Thursday, November 15, 2012

BP's NON ~ OUTREACH OPEN HOUSE

The following letter was written to the New York State Public Service Commission by two Cape Vincent Town Board members that attended an open house in Cape Vincent NY, hosted by BP Wind Energy. BP has aspirations of erecting a 200MW plus wind farm in Cape Vincent NY; subsequently they hosted this open house as part of their Public Involvement Plan (PIP) a requirement of the Article 10 process, a newly enacted law in New York state law that regulates power plant siting

 November 12, 2012


Memorandum To: Urban Hirschey and John Byrne


From: Clif Schneider and Brooks Bragdon

RE: ARTICLE 10 OUTREACH – BP OPEN HOUSE

We both attended BP Alternate Energy's November 10, 2012 Open
House in Cape Vincent and we were both underwhelmed.
BP showcased their latest 124-turbine layout, the same map that
was on display at their October 23 meeting. Nothing was new in
spite of the widespread criticism from the Towns of Cape Vincent
and Lyme municipal officials.


We asked questions about what model turbine BP used in the
latest layout and we were told they had not yet decided.
We asked questions about wind turbine noise limits and we were
told they were not sure because they did not know which turbine
model will be used.


We asked questions when would the Article 10 Siting Board's
representatives come to Cape Vincent and at what time would they
begin to hear testimony. We were told they didn't know and that
these were good questions.

We asked why BP's projected economic impacts used a hypothetical
financial model that was not intended to be used for any other
wind project other than for Galloo Island. We were told the
Galloo Island PILOT was used because it was approved by
Jefferson County.

BP's presentation included Town Supervisor Joseph Kushner, who
discussed economic impacts from the wind project in the Town of
Eagle, NY. BP's poster stated that the Town of Cape Vincent
would receive 15% of the PILOT payment; yet Kushner noted that
his town gets 88% of the pie. On a benefit per MW basis
Kushner and the Town of Eagle are receiving nearly 6 times the
money that BP plans for Cape Vincent. Kushner's experience was
not a good example of what BP was offering Cape Vincent.

 
In summary, this open house never should have happened. The two
big pieces of information, the project layout and economic
impacts, were guesses and were not good examples for Cape
Vincent.


The Department of Public Service needs to revamp the Public
Involvement Program that is required under Article 10. There is
no sense having an Open House and disguised public outreach if
an applicant has nothing to say or offer other than
possibilities.

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Agreed,- this open house should never have happened, especially on town property!!

The PSC should not revamp their PIP process, they should cancel it. It is an insult and an affront to every citizen of every NY community.