Turbines divide neighbors

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Kristen and Mike Thorsen make desert with their family at Mike's parent's home in Waterman on Friday. Mike's parents want a wind turbine installed on their land. (Beck Diefenbach/Shaw News Service)
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Ben and Michele Anderson invite 350 of their closest friends and neighbors to their 40-acre farm in Waterman every July for a pig roast.

This year, however, the guest list must be carefully drawn up.

Because this year, wind turbines – even if none are visible – will get in the way.

An energy company’s proposal to erect a wind farm on the DeKalb-Lee county border has pitted friends and neighbors – some who have been friends for decades – against each other.

“We already know now we’re not going to able to invite a couple of the neighbors with the others because they are so at each other,” said Ben Anderson, who has lived on the farm his entire life and now shares the upstairs level of his parents’ home with his wife, Michele, and 16-year-old daughter, Lauren.

Florida-based NextEra Energy Resources wants to build 133 turbines in Afton, Clinton, Milan and Shabbona townships, and 18 in neighboring Lee County. None would be built closer than 1,400 feet to homes.

NextEra said the farm would generate 226.5 megawatts for the electricity grid, enough to power 55,000 homes and help Illinois meet its renewable-energy goal of generating 25 percent of electricity from renewable resources by 2025.

The application for a special use permit to build the turbines on land zoned for agriculture was submitted to the county in January. Since then large crowds have attended public hearings to voice their opinions – both for and against – the proposal.

A public hearing in February was canceled because there wasn’t enough space at the chosen venue to house the 400 people who showed up. A rescheduled hearing March 21 drew more than 700 people to the Sycamore High School gym and adjourned after nearly 19 hours.

When NextEra submitted new information to its application – including concessions made after a hearing officer recommended the county board deny the request – the board’s planning and zoning committee sent the proposal back to a public hearing.

“It’s all we’ve been thinking about,” said Anderson, who is against the proposal.

“What really hurts the most is you have generations of neighbors that have become friends through great-grandparents,” he said. “Now those friendships are scarred forever because some are getting the windmills and some aren’t.”

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