates of wind energy in Greenbrier County are weighing in on Thursday's release of a national study mandated by Congress on the environmental impacts of windfarms with mixed results.
Whether either side will use the study to its own advantage as the deadline nears for filing written briefs to the state Supreme Court is unknown, but both will have some ammunition to use.
Just last month, the court agreed to hear two appeals of the state Public Service Commission's green light to allow a building permit for a proposed $300 million windfarm in northern Greenbrier County.
More rules needed for wind power, study concludes
May 4, 2007 by Ken Ward Jr. in The Charleston Gazette
May 4, 2007 by Ken Ward Jr. in The Charleston Gazette
Appalachian states lack strong and detailed guidelines to regulate the continued growth of wind power facilities along the Mid-Atlantic highlands, according to a new study by the National Academy of Sciences.
A team of academy experts concluded that wind power can help offset the greenhouse emissions caused by coal and other fossil-fuel energy sources, but the projected growth of wind power in West Virginia, Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania creates potential threats to bird and bat populations that are not fully understood, the academy study found.
Windmill "farms" also can cause other environmental problems and create legitimate aesthetic concerns for local communities - ranging from damage to scenic vistas to noise and "shadow flicker," a strobe-like effect created by rotating turbines, the report found.
"The United States is in the early stages of learning how to plan for and regulate wind-energy facilities," says the report, compiled by the National Academy's National Research Council.
The report said the cumulative effects of continued growth in wind power are unclear, and that further study is needed.
People who live near the planned Nedpower Mount Storm and Shell Energy wind farm in Grant County have sought to have it enjoined by having it declared a nuisance. The plaintiffs have previously lost in the Circuit Court of Grant County. In mid-April they argued an appeal of that decision to the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals.
Although most people would consider a "nuisance" to be mosquitoes, telemarketers, lawyers, or the like, in the eyes of the law a "nuisance" is a use of land that interferes with someone else's use and enjoyment of their land. It is what is called a common law cause of action.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Rep. Alan B. Mollohan, D-W.Va., told a House committee Tuesday about the dangers wind turbines in West Virginia and elsewhere pose to birds and bats.
"In the past, West Virginia's natural resources were exploited without regard to the long-term environmental consequences, and I think it's imperative that this not be allowed to happen again," Mollohan told the House Subcommittee on Fisheries, Wildlife and Oceans during Tuesday's hearing, the first congressional hearing on the impact of huge wind turbines on wildlife.
Mollohan also spoke about the size of the wind projects on West Virginia's mountain ridges.
Also filed under [
Energy Policy|
USA]
Congress urged to study effects of wind power on bats, birds
May 2, 2007 by Tara Copp in American-Statesman
May 2, 2007 by Tara Copp in American-Statesman
WASHINGTON - An unusual coalition of conservationists and coal advocates told Congress on Tuesday that before the nation continues its rapid expansion of wind power, an assessment is needed of how many bats and birds are maimed and killed by wind turbines' blades.
That study should be followed up with regulations to protect those species, witnesses told a House Natural Resources subcommittee.
Opponents encouraged by state Supreme Court’s decision to hear case
April 19, 2007 by Christian Giggenbach in Register-Herald
April 19, 2007 by Christian Giggenbach in Register-Herald
Wednesday's decision by the state Supreme Court to enter into Greenbrier County's windfarm debate was met, expectedly, with elation by opponents of the planned project and grim determination by its developers.
Mountain Communities for Responsible Energy (MCRE) - the leading voice against the project - has spent about $50,000 in its efforts to stop 124 electric-producing wind turbines from being built in northern Greenbrier County.
MCRE spokesman Dave Buhrman said Thursday he felt "encouraged" by the Supreme Court's decision to determine whether the Public Service Commission erred in giving Beech Ridge Energy a conditional building permit. Buhrman said the fight against the windfarm has been difficult, but worthwhile.
Justice thought ‘pro se’ advocate was lawyer
April 18, 2007 by Christian Giggenbach in The Register-Herald
April 18, 2007 by Christian Giggenbach in The Register-Herald
While it takes most lawyers over seven years of hard work before being admitted to the West Virginia State Bar, don't tell that to real estate appraiser Jeffrey Eisenbeiss. While arguing against the proposed Greenbrier County windfarm in front of the state Supreme Court of Appeals on Monday, one justice mistook him for the real thing.
Eisenbeiss and his wife Alicia filed as "intervenors" in 2005 with the Public Service Commission when Beech Ridge Energy announced plans to build their part of a $300 million electric-producing windfarm near their home in Renick. Some of the proposed 400-foot tall turbines fall within one mile of their front porch. The Eisenbiess' decided to file "pro se" - without the aid of a lawyer - despite having no legal background.
"It's been a combined effort for the two of us," Jeffrey told The Register-Herald after his experience of being in front of the highest court in the state. "We have filed at least a half dozen legal documents."
In a stunning reversal of fortune for anti-windfarm advocates, the state Supreme Court of Appeals on Wednesday unanimously agreed to hear two cases claiming the West Virginia Public Service Commission erred last fall in their decision to give the green light for building 124 electric-producing wind turbines in northern Greenbrier County.
The decisions by Chief Justice Robin Davis, and Justices Larry V. Starcher, Elliott E. "Spike" Maynard, Joseph P. Albright, and Brent D. Benjamin were released late Wednesday by court information services director Jennifer Bundy.
Mountain Communities For Responsible Energy (MCRE), along with Jeffrey and Alicia Eisenbeiss, filed the petitions asking the high court to hear why they disagree with the PSC ruling. The Eisenbeiss' filed "pro se" - without the aid of a lawyer.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
Foes of wind farm take case to state high court
April 18, 2007 by Associated Press in The Times West Virginian
April 18, 2007 by Associated Press in The Times West Virginian
Property values were at the center of a court case that pits homeowners against a planned $300 million wind farm in West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle that one lawyer labeled a "brothel on top of the hill."
The state Supreme Court heard arguments Tuesday in a case that pits a group of property owners against NedPower Mount Storm LLC and its owner, Shell Windenergy Inc. The companies want to build a 10 1/2-mile string of 200 wind turbines along a ridge top in Grant County.
Residents claim the project would severely damage the value of their property. The companies argue the 330-foot-tall turbines will not only bring economic gain to the area, but the homeowners' concerns have already been dismissed by the state Public Service Commission.
State Supreme Court set to hear windfarm appeal
April 17, 2007 by Christian Giggenbach in The Register-Herald
April 17, 2007 by Christian Giggenbach in The Register-Herald
Two anti-windfarm advocates will present oral arguments today to the state Supreme Court that their cases should be added to the high court's docket in hopes of stopping a planned $300 million project slated for northern Greenbrier County.
Mountain Communities For Responsible Energy, along with Jeffrey and Alicia Eisenbeiss, filed the petitions after the state Public Service Commission's landmark decision last fall giving the green light to a wind energy developer's request to build 124 turbines along 23 miles of ridgeways owned primarily by MeadWestvaco.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
W.Va. Supreme Court justices to hear wind turbine case
April 15, 2007 by Mona Ridder in Cumberland Times-News
April 15, 2007 by Mona Ridder in Cumberland Times-News
The NedPower wind turbine project at Mount Storm is the first case that will be heard by the West Virginia Supreme Court on Tuesday as it convenes for the 2007 LAWS program.
Also filed under [
Zoning/Planning]
AEP, synonymous with coal, wants more wind power
April 5, 2007 by George Hohmann, Business Editor in Charleston Daily Mail
April 5, 2007 by George Hohmann, Business Editor in Charleston Daily Mail
American Electric Power announced it wants to enter long-term purchase agreements for 1,000 megawatts of wind energy, including up to 360 megawatts for its eastern United States service territory - where coal has traditionally been king.
The utility giant said it wants to add the wind energy by 2011 as part of its strategy to address greenhouse gas emissions.
On Tuesday the company issued a request for proposals seeking up to 260 megawatts of wind energy for its Appalachian Power unit. Appalachian serves more than 900,000 customers in southern West Virginia, Virginia and Tennessee.
The company also issued a request for proposals seeking up to 100 megawatts of wind energy for its Indiana Michigan Power unit.
The deadline for bids is April 30, with delivery to begin by the end of 2008.