From the Thousand Islands Sun
October 31, 2012
Boards Voice Unified Message: Respect Our Zoning Laws
By Pam McDowell, Staff Writer
Cape Vincent – An effort by British
Petroleum to have meaningful communications with the towns of Cape Vincent and
Lyme about its proposed wind project fell flat Oct. 23 when many of the
questions posed by town board members were answered with vague, general
statements.
Virtually all members of both of the
towns’ boards and planning boards relayed to Cape Vincent Wind Farm’s project
developer, Richard Chandler, that they want assurance that BP will respect
local zoning laws. Instead they received the response that the wind company has
opted to apply for the wind project through New York State under Article 10,
rather than through local planning board review.
Mr. Chandler stated more than once that
the company will seek approval from the state because it is a “one-stop-shop”
for permits.
The criticism of applying through the
state is that the siting board can give the green light for industrial energy
companies to avoid following local laws.
At the onset of the more than two-hour
meeting, which was moderated by Attorney Paul J. Curtin, Mr. Chandler said he
is putting the towns “on notice” that he will request information needed for
the state application.
The information established during the
meeting was that the company plans to build 124 turbines each not more than 499
feet high, with transmission lines running through the town of Lyme. BP has not
selected the style or size wind turbines. Mr. Chandler said they are waiting to
find what type is most “optimal” at the time the application is approved and
that, as a result of public opinion, BP has moved the turbine array further
inland from the St. Lawrence River than originally planned.
The panel was looking for more than
technical details. The main concern of most members seemed to be why BP claims
to be involved and communicative with Cape Vincent when they say, BP has not
been, and whether the global company will respect the comprehensive plan and
adhere to the zoning laws of small towns.
A map with proposed wind turbine sites
was displayed by BP and several board members pointed out that the plan does
not comply with local laws.
“We are completely committed to
defending our zoning law, which is based on scientific fact,” Cape Vincent Town
Supervisor Urban Hirschey told Mr. Chandler.
Virtually all boards represented echoed
the same intent when they had the floor.
Cape Vincent Planning Board vice
chairman Robert Brown said, “We are concerned with the health, safety and
welfare of our entire community. It was paramount in all of our decisions, and
the technical points in the law were established from expert scientific
knowledge.”
Most of the 17 board members on the
panel questioned Mr. Chandler about his claim to communicate with the towns,
with at least one member pointing out that communication only took place prior
to the two wind farm merging.
Mr. Chandler responded that he has been
engaged with the community.
Some pointed out that he was only in
contact with leaseholders rather than with the town boards or the general
public.
Cape Planning Board member Cyril Cullen
commented to Mr. Chandler, “For some strange reason you chose not to be up
front with the planning or towns boards on this. You have taken the back-door
approach and had utterly secret conversations with leaseholders and former
board members years before you applied for the project. That map is the first
definitive map of this project. You put pressure on Jefferson County Industrial
Development Corporation for a tax deal to take this town’s taxing authority
away… your comments on involving the community haven’t happened.”
Board members continued to voice their
frustration that BP had many opportunities to offer input during several
months’ time while the boards were seeking suggestions about local laws, but
representatives from BP did not attend sessions or submit suggestions.
Mr. Chandler cited BP’s recent
newspaper advertisements as just one attempt to show that the company is
working on public outreach, but meetings with the public will be scheduled.
Town Councilman John Byrne said, “You
say you want to be involved with the community but you have only had meetings
with the leaseholders… We are elected to represent the community. The magnitude
of your project is that it will encompass 90 percent of the landmass. You need
to involve the whole community. The wind law was adopted for safety and
well-being of the community, not to discourage wind, and I have every intention
of protecting that zoning law.”
Councilman Brooks Bragdon asked Mr.
Chandler whether BP has considered the aesthetics and historic preservation
resources of the town and considered that a committee worked on the town’s
zoning law for 3500 man-hours.
Mr. Chandler said that BP has “factored
it in and will talk about how to further optimize the project.” After receiving
vague answers from Mr. Chandler, Councilman Bragdon eventually commented, “I’m
asking you to please cut the bull… We’re capable of being polite while having
an adversarial relationship, and that’s probably what’s going to happen.”
In response to Mr. Chandler’s repeated
claims that he has been involved with the towns and has significant support,
Lyme Planning Board Chairman Frank Congel said, “Please refrain from saying
that you have the support of the community.”
Lyme officials were concerned about
whether the plans for transmission lines within the town would lead to future
applications for wind turbines. Mr. Chandler said the question was
hypothetical. When asked again, he said this application does not call for wind
towers.
Earlier, Supervisor Hirschey had asked
the same question repeatedly, with Mr. Chandler conceding that there may be
land leases in place in Lyme for turbines, but that is not the plan for this
project.
“Since our town law does not prohibit
transmission lines, then why are you going through Article 10?” asked Lyme
Councilman Daniel Villa. Again, Mr. Chandler’s response was that BP wants to
take advantage of a comprehensive “one-stop-shop.” Applying directly to the
state may bypass the towns’ permitting process.
Questions were posed regarding which
standards BP uses to determine its project’s scope, with Mr. Chandler
responding that they meet or exceed industry standards not necessarily “world
standards” that he was asked about.
He also said that the Oct. 23 meeting
will be followed by further attempts to interact with the community. He said
the company will soon have a website, capevincentwindfarm.com, where residents
and town officials can learn information about the project and a Saturday, Nov.
10, open house is scheduled.
He noted that intervenor funds will
become available in the future. Intervenor funds are made available to
stakeholders for research on the merits of a project.
Pro-wind supporter Gary King said he
was satisfied with the session, commenting afterward. “I was glad for our
showing, glad to see people were civil – it went well.” He also reasoned that
Mr. Chandler did not answer certain questions because he is relatively new in
the position of project manager and can’t answer what BP’s plans may be for the
future.
Wind opponent Dave LaMora said he
thought the board members stated sentiments of wanting to defend local laws is
reflective of the opinion of much of the community. “It shouldn’t be lost on
anybody that there was not one single positive comment from any board member,”
he said.
Mr. Chandler said his opinion of the
Oct. 23 session could only be relayed to the press through a public relations
liaison in his Texas office, but when pressed for an opinion statement about
the meeting, he responded, “Both towns have passed zoning laws they believe in.
The best direction is for us to go through Article 10, where we will have
robust engagement about the project.”
Nearly 300 interested parties from Cape
Vincent and surrounding towns listened intently and respectfully during the
two-hour exchange. Questions and comments were not open to the public. The
audience included many public officials, including the Cape Vincent Village
Board, Jefferson County Legislator Michael Docteur, Hammond Town Supervisor
Ronald Bertram, and Hammond residents, citizens of Clayton and a town
councilman from Cortlandville.
At the end of the meeting, Attorney
Curtin asked if the project would be adversely impacted if the federal tax
credits are not renewed in January.
Mr. Chandler responded that the
question was hypothetical. “No this is real,” Mr. Curtin shot back, after which
Mr. Chandler stated that the company will re-evaluate the project if the tax
credits expire.
Mr. Curtin thanked the BP
representative for the forum and called him an extraordinarily brave person.
In a light moment, Supervisor presented
Mr. Chandler with a small model of a wind turbine.
BP’s next step is to respond to the NYS
Power Commission Siting Board about it recent rejection of BP’s public
involvement plan. The company was given 30 days to respond after the state’s
label of “inadequate.”
5 comments:
Excellent article.
Great Reporting from the Thousand Islands Sun. More thorough and accurate than what we read in the Watertown Daily Times
When is the Watertown Daily Times going to start talking about the meaning and significance of the elephant in the parlor? The elephant is the combined goal of BP and Iberdrola and the parlor is the Thousand Islands.
We are making a dangerous mistake TI.
The towns intend to go along with the ArtX process. The WDT probably erroneously thinks like many now that this will all work out in the end because these towns have passed restrictive laws. Blah,blah blah.
There is no new news here. So whose fault is it the WDT isn't reporting. Haven't even seen a counter ad by the wind opposition to BP's 2 half page PR adds.
But imagine for a moment if the local towns unified in a resolution to opposed Art X like the county has already done? Then agreed to not send reps to Art X and not give them a place to meet in our communities. A statement saying we will deny any wind project a PILOT. Some big political ads in the paper asserting home rule against Cuomo so we can truly protect our precious 1000 Islands and Golden Crescent. Pass a community or regional bill of rights, to assert our constitutional rights over corps like BP invading our communities. Be the leaders and get other counties and communities to join us.
Geee I don't know, think THAT might make the news, maybe even in Syracuse, Buffalo, Rochester, NYC...
AND ALBANY!!! Where our message about the 1000 Islands. Otherwise nobody but a handful gives a damn about a letter to the PSC or the other Art X agencies or legislators.
You talk so many times of protecting the 1000 Islands. Well if you are serious then we need to get off our butts and start taking the serious actions to actually do that. Restrictive wind laws and going along with Art X is NOT protecting the 1000 Islands
Nor is one meeting yelling at BP.
Review the big environmental battles, most entailed aggressive action in someway that significantly challenged the system.
Here is one for you. Google Ward Valley and nuclear waste.
Take a lesson!!
Above comment by Art
Pundt
Good job Pam reporting on the meeting on Oct ,23.
Indeed as TI points out ,a much better coverage than the WDT.
Neither paper however has presented a very potent or illuminating exposure of the debacle that is ART. X.
Every community in the region ser ved by these two publications, is under the potential threat of having their lives turned upside down ,and the face of their landscape forever altered, against their will by an oppressive New York State legislature- approved energy siting process.
Neither the communities themselves nor the Fourth Estate which traditionally acts as a conduit for information that is critical to a well-informed society, has launched an all-out objection or opposition to this theft of home rule rights by Andrew Cuomo.
activism is dead in the North country. Even a well -behaved civil protest in Cape Vincent is hardly given exposure or credit, rather it is characterized as rude and unsavory.
The status quo is the game of the day. On to Art.X and lets see what awaits us.
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