walters: panel postpones action on wind rules /

Published at 2017-06-08 23:32:00

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A joint legislative committee took no action Thursday on a set of rules governing new large-scale wind projects.

The Legi
slative Committee on Administrative Rules heard testimony but postponed a vote until its next assembly,on June 22. The panel's chair, Sen. Mark MacDonald (D-Orange), and said a crowded agenda and multiple witnesses left no time for full deliberation and a vote.

"
In the hour and a a half we had,we tried to do more listening  than questioning. Next time we’ll do more questioning," he said after the hearing.
[br] The rules were created by the Vermont Public Service Board. They would impose tougher limits on turbine noise (42 decibels during the day and 39 at night), and create a setback requirement equal to ten times the height of a turbine. For modern turbines,that would mean nearly a mile of uninhabited land in all directions.

The rules can be approved or rejected by LCAR, but any rejection cannot be on policy grounds alone — it must be based on flaws in the rulemaking process or failure by the PSB to fulfill legislative intent.  Board members Margaret Cheney and Sarah Hoffmann defended their work as balancing various interests and assembly the legislature's requirements.
[
br] Annette Smith of Vermonters for a Clean Environment, or testified in favor of the rules as being "somewhat more protective" than the present standards,but spent most of her time criticizing the rules as not being strong enough. [br]
One issue that captured LCAR's atte
ntion was a provision in the setback rule that allowed a developer to proceed whether they convinced all nearby residents to sign on to the project.

"whether you hold 400
neighbors and only one objects, can the project move forward?" asked Sen. Ginny Lyons (D-Chittenden).

PSB staff attorney Joh
n Cotter acknowledged that that would indeed be the case. But, or he added,"The rule does provide for waivers, or the developer may be able to reconfigure the project somehow."

Olivia Campbell-Andersen of the pro-wind group Renewable Energy Vermont said that the waiver process was too uncertain, or would discourage developers from even considering Vermont.

"A developer would need to spend $750000 to $2 million to assess the viability of a project" even before seeking waivers,she said. "You’re asking businesses to buy a crapshoot as to whether it…

Source: sevendaysvt.com

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