If a company added turbines like these close to your home, without consulting you at all, what would your concerns be? 

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Adams County Wind Ordinance
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Quick Links:

Landowners individually named in lawsuit re: DeKalb, IL County Board Wind Ordinance, 1-9-2010

A Wisconsin farmer talks about his regrets

A medical doctor's plea
for longer setbacks, based on recent evidence,
Jan. 8, 2010

Follow up info for Quincy WGEM news quote:  Safety manual for turbine safety workers warns against 1300 feet perimeter, or being in line with revolving blades

Noise contaminated home assessed at 50% previous value

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We are not against wind energy.  Rather, this website includes important questions about the best ways to develop our Adams County Wind resources, and it reflects our obvious concern that the Adams County Wind Ordinance fails to protect the interests of all of our residents.  The public deserves a far better deal than this ordinance provides.

Thank you for considering this information; we promise to respect those who have differing opinions, and we hope for the best future for our beautiful and beloved Adams County.

 
 
 
 

Note:  The following article may seem to be an argument against wind energy altogether, but it was originally followed with a long list of legal issues to consider when signing a contract.  We have included it here because it illustrates the problem of dividing a community when an ordinance creates clear "winners" (people who get paid) and "losers" (people who involuntarily must put up with significant negative consequences of other people's business decisions).  This community division does not have to be a side effect of bringing a wind farm to an area; it could be avoided by not making a whole group of people in a many square mile area feel like some have forcibly lost their health, some their happiness, and all their voice in the process.  Longer setbacks, fair compensation for those who have genuinely lost something, and an open, participatory style of government will avoid a great deal of unhappiness, and therefore a great deal of subsequent community strife.  Here's a painful example of the strife a poor wind ordinance can cause... 

 

 

Wisconsin Farmer Has Regrets about Signing Wind Farm Contract.

Why Can’t He Speak Openly About It?

 When you sign a 20 to 30 year contract to host a wind turbine on your land, you may be signing away many rights you're unaware of. A confidentiality agreement in the contract may mean legal action can be taken against you if you complain publicly about the project.

A Fond Du Lac area farmer signed away his rights. He was interviewed by Don Bangart who wrote the following on behalf of the farmer whose name is withheld because his contract with the wind farm company prevents him from speaking openly about any problems.

WHAT HAVE I DONE?

 Now each morning when I awake, I pray and then ask myself, “What have I done?”

 I am involved with the Blue Sky/Greenfield wind turbine project in N.E. Fond du Lac County. I am also a successful farmer who cherishes his land. My father taught me how to farm, to be a steward of my fields, and by doing so, produce far better crop production. As I view this year’s crops, my eyes feast on a most bountiful supply of corn and soybeans. And then my eyes focus again on the trenches and road scars leading to the turbine foundations. What have I done?

 In 2003, the wind energy company made their first contacts with us. A $2,000 “incentive” started the process of winning us over, a few of us at a time. The city salesmen would throw out their nets, like fishermen trawling for fish. Their incentive “gift” first lured some of us in. Then the salesmen would leave and let us talk with other farmers. When the corporate salesmen returned, there would be more of us ready to sign up; farmers had heard about the money to be made. Perhaps because we were successful farmers, we were the leaders and their best salesmen.

Sometime in 2004 or 2005, we signed $4,000 turbine contracts allowing them to “lease” our land for their needs. Our leases favored the company, but what did we know back then? Nobody knew what we were doing. Nobody realized all the changes that would occur, over which we would have no control. How often my friends and I have made that statement:

WHAT HAVE I DONE?

I watched stakes being driven in the fields and men using GPS monitors to place markers here and there. When the cats and graders started tearing 22-footwide roads into my fields, the physical changes started to impact not only me and my family, but, unfortunately, also my dear friends and neighbors.

Later, a 4-foot-deep by 2-footwide trench was started diagonally across my field. A field already divided by their road was now being divided again by the cables running to a substation. It was now making one large field into 4 smaller irregularly shaped plots.

Other turbine hosts also complained about their fields being subdivided or multiple cable trenches requiring more of their land. Roads were cut in using anywhere from 1,000 feet to over half a mile of land to connect the locations.

We soon realized that the company places roads and trenches where they will benefit the company most, not the landowner. One neighbor’s access road is right next to some of his out buildings. Another’s is right next to his fence line.

At a wind company dinner presented for the farmers hosting the turbines, we were repeatedly told — nicely and indirectly — to stay away from the company work sites once they start.  I watched as my friends faces showed the same concern I had, but none of us spoke out. Months later, when I approached a crew putting in lines where they promised me they definitely would not go, a representative told me I could not be there. He insisted that I leave. The line went in. The company had the right. I had signed the lease.

Grumbling started almost immediately after we agreed to 2% yearly increases on our 30-year lease contracts. Some felt we should have held out for 10%. What farmer would lock in the price of corn over the next 5 years, yet alone lock one in at 2% yearly for 30 years?  Then rumors emerged that other farmers had received higher yearly rates, so now contracts varied.

The fast-talking city sales folk had successfully delivered their plan. Without regard for our land, we were allowing them to come in and spoil it. All of the rocks we labored so hard to pick in our youth were replaced in a few hours by miles of roads packed hard with 10 inches of large breaker rock. Costly tiling that we installed to improve drainage had now been cut into pieces by company trenching machines.

Each night, a security team rides down our roads checking the foundation sites. They are checking for vandals and thieves. Once, when I had ventured with guests to show them foundation work, security stopped us and asked me, standing on my own property, what I was doing there. What have I done?

Now, at social functions, we can clearly see the huge division this has created among community members. Suddenly, there are strong-sided discussions and heated words between friends and, yes, between relatives about wind turbines. Perhaps this is a greater consequence than the harm caused to my land — life is short, and friendships are precious.

I tried, as did some of the other farmers, to get out of our contracts, but we had signed a binding contract. If you are considering placing wind turbines on your property, I strongly recommend that you please reconsider.  

Study the issues. Think of all the harm to your land, and, in the future, to your children’s land, versus the benefits from allowing companies to lease your land for turbines.

Please do not do what I have done.

(This was originally printed as a full page informational ad in the Chilton, WI Times-Journal, on October 25, 2007. The BPRC is grateful for kind permission to re-print it for our community.  It has since been reprinted, with permission, from www.betterplan.squarespace.com )