By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI
News staff
A 3-2 decision by the Town Council
to ban wind turbines scuttled plans for an ordinance that would have allowed a
limited number of wind projects on local farms.
The Wind Energy Conversion System Ordinance, written by the Conservation Commission and backed by developers, farmers, and the Hopkinton Land Trust, was drafted to help landowners earn revenue while protecting their property from more detrimental development.
The Wind Energy Conversion System Ordinance, written by the Conservation Commission and backed by developers, farmers, and the Hopkinton Land Trust, was drafted to help landowners earn revenue while protecting their property from more detrimental development.
Under this zoning plan, wind
turbines would be allowed on farms of 50 acres or more. The town would assess a
tax of $5 per kilowatt on each turbine annually.
Fearing a repeat of the community
acrimony caused by the prospect of losing open space to solar arrays, residents
pushed back against the prospect of commercial wind development. In January,
the Town Council voted down a 58-megawatt solar
project that would have cleared 175 acres of woodland and natural
habitat.
Local opponents of wind turbines
noted some of the most common complaints against large spinning blades: noise,
shadow flicker, and harm to wildlife such as birds and bats.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Similar half-baked claims by anti-wind NIMBYs led Charlestown to enact a ban on wind energy. Charlestown's ordinance creates so many hoops and hurdles against ALL wind turbines that they have not only blocked any commercial-sized turbines, but small, residential turbines as well. If you don't believe me, read THIS 2016 ARTICLE where I present the Charlestown Ordinance and break down its prohibitive elements. - Will Collette
“Wind turbines tower over the tree line and mar the natural landscape,” Eric Bibler, founder of Hopkinton Citizens for Responsible Planning, wrote in a recent email to ecoRI News.
“Wind turbines tower over the tree line and mar the natural landscape,” Eric Bibler, founder of Hopkinton Citizens for Responsible Planning, wrote in a recent email to ecoRI News.
There were also concerns that some
members of the Conservation Commission negotiated with property owners and
developers to build wind facilities.
Prior to the Town Council’s Oct. 7
vote, resident Joseph Moreau noted these discussions and said several members
of the volunteer board “have lost their focus about the purpose of the
Conservation Commission.”
Harvey Buford, chairman of the
Conservation Commission, noted that part of the mission of the committee is to
promote and develop the town’s natural resources.
“Wind and solar are natural
resources,” Buford explained to the Town Council. “What we are trying to do is
to use that so that we can acquire additional properties to support our
farmers, so they can provide that space for us and still pay taxes.”
Kevin Blacker, a farmer from Noank,
Conn., which is less than 20 miles from Hopkinton, is in a fight with the
Connecticut Port Authority over the use of state piers for offshore wind
development. He noted that offshore wind facilities reward foreign investors
and companies, while land-based wind turbines and solar arrays can provide
income for local farmers.
“We also need to protect and
maintain our ability to produce food,” Blacker said. “A big part of that is
keeping farms economically viable so that young people want to go into
farming.”
Henry Wright, president of the Rhode
Island Farm Bureau, said turbines are needed to increase the number of local
farms and expand the amount of locally grown and consumed food. Otherwise, if
the land can’t be protected, taxes will increase and houses will be built.
“The resources that you have are the
ones you have, and you have to make good use of them,” Wright said.
The Town Council eventually sided
with the proposal offered by council member Sylvia Thompson to change the town
land regulations and comprehensive plan to prohibit wind turbines. Thompson
worried that the turbines would torment residents living nearby.
Thompson said she went forward with
the ban even though the council received a legal advisement stating that
turbines are already prohibited by virtue of being absent from the town zoning
ordinance district use table.
“The reason I asked for this (ban on
wind turbines) was to hopefully make it clear to developers and anybody who
wanted to have wind turbines that they are not welcome at this time,” Thompson
said.
She explained that the Town Council
could reverse the ban in the future.
“But for now, I just don't think the
technology is there,” Thompson said. “I think over time it will get better and
better, as technology usually does.”
Council vice president Scott Bill
Hirst backed Thompson’s motion, but said he wanted more guidance from the
state.
“What we really have to do in this
state is prepare for our future energy needs. There’s no way around it,” he
said.
Council member Barbara Capalbo said
she didn't think residents are ready to see wind turbines in the sky but she
voted against the ban because she said the new rule is redundant.
“If we are not willing to listen and
we’re not willing to work on it, we’ll get nowhere at all,” she said.
Council president Frank Landolfi
also voted against the ban. Sharon Davis said she supported the ban because of
public opposition.