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Published - Sunday, December 16, 2007
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Trempealeau County to pass restrictive wind turbine ordinance

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Ron Reimer doesn’t want to live in the shadows of wind turbines.

The 61-year-old organic farmer and photographer from Ettrick, Wis., fears the potential health effects of the rhythmic swooshing of turbine blades and the shadows they might cast over his home.
Ron Reimer of Ettrick, a member of the Concerned Citizens of Trempealeau County, holds a photo illustration he created showing how the hills of Ettrick would look with wind turbines. The same view of the proposed Ettrick site can be seen in the background. Reimer feels the negative affects of industrial wind turbines on the environment, such as carbon release and noise, outway the benefits and is against the placement of turbines in Trempealeau County. (Photo by Melissa Carlo/Winona Daily News)

Reimer considers himself a progressive. He has protested a nuclear power plant in Durand, Wis., mining, the Vietnam War. Now he’s against industrial wind energy.

He calls himself an environmentalist and an advocate of community-supported wind. Other people call him a radical who supports wind energy as long as it’s not in his backyard.

Reimer’s anti-wind reasoning could be considered farfetched, but he’s hardly alone in his battle against the wind. Everywhere there’s a wind turbine or proposed wind development, there’s a clone-able faction of citizens just like him.

“This side needs to be heard,” Reimer said. “I feel it’s almost being suppressed.”

Reimer and about 30 others who call themselves Concerned Citizens of Trempealeau County are another example of wind action groups like the War Against Wind group in Osterville, Mass., Protect the Flint Hills in Kansas, We Oppose Wind Farms in New York and Wind Cows in Wisconsin.

Wind energy has become a divisive issue for Trempealeau County’s residents over the past 14 months. The county board will vote Monday on a third draft of a wind ordinance they’ve been wrestling with since investment group AgWind Energy Partners approached the board in September 2006 with a request to look at three potential sites to build four to six turbines.

The proposed ordinance is stricter than the previous two. It would require turbines to be at least a mile from all habitable structures and a half-mile from property lines. Among more than 30 other restrictions is a requirement that the noise from the turbines can’t exceed 40 decibels when measured at any residence.

AgWind managing director Jim Naleid called it unreasonable, unnecessary and “overkill beyond words” from the state’s model ordinance. While there is a clause for mitigation with neighbors within the one-mile setback, Naleid said it would delay construction and increase costs.

“It results in saying there will be no wind development in Trempealeau County, and that relates to commercial and personal,” Naleid said. “They may say they’re promoting small wind but the restrictions they put in place — they wipe it out.”

Though wind energy is embraced as a renewable source of energy that doesn’t create greenhouse gasses, Reimer said the popular perception is distorted.

“This is much more than people upset about looking at wind towers,” he said.

Wind energy is profit-driven, not environmental, he said. It benefits developers, utilities, manufacturers, government and landowners, Reimer said. Not those who live near the turbines.

He calls it corporate “greenwashing.”

He believes wind energy will increase the use of fossil fuels because turbines don’t always run at peak capacity, and electricity can’t be stored. An auxiliary coal generator would have to run on stand-by all the time, creating mercury and carbon dioxide pollution.

Turbines generally produce about 20 to 40 percent of their peak capacity. Reimer questions why people would buy anything that would works only 40 percent of the time?

“It’s environmentally insane,” Reimer said. “It’s wasting more fuel than saving. Utilities love it.”

Reimer believes large-scale wind turbines are a defilement of the environment and a distraction from what people need to do to conserve. He prefers alternative energy saving tactics like solar cells, mass transit and hobbyist wind generation.

The debate is not whether there should be wind turbines, Reimer said. The issue is how big, where, and who benefits.

“I don’t really mind being called a NIMBY or having one put in my back yard, but not for 2,300 other people,” Reimer said. “I’m willing to do my share but not everybody else’s share.”

Reimer is convinced there are negative health impacts to those living close to wind turbines from low-frequency noise and shadow flicker from the spinning blades. He thinks it could cause developmental issues with children and it could contaminate ground water.

Reimer doesn’t trust sources like American Wind Energy Association. He relies on the Web sites of groups like American Wind Energy Opposition and National Wind Watch. He believes the horror stories he reads online from residents who live near wind turbines and the low-frequency noise research done by New York pediatrician Nina Pierpont.

Wind advocates counter that Pierpont’s research is not peer-reviewed and many of those Web sites promote believing what you want to believe.

“He spewed misinformation from the get-go,” Naleid said. “Once Ron Reimer entered the fray and got people emotionally confused about the issue, we halted all engineering and planning since.”

Trempealeau County never gave wind a chance, Naleid said.

He charges that the county’s zoning director, Kevin Lein, stacked the committee that drafted the proposed ordinance with wind opponents.

Lein said the committee made recommendations based on health and safety aspects, not personal opinions.

Lein doesn’t think the ordinance would prevent wind development. “It does put an onus on it, and they’ll have to put in extra leg work,” he said, “but I think it’s still very doable.”

Only after paying everyone nearby “a million dollars” to waive the setbacks, said Ronn Winn, an AgWind partner and 40-year resident of Galesville, Wis.

Winn, a member of the committee that drafted the ordinance, said he felt like he went there with a “big target” on his back. The ordinance, if passed, takes away his right to free enterprise on his land, Winn said.

He doesn’t get where people like Reimer come from.

“He’s educated, he’s articulate, does some research. He’s a good thinker. Why? Is this a hippie hangover?” Winn said. “None of what he can say or what he’s said can be substantiated, but it doesn’t make any difference for him.”

Reimer said he studied electrical engineering and understands how the electrical grid works. He is a graduate of University of Wisconsin-Madison with an interdisciplinary degree in American institutions.

Reimer, who didn’t serve on the committee, said Trempealeau County’s ordinance should address quality of life and property rights. No one deserves to live next to something that sounds “like jumbo jets spinning above,” he said.

His major opposition is the possibility of the state stepping in and not allowing counties any say in where turbines will be built.

Reimer said people should ask questions. What’s really going to happen with wind turbines. What are the economic realities? Who benefits from it? Whose wind is it anyway?

“There’s no way to prove how far away these things are safe,” Reimer said. “No one wants to pay for the studies. Part of it is taking precautions and testimonies from people who know.”

Contact reporter Amber Dulek at amber.dulek@lee.net or 507-453-3513.
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jandy wrote on Jan 3, 2008 12:54 PM:

" Thanks for asking. I'm in Ohio, so it may vary from state to state, but federal incentives are there, also. Go to www.dsireusa.org and click on your state. There are corporate/state/property tax exemptions as well as accelerated depreciation. The company will get 1-1.5 cents over the cost of the electric when they sell it. There are many other things that take time to research. Go to windwatch.org to start learning more. Electric requirements on the hottest days of summer (here in Ohio) mean the stillest days and we are already in the lowest wind area. Our state is trying to "create jobs" with the federal tax incentives being offered to states to join in. States will differ. Wind would be good in windy areas where population density is minimal. I say let the homeowners have the tax incentives of installing our own units (solar too) instead of these industrial giants. "

Reasonable wrote on Jan 2, 2008 11:29 AM:

" Jandy, please explain to me exactly why an investment company would spend a ton of money to build expensive turbines in an area that, as you say, simply cannot produce enough usable power. Exactly what tax dollars are they getting for this project? In other words, what is their motivation? Do you have ANY facts to back ANY of this up? And please, no more “shadow flicker” or other unsubstantiated BS. To me it sounds exactly like what Troller said. You all claim to be “green” and “environmentalists” as long as you don’t have to change anything in your life. It sounds to me like the Trempealeau board caved in to a couple of loud mouths. "

jandy wrote on Jan 1, 2008 10:59 AM:

" I also am an organic farmer and consider myself an environmentalist. Industrial wind turbines are NOT about reducing CO2 emissions, but are about more big corporate profits for investment companies at the expense of our tax dollars. Anyone who cannot see this just hasn't done their homework. I live in alow wind area that is being inundated with companies trying to set up these massive, expensive turbines in an area that simply CANNOT produce enough usable power. I also support community-supported and individual wind/solar projects. I commend Ron Reimer for taking this stand and trying to explain to the masses what this is truly about. Conservation is the only hope and the majority of people will NOT take that route. They want to continue to consume and expect all to be well. It will NOT happen until EVERYONE is forced to cut back on their power consumption. Good luck Ron! "

JED wrote on Dec 17, 2007 7:30 AM:

" I would hope that our electrical systems have advanced somewhat. It shouldn't be extremely difficult to put sensors on lines to show when power supply from wind turbines is increasing and decrease the speed coal burning generators are operating. Heavier wires could be installed if needed to carry loads away from the wind generators. Adding wind turbines to the electrical grid wouldn't be a major problem. "

Troller wrote on Dec 16, 2007 2:47 PM:

" Thank you oh wonderful and educated DIrebmeM. You still haven't answered how you burn more fossil fuels by having wind power as Mr. Reimer states. Using your analogy (because your facts are highly suspect) we would be better off not paying our debts, because in the long run it'll never work. I think every little bit helps and reducing even a percent of dependence on foreign oil is okay by me. I'll support wind power. Meanwhile, you go ahead on pontificate. See where it gets you. Just more Algorian foolishness. Do as I say, not as I do. "

DIrebmeM wrote on Dec 16, 2007 2:13 PM:

" The preceding posts are from uneducated folks. realities surround wind energy. Wind: Wind cannot replace a dispatchable fuel power plant - ever. Dispatchable sources must react to changes in wind speeds, decreasing their efficiency. Grid cannot handle peak outputs from many wind turbines, so states can't realistically reach their RPS goals with wind. Infrastructure is driven by profit expectations, not clean air or fossil fuel replacement. 44% of gross revenues come from taxes says recent Business Week article Little Green Lies. Wind turbines are between 30 and 700 times more visually present than traditional power plants per average output. Noise and shadow flicker are known and very real, well documented issues that reduce residential property values and usurp property rights. Wind turbines are symbols of a real need, but they don't offer a significant piece of a real solution. "

as i see it wrote on Dec 16, 2007 1:21 PM:

" Interesting! No windmills? Built a nuc plant or another coal burning facility next to him. Cannot believe people can be so narrow minded. Has he read about Denmark how much electricity is produced from wind. We are one of the great polluters in the world and no one seems to want to do anything about it. We need generators on the dams of the Mississippi to produce energy also. "

The Ultimate Hustler wrote on Dec 16, 2007 1:18 PM:

" tl;dr "

JustCannotresist wrote on Dec 16, 2007 11:28 AM:

" How is it that an organic farmer can come to NOT appreciate the power and cleanliness of wind energy?? No one sees these as unsightly when they drive by. Most people look at these windmills as smart investments towards the future. I don't feel one bit sorry for this guy. At all. "

rusty wrote on Dec 16, 2007 9:01 AM:

" This guy defines "concerned Citizen". How about concerned citizens of ron reimer" WAAAA, there is a windmill by my house, WAAAA! "

The Ricker wrote on Dec 16, 2007 8:46 AM:

" Wow this guy is a tool. Is that why you did a story on him? "

Troller wrote on Dec 16, 2007 7:48 AM:

" This must be new math. If you burn coal during times the wind isn't producing 40% of the energy to cover the decreased production.... wouldn't you burn coal 100% of the time with no wind turbine at all? How then is this using more coal? 40% more coal consumption? That makes no sense. Could he be wrong with his other assertions as well? This is typical Algorelexia! We want a green planet, but you have to change your lifestyles, not me! "


The comments above are from readers. In no way do they represent the views of the Winona Daily News.

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