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Homeowners who live near the site of proposed Western Maryland wind farm brought their case before utility regulators Wednesday, saying the impact on their safety has not been adequately considered.
''This commission is our last and only hope our government will protect us,'' said homeowner Victor Fickes.
Synergics Wind Energy wants to build a 50-megawatt wind energy farm atop Backbone Mountain near Oakland in Garrett County.
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Impact on People]
State energy officials are gauging interest from developers who would build an offshore farm of electricity-generating, skyscraper-sized wind turbines off the Worcester coastline.
"The question is, how do we tap into the wind resources that we've got?" said Maryland Energy Administration Director Malcolm D. Woolf.
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Energy Policy]
Ex-Frostburg mayor challenges proposed wind power ordinance
July 27, 2009 by Michael A. Sawyers in Cumberland Times-News
July 27, 2009 by Michael A. Sawyers in Cumberland Times-News
The mayor and council recently approved a first reading of the ordinance that would allow personal wind turbines as tall as 165 feet in Frostburg's backyards. At the Aug. 20 public meeting, the city officials are scheduled to have subsequent readings and a vote on the matter, though some talk has surfaced about postponing that action until September.
"A structure this high is equivalent to a 16-story building," Bambacus told the elected officials in an e-mail.
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Zoning/Planning]
Wind energy bad for W.Va., Allegheny Front Alliance claims
July 15, 2009 by Sarah Moses in Cumberland Times-News
July 15, 2009 by Sarah Moses in Cumberland Times-News
Though the Mineral County commissioners heard from US Windforce on the Pinnacle project on Green Mountain last month, the Allegheny Front Alliance got the chance Tuesday to try to refute some of the wind developer's claims.
The group's nearly hour-long presentation included sentiments that the energy provided by the project was not needed in West Virginia, but in the other states on the PJM grid.
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Impact on People|
West Virginia]
Opposition to proposed power line grows on Md. Shore
July 11, 2009 by Timothy B. Wheeler in Baltimore Sun
July 11, 2009 by Timothy B. Wheeler in Baltimore Sun
A $1.2 billion, 150-mile power line that would cross Maryland and lay high-voltage cables under the Chesapeake Bay for the first time has been proposed to ease the threat of blackouts on the growing Delmarva Peninsula.
But the proposal is generating opposition from environmentalists, landowners and even business interests in mostly rural Dorchester County, who worry that the project could disrupt farming, damage sensitive marshlands and blight the area's growing tourism.
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Impact on Wildlife]
US WindForce calls Pinnacle a favorable spot
April 7, 2009 by Richard Kerns in Mineral Daily News-Tribune
April 7, 2009 by Richard Kerns in Mineral Daily News-Tribune
Wind Farm near Keyser is a favorable site for turbines based on wildlife considerations, according to extensive studies conducted by environmental consultants retained by the developer, US WindForce.
That was the message from Monday night's meeting of the Community Advisory Panel, delivered by Jennie Henthorn of Henthron Environmental Consultants.
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Impact on Wildlife|
West Virginia]
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.
Farmer says possibility of power line on his land 'like a punch to the gut'
August 24, 2008 by Joshua Bowman in Herald Mail
August 24, 2008 by Joshua Bowman in Herald Mail
One week after moving in, Loudenslager found out that a swath of the farm where cows graze and alfalfa grows soon could be cleared to make way for a high-voltage power line.
"It's like a punch to the gut," Loudenslager said. "This is where I've wanted to be my whole life."
Loudenslager's farm north of Boonsboro sits on one of several routes that have been suggested for the Potomac Appalachian Transmission Highline (PATH), which would run from St. Albans, W.Va., through Bedington, W.Va., to Kemptown, Md., in Frederick County.
During a work session last week, the Ocean City Mayor and Council reviewed a presentation from Bluewater Wind proposing a 200-turbine wind farm off the coast of the resort with construction beginning by 2013. Delaware recently approved a similar, albeit smaller, project off its Atlantic coastline with an anticipated 60-70 turbines producing enough energy to supply about 50,000 homes in that state.
While all agreed the idea has merit from an alternative, renewable energy standpoint, the biggest concern raised during Bluewind's presentation last week was the visibility of the massive windmills from the shore and their impact on the landscape.
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Impact on Views]
Visibility was the top concern amongst Mayor and City Council members this week, as they heard the latest updates on the potential offshore wind farm off the coast of Ocean City.
Bluewater Wind came before the Mayor and Council this week in an effort to keep the community updated on the potential offshore wind park, one they hope will come to fruition no later than 2013. ...Council member Jim Hall questioned the stability of residents' energy bills, pointing out that only 10 percent of energy bills would be affected by wind energy.
"We would still have 90 percent, at least, of fluctuation in our bills," he said.
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Impact on Views]
As long as 'you can't see it'; Visability of wind farm concerns OC
July 16, 2008 by Brian Shane in Delmarva Now
July 16, 2008 by Brian Shane in Delmarva Now
"We don't want to see them. Standing on the beach, we don't want to see them," he said during the council's work session Tuesday afternoon.
Councilman Jim Hall echoed the mayor's sentiment, saying the project could prove far more popular if the turbines were invisible from land.
"If you can't see it," Hall said, "then you can add acres and acres of wind farms. I think people are going to eat it up."
For Bluewater, it's an expensive courtesy. Lanard said pushing the turbines farther out to sea makes it more expensive. It costs $1,000 for every foot of cable connecting the wind farm to the shore.
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Impact on Views]
So many people have flooded the Maryland Department of Natural Resources with emails, calls and letters about a proposal to build wind turbines in state forests that the agency has been forced to find a larger venue for its public hearing.
"We've had a lot of interest expressed, so we changed the date," said Olivia Campbell, spokeswoman for the state wildlife agency. "We are making it easier for the public to participate. We realize a lot of people have passion on both sides." ...Some people have expressed strong opposition to the idea of letting developers rip up state forests and build tall industrial machines. Others strongly support the idea of using state property to generate clean, pollution-free electricity.
Wind turbines dominate Garrett legislative forum
December 16, 2007 by Sarah Moses in Cumberland Times-News
December 16, 2007 by Sarah Moses in Cumberland Times-News
Topics from wind turbines on state land to alcohol sales on Sunday were discussed at a legislative forum held on Saturday at Garrett College.
"We continue to have problems on the southern part of the county (with wind turbines)," Bob Lewis of Oakland said. "But I sense a lot of opposition on this. There are people taking a stand against this that have not previously taken a side on the issue."
Delegate Wendell Beitzel and Sen. George Edwards both discussed their views on this current topic of debate.
Beitzel said he was opposed to placing industrial windmills on state forests, saying the land is something that needs preserved. He said other parts of the state are coping with the loss of farmland and open space because of development.
"We're really lucky to have this state land in the county," he said. "I'm very much opposed to these."
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General|
Energy Policy]
Local Sierra Club members oppose wind turbines
December 10, 2007 by Kevin Spradlin in Cumberland Times-News
December 10, 2007 by Kevin Spradlin in Cumberland Times-News
Mark Diehl, conservation chairman of the Western Maryland Group of the Sierra Club, and Sam White, Western Maryland representative of the Maryland Sierra Club, both told the District 1 legislative delegation Saturday during a public forum at Allegany College of Maryland they oppose that type of renewable, clean, alternative energy source.
But why?
For starters, Diehl said, "it's just not worth it. It seems like a good idea" but it's not.
He said it would take too many tall, unsightly turbines - "thousands, maybe tens of thousands" - to gather enough wind and produce enough energy to make a difference.
The alteration of the area's scenic beauty, he said, isn't worth the sacrifice.
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Impact on Wildlife|
Impact on People]
People see good and bad in O'Malley proposal to lease state park land for wind turbines
December 8, 2007 by Sarah Moses in Cumberland Times-News
December 8, 2007 by Sarah Moses in Cumberland Times-News
Opinions remain mixed over the O'Malley administration's proposal to lease state park land for wind power turbines. ...for Peter Skylstad and Kevin Dodge, wildlife biologists and professors at Garrett College, the loss of 400 acres just for the turbines makes them wary of things to come.
Skylstad said he is worried that it is something that would set a precedent for other permanent impacts and the continued shrinking of the size of the forest ecosystem. He added that as the property proposed is public land, he doesn't feel it is something the state can make a profit from.
"The public should make that decision," Skylstad said. "At least they should be informed. One of the reasons I came here is I appreciated what Maryland had up here, and they keep inching into that environment."
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Impact on Wildlife]
State forests sought for wind farms; Pa. company would lease W.Md. ridges for turbines
December 6, 2007 by Tom Pelton in Baltimore Sun
December 6, 2007 by Tom Pelton in Baltimore Sun
A Pennsylvania company is asking the O'Malley administration for leases in two Western Maryland state forests so it can clear up to 400 mountaintop acres to build about 100 wind turbines.
The U.S. Wind Force structures would be about 40 stories tall and visible from some of the region's most popular tourist areas, including Deep Creek Lake and the Savage River Reservoir. ...Dan Boone, a former state wildlife biologist who has been fighting wind farms in Western Maryland, said the Savage River and Potomac state forests contain rare old-growth trees and threatened species.
"You are talking about taking one of the most spectacular scenic overlooks in Maryland and industrializing it," Boone said of a proposed site on Meadow Mountain in the Savage River forest. "It would be a real tragedy to take state lands and convert them into an industrial theme park for U.S. Wind Force."
Eyesores or clean machines? Environmentalists are split over the giant energy-producing towers popping up in Maryland and other states.
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Impact on People|
Energy Policy]