At the Special meeting at Recreation Park, Tuesday evening Planning Board Member Bob Brown addressed Richard Chandler, BP project developer.
Bob Brown:
Mr. Chandler, thank you for coming tonight and giving us the little bit of
information that you did .I assume you're here to answer some questions should we
pose them.
I would like to explain a
little bit about what we have done in the past year with our zoning laws. Your
advertisement, you say you've published. I've seen one of them that
advertisement says Cape Vincent wind farm to achieve a win-win for the
community and local economy .The only way we see a win-win is if you pay some
significant attention to our new zoning law.
In January,
the town board appointed a group of citizens from all over the town and charged
us with looking at the existing zoning law. Obviously part of that was to
address wind energy conversion systems. Four
attempts have been made in the past six years to write a wind addendum to the
zoning law, each of these attempts ended in dismal failure because of the
attitude of conflicted interests. These attempts were carried out in a very
controlled fashion; public input was not sought let alone encouraged, by the
zoning law committee. Under the guidance
of Mr. Curtin established two irrevocable principles.
Number one, the health the safety and welfare of the entire community, everybody, was Paramount.
The second one, was all technical requirements, all technical requirements were established in concert with recognized experts in their field. These were not established based on emotion or anything else. They were based on expert technical, sound scientific knowledge and we do have the experts to back it up and we will bring them with us.
Number one, the health the safety and welfare of the entire community, everybody, was Paramount.
The second one, was all technical requirements, all technical requirements were established in concert with recognized experts in their field. These were not established based on emotion or anything else. They were based on expert technical, sound scientific knowledge and we do have the experts to back it up and we will bring them with us.
The zoning
rewrite committee set up an operating method that encouraged public input, the
well-publicized meetings wherein the paper, initially, they were then talked
about at the town board meetings. The town knew we were having the meetings and
everybody was invited to come.
From January 17, to June 4, we met twice a
week, two and half hours each time. The public was invited, the public was
encouraged. During this entire time neither BP nor any of the identified
leaseholders attended these meetings and contributed in any way toward the
coverage of wind energy conversion systems.
We set up a formalized method where people
could write a comment or suggestion and we had them in a notebook, we still
have them.
There were no comments from anybody, on setbacks, anything related
to turbines, setbacks noise vibration anything. Apparently, BP
had gotten together leaseholders and said stay away from the process. To further
encourage public participation the committee insisted on having a public
comment session, before we submitted the draft to the town board and the public
hearing. Again, we received no wind related comments from BP, or their
leaseholders.
Yes, we did receive a letter from you Mr. Chandler, dated June 27,
and I'm going to try to quote the end of that letter. For parties interested in
submitting applications to site wind energy projects in the town of Cape
Vincent, the provisions contained in the proposed zoning law are unreasonably
burdensome, in view of existing wind generating technologies and/ or the need
of costs to ratepayers. We respectfully request the town reconsider the
proposed zoning law, taking into account the above comments.
Mr. Chandler, we
appreciate your effort but you told us nothing. You did not make one suggestion
on how you thought we could improve the law and make it more amenable to your
needs. Again, we had the formal public hearing when the town was looking to
pass a law on WECS wind energy conversion systems. Some of the leaseholders made
comments on other sections but nothing having to do with wind. The result of
these months of effort was a zoning law that contains many sections with
requirements for industrial concerns that were similar to the types of requirements
that were there for WECS.
The law treats all of those concerns equally,
independent of specific commercial business. So, if there is a sound
requirement for turbines it's the same sound requirement as it is for a Quarry. We did not separate out wind turbines. Mr. Chandler, I was the chair of the
zoning law a rewrite committee, we spent a good deal of effort revising our
law. Our law very much reflects what our comprehensive plan says. The work
resulted in a comprehensive zoning law that protects the health safety and
welfare of the community. It is a just law, it does not discriminate against
anyone entity, and this law is not up for grabs.
Unless
it can be demonstrated that a request fully complies with the health safety and
welfare of our community, the request will not be considered. We believe this
law is defensible under any review .
A couple of quick questions if I may please.
BP
apparently decided they were not going to participate or their leaseholders
participate in the law. And yet, in your PIP, in the last section you say that
you want to talk to the towns and then decide what local laws and ordinances
the siting board should not apply.
It's illogical to expect the siting board to
vacate a law that you and/or your leaseholders were offered the opportunity to
participate in but declined to do so .Can you explain the logic of that Please? How can you ask the siting board to vacate
the Cape Vincent zoning law when you were given numerous opportunities to
participate in the development of it?
Chandler: we
are proposing a project that we believe the community supports, that can't
happen, unless we have a community that supports it. We can't build a project
on land that we don't control. We have an incredible amount of support from the
community that is why we are here, that is why we are moving
forward with this project.
We have continued to engage with the community and
the board over the past several years including this year, including over the
summer months, time that we were spending on trying to optimize the layout that
you see before you here. There was certainly uncertainty.
Planning
board Chair Richard Macsherry: who did you talk to? Just out of curiosity, from
either board.
Chandler:
the response that we provided in the June, time frame was the best information
that we had at the time to contribute to the discussion that the town was having regarding its draft zoning law. At the same
time the Article 10 process was also in the draft format. Given the regulatory
uncertainty regarding how to move forward with permitting, we were trying to give
feedback in both of those processes, while trying to work on a revised layout
of optimizing the two projects. So, only after getting a bit more clarity and
certainty on where the town was going to end up with its zoning law in August
time frame when that was passed and when the Article 10, process was passed in
the August time frame as well, that we have enough certainty on what the
options were, that we can use to take the project forward.
Bob Brown:
Sir, you haven't answered my question .My question was, you elected not to participate and your leaseholders through you, elected not to
participate in the development and writing of this
law. How can you go to the state and say the law was no good ? You were given
many opportunities to participate and we did it directly through the entire
town.
I think your proper response to Mr. Macsherry was that you worked with 4 or
5% of the town and assumed that they were going officially notify our board. Nobody
did.
Chandler: We, again we submitted a response in the June
time frame.
Bob Brown:
I read that last paragraph in that response sir, and it said nothing as far as
being helpful to the writing of the law.
Chandler: we
submitted a response in the time frame, to notify the board that we had seen
the draft zoning law and we asked the town to reconsider because as drafted at
that time, as currently drafted, we do believe that the requirements are unduly
unreasonable, with respect to wind turbines
Bob Brown:
what requirements?
Chandler:
I'm not prepared to comment the specifics of that. This forum is the opportunity to...
Attorney Curtin:
I think Mr. Chandler has answered the questions to the best of his current
ability, given the facts that he may have been provided by other parties. This
is not, certainly not, an inquest or deposition, but that having been said and you’ve
got additional questions please ask them.
Bob Brown: I
won't take up any more time. Thank you Mr. Chandler.
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