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Her family suffered severe sleep deprivation and were forced to move out to a rented house in Spalding.
She said: "This result is excellent for everybody who has had their lives devastated by noise, both audible and low frequency, from wind farms.
"I think it's a very fair result and the tribunal was well aware it was being asked to make a national precedent.
"This is one battle won but there's still the rest of the war to go."
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Impact on People]
A couple have won their fight to lower the council tax banding on their property, which dropped in value after wind turbines were built nearby.
Julian and Jane Davis, along with their daughter Emily, had to endure endless sleepless nights after a wind farm, with turbines 100 metres high, was built less than 900 metres away from their home.
In May 2007, the family abandoned their Deeping St Nicholas home and rented a property in Spalding five miles away.
However, the house became un-sellable because of the problems created by the turbines.
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A couple who say their home has been blighted by noise from a wind farm have won a 20% reduction in council tax because the house's value has dropped. ...Although investigators sent by the Lincolnshire Valuation Tribunal to measure noise levels did not find any problems, the panel conceded the construction of the windfarm "had had a significant detrimental effect on the appellants' quiet enjoyment of their properties.
"The tribunal therefore found that the nuisance caused by the wind farm was real and not imagined and it would have had some effect upon the potential sale price of the appeal dwellings."
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Noise and safety top turbine meeting agenda
July 8, 2008 by Ben Barnett in Bradford Telegraph & Argus
July 8, 2008 by Ben Barnett in Bradford Telegraph & Argus
At a lively meeting in which the Princes contingent were often heckled and saw one couple walk out, objections centred around increased noise and health and safety issues.
Paul Jackson, general manager of the Princes plant, said the turbine would reduce the firm's energy costs.
He said: "We need to be as competitive as we can in what can be a very aggressive and competitive market.
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An energy company has pulled out of plans to build a wind farm in Rhondda due to concerns over noise.
E.On and community group Arts Factory wanted to build the eight-turbine wind farm between the Rhondda Fach and Fawr, near Ferndale.
But E.On said it was worried that the project could potentially pose a "noise nuisance" to nearby homes.
Arts Factory said it was looking for a new partner so that it could continue with the scheme.
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A family forced to move home because of the noise generated by a nearby wind turbine have given evidence to the House of Lords.
Jane and Julian Davis were plagued by sleepless nights when they lived close to the wind farm at Deeping St Nicholas and eventually moved out.
They were recently told that their house was unmarketable and now live in Spalding.
They documented their wind turbine nightmare and sent evidence to the House of Lords Economic Affairs Committee, which is investigating the economics of renewable energy.
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Impact on People]
Jane and Julian Davis left their Deeping St Nicholas home at Christmas 2006 after months of sleepless nights due to noise and vibration from the turbines, which are less than 1km from their house.
However, there is a way forward at last after complaints to the Local Government Ombudsman over the handling of their issue by South Holland District Council, and monitoring of noise levels will now take place once more to establish the extent of the issue.
Mrs Davis said: "Now we start all over again - but at last it is being accepted there are issues.
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A West Cumbrian man claims his life has been made a total misery because of a windfarm just half a mile from his home.
Ron Williams, of The Swallows, Bothel, has revealed that he is taking sleeping pills and suffering mental anguish because of the Wharrels Hill turbines.
The 73-year-old is now urging people living near two proposed windfarm sites to do all they can to oppose the applications. ...He said that the low frequency noise had the worst impact. He said: "The swush, swush, swush as each blade breaks the flow of the wind past the tower, obviously three times per revolution is extremely debilitating. The affect is worse at nights when ambient noise level from traffic on the A595 is low."
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Two wind farms will not go ahead after officials rejected the proposals which would have seen 29 turbines erected.
Planners had been expected to approve the projects in Denbighshire at Llyn Brenig, near Cerrigydrudion, Conwy, and at Gorsedd Bran in Clocaenog Forest.
But at a meeting to decide the matter, 18 councillors voted against the proposals, with just four in favour. There were two abstentions.
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Zoning/Planning]
A family who suffered from sleepless nights thanks to nearby wind turbines are continuing the fight against the noise.
Jane and Julian Davis, of Deeping St Nicholas, decided to move their family away from the wind farm which was producing a low frequency din that saw them struggle to sleep.
The couple complained to South Holland District Council but were left frustrated after the authority's investigations revealed that they were unable to distinguish between the sound made by the turbines and any other noise.
Mr and Mrs Davis were upset at the findings and say that it makes planning conditions, based on a government report which assesses and rates the noise given off by wind farms, unenforceable.
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PLANS for a South Yorkshire wind farm could be blown away - unless a power company comes up with an urgent background noise report.
Councillors are due to consider an application by Cornwall LIght and Power to build three 95-metre high wind turbines at Loscar Farm, Harthill, on the border of Sheffield and Rotherham, on January 31.
But the company has been told that unless it supplies a report on projected background noise from the turbines the application could be refused.
Campaigners have already opposed the wind farm plans on the grounds the turbines will be a blot on the landscape and because of possible noise nuisance.
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Zoning/Planning]
Special Report: Discontent over turbine proposal
November 27, 2007 by Jonny Muir in Evening Telegraph
November 27, 2007 by Jonny Muir in Evening Telegraph
A PUBLIC meeting has been called to discuss controversial proposals to erect 13 wind turbines across a swathe of Fenland countryside.
Peterborough City Council planning chiefs are currently assessing applications for two separate schemes on neighbouring strips of land abutting the Cambridgeshire border. ...Mr Potts said: "We respectfully ask that any application for wind turbines is taken after the findings of Defra's investigation. We do not want the Fens to become a dumping ground for these inefficient systems."
An application for a 25 metre-high wind turbine at Plymstock's Coombe Dean School has been withdrawn ...The school applied for planning permission from Plymouth City Council in July but had to withdraw its application this week due to the lack of "noise information" provided.
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Zoning/Planning]
A PLAN to put a wind turbine in the grounds of a rural school has run out of puff amid concerns it will create too much noise. ...Peter Evans, the council's director of public protection, has expressed doubts over the plan.
He is concerned about the noise the turbine would make and the possible health effects.
The council's planning committee has now delayed a decision for a site visit.
In his report to the committee, Mr Evans said: "The background noise level at the school site is such that we believe the turbine will cause sleep disturbance to local residents during the night."
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Impact on People]
The initial application was refused by the City of York Council and an appeal was refused by the Planning Inspectorate, because planners were unsure how much noise the turbine would generate. ..."I note the appellant's frustration with the perceived lack of council officer support for this scheme, ...However, such schemes should not be at the expense of detracting from neighbouring residents' enjoyment of their properties and in this case insufficient information has been provided to conclude that the proposal would not harm the living conditions of existing residential occupiers."
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The map revealing the eyesores and noise wrecking our rural communities
September 9, 2007 by David Derbyshire in Daily Mail
September 9, 2007 by David Derbyshire in Daily Mail
From the roar of aircraft to the drone of giant wind turbines, it is getting harder to find peace and quiet in the countryside. ...Since the early 1990s, around 320 square miles of tranquil countryside has been lost every year - the equivalent to an area the size of Greater London every two years.
At this rate the remaining 50 per cent of undisturbed countryside in England could be blighted by 2087.
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Impact on Landscape]
A couple forced from their home by noisy wind turbines are prepared to take their fight to the ombudsman.
Jane and Julian Davis moved out of their farm near wind turbines in Deeping St Nicholas in May after months of sleepless nights caused by noise.
And they believe there is no end in sight to the disruption to their lives because South Holland District Council has been dragging its heels investigating the case.
Mrs Davis believes that the council has done nothing to look into the issues of noise at the site since last summer but instead left the investigation in the hands of operator Fenland Windfarms.
She said: "We let them get on with it thinking they were doing something but it turns out they weren't.
"Even in the full knowledge that we were driven out of our home they still did nothing.
"I absolutely hit the roof when I found out."
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Impact on People]
The government has ruled out further research into wind turbine noise following the publication of a university report into the phenomenon.
Salford University concluded the incidence of Aerodynamic Modulation, aerodynamic noise, (AM) from the UK's wind farm fleet is low.
But its recommendation that more research might be "prudent" was rejected.
Energy minister Malcolm Wicks said: "Where there are legitimate problems we will address them. But it is essential that we produce more wind power if we are to meet our climate change and security of supply aims."
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Impact on People]
CAMPAIGNERS against plans for a new wind farm between Bagthorpe, Barmer and Syderstone have been told of the horrific impact turbines can have on village life.
A packed public meeting in Bircham Newton heard from a number of guest speakers who gave grave warnings about the health impact, noise disturbances and threat to wildlife which could stem from the five turbines earmarked for the villages.
Included among the speakers was Jane Davis, of Deeping St Nicholas, Lincolnshire, who described the persistent noise problems she has faced from a wind farm near her home.
She also spoke of how the value of her property has plummeted since the development was completed.
Syderstone resident Reg Thompson, a member of the action group formed to oppose the plans, said: "People are very concerned about this.
"There are moves being made in Europe to ban wind farms that are within two kilometres of housing and we hope that becomes legislation because every house in Syderstone falls within that radius.
"People are very upset. We have seen housing deals fall through as people no longer want to move here.
In the North-east, the Skelmonae Windfarm Action Group was formed in Methlick earlier this year.
Member Mervyn Newberry, 42, a sales manager in oil and gas, said: "These monstrosities inflict untold misery on local inhabitants with their high levels of noise, shadow flicker, ruination of natural landscape, devastation of wildlife habitat and loss of housing value."