Offer made to turbine neighbors

Project involves Lee, Whiteside, Bureau counties

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NORMANDY – A wind energy company is making an offer to neighbors of a proposed project in Bureau County – $1,000 or more a year.

Ireland-based Mainstream Renewable Power has submitted its application for 19 turbines in Greenville Township in northwestern Bureau County.

The company has yet to turn in its applications to Lee and Whiteside counties, but it’s expected to do so in the coming months.

Residents in much of the area of the wind farm have railed against the project. The company plans 60 to 90 turbines in the first phase and a similar number in the second.

The majority of turbines are expected to be in Lee County.

Last year, the board for Hamilton Township in Lee County – ground zero for Mainstream’s Green River project – voted unanimously for a comprehensive plan that recommended against the construction of wind turbines.

In Whiteside County’s Deer Grove, near which Mainstream is planning turbines, the village board has voted to regulate wind energy development in the 1.5-mile area outside its limits. Its village president, Al Thompson, has criticized wind farms.

The company turned in its application to the Bureau County zoning office on Feb. 2, said Kristine Donarski, the county’s zoning enforcement officer. The application will go through the county’s Planning Commission and Zoning Board of Appeals before ending up before the County Board.

The board may vote on the project as early as April, she said.

Shortly after turning in the application, Mainstream started sending its Good Neighbor Agreement offer to residents near the proposed project.

The offer acknowledged complaints about turbines such as noise, shadow flicker and interference with television reception.

“It is true that turbines are not silent; however, we plan carefully to ensure that our wind farms operate to acceptable levels,” the offer states. “In Illinois, noise regulations are set by the Illinois Pollution Control Board, and wind farms are bound by the same regulations as everyone else.”

Opponents say the state created the regulations before the advent of wind farms, though, and as such, the rules aren’t sufficient.

Mainstream also said wind turbines can affect TV reception, depending on the layout.

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Timothy O'Malley wrote on February 27, 2012 5:06 p.m. ...
http://renewableenergy.illinoisstate.edu/wind/faq/#3 A description of how they are taxed. Along with some other good information.

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