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Plan to put wind farm in Upper Peninsula forest gets community pushback 

Credit:  Kaye LaFond | Interlochen Public Radio | www.interlochenpublicradio.org ~~

Most wind energy projects in Michigan are on farmland in the southern part of the state. They are often controversial even there, but one company wants to put a wind farm in an Upper Peninsula forest. Many community members don’t feel that’s the right place either.

The top of Michigan

At 1,979 feet, Mt. Arvon is the highest point in Michigan. It’s in L’Anse Township in the Upper Peninsula – a 4 hour drive west of the Mackinac Bridge. To get to the top in March, you have to take a snowmobile ride that’s just long enough to chill you to the bone.

It’s quiet at the summit, with a view of Lake Superior. There’s a guest log for visitors to sign. Burt Mason looks around proudly, beaming.

“It’s not what we’d call a giant mountain, but it is special to us,” he says.

Mills specializes in community reactions to wind farms, and says that while they can be a big economic opportunity for cash-strapped local governments, some places will view them as a burden.

“Let’s try to go to the places that don’t see it as a burden first,” she says. “The challenge is it’s really hard to find those communities where everybody’s on board.”

Mills agrees that it raises big questions about which communities should carry the load (if that’s how they see it) to solve the problem of climate change.

“Most of the time, the footprint of the communities where we’re asking to host a wind farm, one or two wind turbines would be enough to satisfy the energy needs in that particular place,” she says. “And we’re usually asking them to host 25 or 50.”

Protecting treaty rights and bats

The project site also happens to be right next to the L’Anse Indian Reservation, home of the Keweenaw Bay Indian Community.

Tribal Council President Chris Swartz is concerned about turbines on land where the tribe retains treaty rights, and where many tribal citizens actively harvest.

“It certainly has the potential to limit the ability of my people to hunt, fish and gather,” he says.

The tribe’s natural resources department researched the possible environmental impacts, and found that the proposed wind farm will not follow some guidelines published by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Perhaps most worrisome to them is that the wind farm proposal is close to bat hibernacula – places where bats hibernate.

The tribe does yearly bat surveys, and their data show bat populations in the area are already suffering, likely from from white-nose syndrome. The fungal disease is one of two leading mass-killers of bats globally. The other is collisions with wind turbines.

Renewable Energy Systems’ website says they do plan to adjust operation of the turbines during the fall bat migration season, in accordance with voluntary industry guidelines which claim to reduce bat deaths by about 30%.

The tribe is also concerned about erosion from road construction and habitat fragmentation.

Chris Swartz emphasizes that they are not opposed to renewable energy. But, the tribal council has passed a formal resolution opposing this particular project.

“I informed my council about it, and they said ‘you know what Chris, it sounds like these aren’t right for our area,” he says.

Let the people decide

When RES first proposed the project, L’Anse Township realized that it had conflicting zoning ordinances on the books. One said wind turbines were allowed, and another said they weren’t.

The township dealt with this by changing the ordinances to allow wind turbines, knowing a zoning change could lead to a referendum.

Friends of the Huron Mountains, the nonprofit opposed to the project, went door to door, and collected enough signatures to force a vote. Now, all residents of L’Anse Township will have the chance to weigh in.

Burt Mason says most people he’s talked to in the area are opposed to the wind farm.

“We’re going to have the referendum, that allows the public to say yay or nay to these zoning changes that have occurred. Either way, the people have spoken at that point,” Mason says.

The referendum is scheduled for May 7, 2019. Mason says he will accept the voting result, whatever it is, and hopes that the local government will, too.

Source:  Kaye LaFond | Interlochen Public Radio | www.interlochenpublicradio.org

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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