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“Safe for Somerset” wants delay on approval of proposed wind turbine project
Credit: "Safe for Somerset" Wants Commissioners to Deny Approval of Proposed Wind Turbine Project | By Brittany Cooper | WBOC-TV 16 | January 28, 2015 | www.wboc.com ~~
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Translate: FROM English | TO English
PRINCESS ANNE, Md.- It is the project that keeps going ’round. Texas-based company Pioneer Green is looking to bring more than 25 turbines between 400 and 700 feet tall to the Somerset County area. The height isn’t the only concern for “Safe for Somerset,” a group of people who want county commissioners to delay plans for the wind project.
The local group wants the delay because of health and safety concerns, threats to national security and new evidence of what they claim are possible ethics violations by elected officials considering approval of the project.
Harvey Kagan is a licensed professional engineer who owns property close to where the turbines would go. His concerns about the project go beyond just noise or the effect on property values.
“Catastrophic failures, concerns we have with family and business relationships between lease holders and the impact, the environmental and cultural impact, and also the economics of the project,” said Kagan.
Wednesday’s presentation showed medical research linking wind turbines to sleeplessness, unsteadiness, headaches and nausea.
Paul Harris, the development manager for Pioneer Green’s Somerset County project, says the numbers do the talking. He pointed to more than 20 peer-reviewed scientific studies that dispel health concerns related to turbines and other studies that suggest turbines have no impact on property values.
Still, some homeowners don’t want to see turbines in their back yard.
“We’ve had a petition we’ve been circulating, we have, I don’t know how many exactly but several hundred maybe two, three, four hundred people or more,” said Kagan.
The people of Somerset County have been very vocal, but County Comissioners decline to comment on the issue at this time.
Harris says the additional investment would prevent the county from having to raise property taxes. A study by the University of Baltimore states if passed, the turbine project will bring $44.4 million dollars to the county over its course.
Some property owners believe Somerset County is not the spot.
“I would like to see the commissioners vote to eliminate this project and in the future not entertain any undesirable business or industry at all,” said Ron Declement, member of Safe for Somerset.
One property owner says he is in support of the project because he will receive $5,000 if wind turbines are placed near his home in Westover. As of right now, the county wind ordinance is in limbo, due to information brought up at a past meeting.
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