spokesman<\/em> of Save Our Seashore, as a CT resident, has any business weighing in on these matters.<\/p>\nThe favorite tactic of the American Wind Energy Association is to provide “educational information” on noise, environmental hazards, adverse impacts to health impacts and property, under the banner headline: “Fact vs. Fiction.” They then proceed to state that all of the claims of adverse impacts (amply supported by a wealth of scientific data) are “fiction” and that their assertions of the benefits — and complete lack of adverse impacts — from wind turbines are the “facts.” They drag out the same, old, tired and widely discredited studies — all two of them (one of them funded by AWEA and the other by the Department of Energy) to make their case — and to dismiss everything else as hearsay.<\/p>\n
If you then visit the websites of Liz Argo’s “Cape and Islands Wind (Dis)Information Network”; of New Generation Wind, LLC, the paper corporation behind the Bourne project; of CVEC; or of any other wind energy proponent, you will find them to be near carbon copies of the AWEA propaganda.<\/p>\n
The proponents tell you that we’re rude; uncivil; shrill; a vocal minority of “mostly out of towners” — and you buy it, hook, line and sinker. You skip the research and blithely insert this into your stories. When you reduce this from one of the most consequential issues in the history of the Cape — whether it will submit to a permanent transformation of its rural and historic character through industrialization by wind energy — an engineering idea that doesn’t even work — into a spat between the natives and a handful of busybodies from out of state.<\/p>\n
Do you consider the 340,000 members of the NPCA; the scientists of the NPS Natural Sounds Program; the Federal Advisory Commission on Wind Turbine Guidelines empaneled by the Secretary of the Interior; and the hundreds, if not thousands, of individuals, reporters, scientists, engineers, acoustic experts, doctors and others who have explored this topic, and written extensively about it — not to mention the hapless victims like residents in Falmouth who have extended themselves to appear at hearings in other towns to help others avoid the same fate — all part of the “vocal minority” of critics that are so airily dismissed by the proponents?<\/p>\n
In your list of reasons why the Wellfleet selectmen ultimately abandoned the Wellfleet wind turbine project, you might have remembered that a number of them ALSO said — as your newspaper reported at the time — that they decided that it was “inappropriate” to put wind turbines in a national park. Doesn’t that strike you as somewhat telling — that the developer of the project backed away, in part, because “we just can’t do that to the park” — even as the Superintendent continues to tout the concept? Do you not find that stark irony worthy of reporting?<\/p>\n
And you might have mentioned — as we repeatedly pointed out — that the two industrial wind turbines that George Price had his heart set on erecting were in the MAIN BEAM of the radar! The FAA did not merely deny their permit; in fact, they notified CCNS — not once, but twice — that the “maximum permissible height” for a wind turbine at this location was “zero feet”! Mr. Price, in his letter to the CCNS Advisory Commission, pouts that the FAA hewed to “the party line” and that it appears that they did not even consider the fanciful idea of addressing this issue through “computer modeling,” as his consultant suggested. Instead, you report McKean’s disappointment that the FAA didn’t work with them to consider “a smaller wind turbine.” What did she have in mind, given the requirement of a “maximum permissible height” of “zero feet” to avoid interfering with the radar?<\/p>\n
If you had ever bothered to interview us on this topic (or any other, for that matter), we would have also told you that the consultant’s study expressly declined to measure the microwave radiation from the radar above the one story roof line of the nearby buildings — and for good reason, too. The radiation from the radar (which spreads upward and outward from the base) at the wind turbine site, in such close proximity to the installation, would be so intense as to preclude building the damn thing! OSHA regulations do not allow workers to be exposed to such intense radiation because it can cause detached retinas and blindness. So, just how were they going to build it, service it, change the oil, and so forth? And, in addition to the towers themselves, how do you think that the FAA was going to feel about the periodic use of a crane to service these wind energy installations? No wonder they were scratching their heads at the FAA wondering “What part of ‘NO’ doesn’t Mr. Price understand?”<\/p>\n
To this date, I am not sure which aspect of this whole, sordid episode is more indicative of Mr. Price’s relentless drive to install industrial wind energy into the National Seashore:<\/p>\n
a) his tortured argument that when a town installs wind energy, it is not “commercial because it is “municipal” and that it is not “industrial because it is a “utility”;<\/p>\n
b) his willingness to shrug off the concerns of the NPCA — founded a few years after the NPS and their best friend in the world;<\/p>\n
c) his denial of his responsibilities under his Congressional mandate, and under Director’s Order #47, and his relucttance to engage the NPS Natural Sounds Program in studying the situation — whose express mandate is to perform such evaluations — which he did only at our insistence;<\/p>\n
d) his willful denial of the Wind Turbine Guidelines of the Federal Advisory Committee; or<\/p>\n
e) his intransigent refusal to face facts and admit that it is unacceptable to compromise a major radar installation — critical to both domestic aviation and national defense — so that he could achieve his dream of displaying bold “leadership” within the ranks of the National Park Service and be the first to get his merit badge for ushering industrial wind energy into a national park.<\/p>\n
But one thing that I am sure of: you have reported none of these issues in any substantive way.<\/p>\n
Shame on you.<\/p>\n
These are all consequential issues, not just for the National Seashore, but for the entire Cape, the State of Massachusetts and the world beyond.<\/p>\n
I hope that you will endeavor to do a better job in the future and to make more of an effort to ask the fundamental questions, as the outgoing Attorney General, now Senator, from the State of Connecticut recently did before arriving at the obvious conclusion that wind energy is “fundamentally incompatible” with the legitimate societal goals of high standards of health, safety and quality of life in residential development; historic preservation; and conservation.<\/p>\n
If we admit the legitimacy of these societal goals — even if we sidestep the entire question of whether the damn things work on an engineering basis and grant Mr. Price his mantra (not if, but where) — then the fundamental question on Cape Cod is where on earth could we put them so that they will not compromise our other objectives?<\/p>\n
The answer is nowhere.<\/p>\n
The population density of Cape Cod is such that there is literally no place we can put industrial wind turbines such that they will not impose dramatic hardship on residents. The fact of the matter is that we can’t get them far enough away from homes — which is why the Cape Cod Commission, bowing to pressure from developers, recently attempted to gut their “Minimum Performance Standards” and eliminate the proposed 3000 foot setback because “otherwise it will be impossible to build any industrial wind turbines on Cape Cod.” Read the August 19th minutes of the CCC — please. If you don’t smell a rat here, something is wrong with you.<\/p>\n
Now you see why they targeted the back shore of Wellfleet and the various legacy parcels of town-owned land in Wellfleet and in other towns that lie within the Seashore, or closely abutting CCCNS — with the enthusiastic cooperation of a rogue superintendent: to try to get away from the clustered residential developments on the bay side (where the wind is actually better).<\/p>\n
Vast portions of the Cape — 61% of Wellfleet — are already dedicated to conservation and to preservation in their original state (or a state as close as possible to this). Assuming that the NPCA, the Federal Advisory Committee on Wind Turbine Guidelines and the NPS Natural Sounds scientists are correct — and that Mr. Price is fundamentally wrong — this is no place to put industrial wind turbines.<\/p>\n
From a larger perspective, if the Cape Cod Commission were not so pliant — and so willing to abdicate their fundamental responsibility to the residents of Cape Cod and Massachusetts, as set forth in their charter and in all of their Design Guidelines — to regulate the commercial and industrial development on Cape Cod in such a manner as to preserve the rural and historic character, and the “unique charm and scenic beauty of the Cape” — the entire Cape would instantly be ruled off limits to such industrialization.<\/p>\n
For who can argue that such colossal and obtrusive 400-500 foot industrial machines — emitting over 100 dB of highly disruptive, repetitive noise at their hubs and with blades spinning over 150 mph — are not “out-of-scale” and “out-of-character” on the Cape? Instead, the Commission has engineered a series of “carve outs” exempting industrial wind turbines from such consideration. And when this wasn’t enough, even more reprehensibly, they also attempted to eliminate ALL meaningful health and safety protections for residents by reducing setbacks to an absurd minimum and by requiring nothing more than a sham acoustic study and some vague language concerning adverse health impacts as a “minimum” requirement for developers to obtain permits.<\/p>\n
Under the circumstances, we did not place any confidence in the assurances of Executive Director, Paul Niedzwiecki, that the best course of action was to give him a blank check and allow his agency to “fill in the blanks later.” Nor did the Barnstable Assembly of Delegates, for that matter.<\/p>\n
Did you?<\/p>\n
And finally, as you know (because we asked you to review their minutes from last May and in succeeding months), a substantial portion of Cape Cod is subject to explicit protection by the Old Kings Highway Historic Commission in furtherance of the legitimate goal of historic preservation of the Cape.<\/p>\n
But when the OKH tried to assert its mandate and fulfill its duty, as citizens had a right to expect — in stark contrast to the Mr. Niedzwiecki of the Cape Cod Commission and Mr. Price of the CCNS, who abdicated those responsibilities — by denying permits to a few projects, the Board of Directors of the Cape and Vineyards Electric Cooperative was incensed. How dare anyone to insist that 400 foot wind turbines adhere to the same strictures as other commercial developments a mere fraction of their size!<\/p>\n
The proponents of the project at the Cape Cod Community College sued the OKH Historic Commission and were joined as plaintiffs in their lawsuit by none other than the State of Massachusetts. Not only did they lose, the judge in the case ruled that the plaintiff’s chief complaint — that the OKH Historic Commission refused to consider the “energy benefits” of the proposal — was totally “without merit.”<\/p>\n
So what was CVEC’s response? They are now actively pursuing “Special Legislation” on Beacon Hill, working through the Speaker of the House, to exempt wind turbines from consideration by the OKH Historic Commission to evaluate their impact on the historic character of the Cape. For, as the Chairman of the CVEC was recently quoted as saying, if the OKH Historic Commission insists on preserving the integrity of the Cape’s historic character, there is a whole lot of real estate the CVEC will never be able to get its hand on!<\/p>\n
Do you see a pattern here? Rather than admitting that industrial wind energy is “incompatible” with residential development, historic preservation and conservation, the wind energy proponents are systematically attempting to prostate ALL of these goals to the goal of installing huge wind turbines on Cape Cod. When such considerations get in the way — setbacks from houses; historic districts; dedicated conservation areas — the proponents seek to change the rules, change the laws and neuter the authority of any opposing agencies or to pervert, or “redefine” their mandates (as with CCNS and the Commission).<\/p>\n
Who are the real outlaws here?<\/p>\n
And when are you going to wake up and cover the real story that is unfolding right under your noses — instead of merely repeating the rote characterizations of the wind energy proponents, who regrettably include a large part of the political establishment, of their critics as a “shrill vocal minority”?<\/p>\n
I’ll tell you something else that may shock you. The staff of the Cape Cod National Seashore, the Cape Cod Commission, CVEC, the Energy Committees of all of the individual towns, the governor, the young, idealistic, twenty- and thirty-somethings like Carter Wall at the Mass Clean Energy Center, Liz Argo of the Cape and Islands Wind (Dis)Information Network — none of them really knows a damn thing about wind energy. They are all in high profile positions of public authority, but almost none of them has a working knowledge of the issues. Most of them are just skating along the surface of a popular issue — ardently promoted by a know-nothing governor — that has a great deal of political momentum behind it.<\/p>\n
I’m not saying that they are bad people; merely that this is a classic example of good intentions run amok that has now jelled into a dangerous “group think” complacency — and you, ladies and gentlemen of the press — are definitely part of it. In fact, in my opinion, you bear as much, or more, responsibility than they do for perpetuating this uncritical, and misguided, faith in the limitless potential of “alternative energy.” For you have no political bosses and you are not obligated to hew to the party line on these issues. Your only mandate is to be independent, to investigate the issues and to report them accurately — something that you have not done, by a long shot.<\/p>\n
If you want to meet someone who is motivated to achieve a thorough, rather than a superficial, understanding of the issues, perhaps you should make more of an effort to meet some of the NIMBY’s — for there is nothing that focuses the attention more than the prospect of having your home and your family, your quality of life, years of investment, your health and your happiness, sacrificed upon the altar of a popular, but foolish idea. These people are obsessed with trying to understand what is in store for them.<\/p>\n
It doesn’t take long for them to achieve a thorough appreciation of the fact that they will be made to suffer greatly, perhaps intolerably.<\/p>\n
But perhaps the most tragic part of this exercise is their effort to comprehend why their communities are so willing to sacrifice them, and their families, and even to ridicule and ostracize them for daring to protest. You can imagine that this bitter pill becomes all the more difficult to swallow once they understand that such projects don’t really accomplish any meaningful environmental objectives and that these efforts to “harness the wind” in reality serve only enable the operators to “harvest the subsidies” by redirecting tax dollars, and electricity user surcharges, into their own pockets.<\/p>\n
Whether we’re talking about Wellfleet, or Falmouth or Brewster, Plymouth, Wareham or Bourne, the primary motivation for all of these projects is greed (or “revenue” as the towns prefer to call it). Every time that the adverse impacts come to the fore, as in Falmouth or Vinalhaven, Maine, the operators always declare that can’t possibly curtail operations of the wind turbines to give residents some relief — because they’ll lose too much revenue. So, as in Falmouth, we witness the cruel dynamic of a town compromising the health and well-being of its own citizens for the sake of maximizing revenue to the town.<\/p>\n
I would be happy to refer you to knowledgeable experts on various aspects of wind energy, upon request, including dozens of Massachusetts residents and many others who are internationally recognized for their expertise, if you ever choose to cover this story the way it should be covered. In the meantime, I hope that you will make more of an effort to grasp, and to report, some of the more fundamental aspects of this contest over the shape of our collective futures, rather than limiting yourself to the theme of selfish NIMBY’s and outside agitators vs. the tireless “volunteers” in town government and the responsible “visionaries” — more like apparatchiks, really — like George Price and Paul Niedzwiecki.<\/p>\n
And I’d like to address one last issue. I know that there has been a rumor circulated recently that because the opposition to industrial wind energy on Cape Cod has been so intense, and increasingly organized, as opponents have discovered each other and joined together in common cause, that the opposition must be fueled by some mysterious source of “big money” sticking its nose in the politics of Cape Cod, where it doesn’t belong.<\/p>\n
Perhaps this can be viewed as a sort of backhanded compliment to the efforts of the opponents, but surely the purpose of the wind energy proponents in asserting this is, once again, to demonize their opponents.<\/p>\n
The truth is that we are all volunteers and we are all motivated by our sense of responsibility to share our knowledge to prevent other towns from compounding the errors of Falmouth, Price, Niedzwiecki, et al. More than anything, we are motivated by compassion for the victims and by our fierce desire to protect something that is precious to us — the character and the integrity of Cape Cod.<\/p>\n
Some of the other organizations have collected money to pay for some basic expenses — such as WindWise Cape Cod’s renting of the auditorium at the Cape Cod Community College to host a series of events that allowed expert speakers to address the public, free of charge. Save Our Seashore has never collected a nickel from any of its members. When something needed to be paid for — like briefing books full of information for the members of the Cape Cod Advisory Commission — individuals just quietly paid the expense, without complaint.<\/p>\n
The ones who have borne the real financial brunt of these misguided proposals have been the citizens in towns all over the Cape who have had to hire attorneys to contest these projects and who have had to hire their OWN acoustic experts and their OWN property appraisers and their OWN medical consultants to dispute the so-called “evidence” offered by the proponents.<\/p>\n
Here is another theme that you fail to report: that virtually all of the money — or at least the lion’s share of it — that pays for the fraudulent, but expensive, acoustic studies from the likes of Tech Data is paid from taxpayer funds — whether the developer is a private or a public entity — through grants provided by the Mass Clean Energy Center. No wonder every town is jumping through hoops to do the expensive preliminary investigations for a wind energy proposal — because they’re not picking up the tab.<\/p>\n
Conversely, the beleaguered residents of all of these towns are dipping into their retirement funds, liquidating their savings, skipping their insurance payments, to scratch together enough funds to pay a lawyer in a desperate attempt to fend off these asinine projects — which constitute nothing less than an existential threat to their way of life. Imagine yourselves in the shoes of some of the Falmouth residents who not only cannot sleep, work in their gardens, enjoy a moment of tranquility or hear themselves think, but who are also being bled dry by this process, even as the town turns a deaf ear and their own communities abandon them!<\/p>\n
What will it take to wake you up?<\/p>\n
We don’t ask you to blindly take our side of all of these issues. But, for God’s sake, roll up your sleeves and invest some effort in educating yourselves on the pertinent issues.<\/p>\n
Sincerely,<\/p>\n
Eric Bibler
\nPresident<\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
\u00b7 Big Wind & Media exposed in bed together on Cape Cod (and everywhere else) \u00b7 From: \u00a0Save Our Seashore,\u00a0Wellfleet, MA Date: \u00a0January 8, 2011 To: \u00a0Mary Ann Bragg, Reporter;\u00a0Paul Pronovost, Editor-in-chief;\u00a0Anne Brennan, Assistant managing editor\/digital media;\u00a0Susan Moeller, News editor;\u00a0Michael Medwar, Assistant news editor;\u00a0Gregory Bryant, Online editor Re: Reporting on the National Seashore Wind Turbine Proposal and Save Our Seashore \u00b7 Dear Ms. Bragg and Editors of Cape Cod Times, We are writing to object to your reporting on recent controversies over the installation of industrial wind turbines in the National Seashore and elsewhere on Cape Cod. As Ms. Bragg, Mr. Fraser, Mr. Cassidy, Mr. Harold, and more recently, Ms. Myers and Mr. Gonsalves can attest, we have copied the Cape Cod Times religiously on all communications to the Seashore, to the Cape Cod Commission, to the Barnstable County Assembly of Delegates, to Wellfleet and to officials in various other individual towns on Cape Cod, including Bourne and Brewster, where utility scale wind turbines have been, or are currently under consideration. Additionally, we have provided the Cape Cod Times with copies of many other items, including official letters from the Selectmen of the Town of Wellfleet to their representatives to the Massachusetts state legislature, to the Speaker of the House, the President of the Senate and to the Massachusetts Municipal Association, opposing the Wind Energy Siting Reform Act last summer. As you know, our letters to the National Seashore and various other entities included attachments of, or links to, many documents and additional information, including, but not limited to, all of the following:<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[167,16],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12289"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=12289"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/12289\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=12289"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=12289"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=12289"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}