Wind turbines may mean huge boon to Cherokee County — or maybe not!
by Terry Dean
Oct 15, 2012 | 9982 views | 10 10 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
WIND TURBINE PRESENTATION. David Savage of Green Energy gives a slide presentation on a proposed wind turbine project for Cherokee County during a recent meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board. The board recently voted 2-1 in favor of the project which Savage said could provide energy for 6,000 local homes and bring in revenue of approximately $300,000 a year to Cherokee County.
WIND TURBINE PRESENTATION. David Savage of Green Energy gives a slide presentation on a proposed wind turbine project for Cherokee County during a recent meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board. The board recently voted 2-1 in favor of the project which Savage said could provide energy for 6,000 local homes and bring in revenue of approximately $300,000 a year to Cherokee County.
slideshow
It appears that wind turbines and the energy created from them are in Cherokee County’s future. But there are some who are less than enthusiastic about the proposal. During a recent meeting of the Cherokee County Parks and Recreation Board, members voted 2-1 in favor of the project.

Following a presentation by David Savage of Green Energy, a Texas-based, company. Board Member Virgil Adcock motioned to enter into the agreement with Green Energy and Board Member Gary Bannister also voted for the project. Board Chairman Scooter Howell voted no, saying he thought the board needed more time to discuss the issue and Board Members Henry Wright and Daphne Rogers were silent throughout the vote.

There was some question following the meeting as to whether the motioned passed with only two yes votes.

Attorneys for both the park board and Green Energy, however, concluded that the vote was legal and binding.

Currently the plan is to place approximately 10 turbines on the mountain above Leesburg that would generate electricity for Tennessee Valley Authority.

Savage said the project could mean approximately $9 million in tax revenue for the county over the life of the project could increase tourism for Cherokee County, bringing in extra dollars from outside the area. The project will also result in new jobs, during both the construction phase and afterward with tentative plans for a visitor center, which will be shared by Pioneer and the Park Board that will offer educational programs promoting and explaining clean energy. The completion date for the project could be as soon as December of 2013.

Projected revenue could mean up to $300,000 a year over a period of 30 years for the county if the project along a ridge of Cherokee Rock Village proceeds. The project would generate up to 20 megawatts of energy, which is enough to provide electricity close to 6,000 local homes.

The turbines, more than 400 feet high, would be place approximately a quarter of a mile apart and would be located at least 1,000 feet away from any permanent residence(s), Savage said.

Savage said an environmental study by TVA is required before going further with the project.

During a more recent meeting of the park board, however, some 20 citizens attended to express their views on this project, including Carlo and Angela Whitehead, who didn’t get to speak at this meeting but are scheduled to speak at the next meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board.

The Whiteheads reside on Cherokee County Road 70 in Sand Rock, at the base of the entrance to Cherokee Rock Village.

“We went to the parks and recreation board meeting and they talked about the windmill project they were going to put on the mountain,” Carlo told the Herald following the Wednesday, Oct. 10 meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board. “We didn’t get to express our views and there were about 15 or 20 people in the hallway that weren’t able to make it in the room with us because it was too full that were against this idea of having windmills on top of Cherokee Rock Village, area, Sand Rock mountain. Because we believe it is going to take away from the beauty of the mountain.”

“Who in the world would want to camp under these giant windmills when they are going out to be a part of nature?” Carlo asked. “They make movies on this mountain because it is pristine, it is beautiful. Who would want to make movies on this mountain (with the wind turbines)? And I think it is a terrible thing to do to this mountain and I think the parks department, if they let this project go through, they are getting so far away from what they started out doing, with these campsites where people can go up there with their families and kids and enjoy the campsite, they are just way off base and getting out into the left field into the weeds where they don’t need to be with this windmill project. I don’t see somebody being in a tent camping and listening to the roar of one of those generators above their head all night long and enjoying it.”

Whitehead said he has seen these windmills first hand in the state of New York.

“Go up under one, stand under one and see how much you like it,” said Whitehead. “With the vibration of the ground, you are going to feel it when the wind is turning. It is going to shake the ground it is so massive. I just think it is a bad idea and I am honestly I think if they actually let people know more about what it is going on, there would be a lot more against it. I was lucky enough to find out about it last night and to come up and express my thoughts about it.”

“What about the medical aspects of it, making people sick from the generators and stuff like that,” asked Angela. “It is not even something I want to look at every day. I see that mountain every day.”

“I have seen with my own eyes how busy that place is with all the cars and stuff coming down, people with their tents, like on the Fourth of July, and the revenue the campsite is bringing to the area I think is good,” said Angela. “But as for the windmills, I am like him. I think it is just blowing money away by having the campsites built and a windmill right on top of it. I am not happy at all about it. I am not budging off my decision or my opinion.”

Stay tuned! The next meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board is Wednesday, Oct. 24, at 1 p.m.

Comments
(10)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
anderlan
|
April 15, 2013
“Who in the world would want to camp under these giant windmills when they are going out to be a part of nature?”

I AM GOING TO CAMP UNDER THESE GIANT WINDMILLS WHEN I AM GOING TO BE PART OF NATURE. And there are plenty of other folks who think like me and will be excited to see Alabama's first wind farm(s) go up!

Think about this, as much as these white towers interfere with the view of nature, the things they are replacing interfere with nature much, much, much more. Too much coal and gas are insidiously invisible in their malevolence.

People say they support science and knowledge and truth and the posterity, but to proceed making energy the same way we have been is to say otherwise. Business as usual using coal and gas is not acceptable. I am proud of Alabama's tiny but growing solar, of its hydro, and even its nuclear. I will be proud of these machines, in graceful synchrony with the nature above which they tower.
anderlan
|
April 15, 2013
This is not to say that those who live near turbines, and who feel there is a cost to them, shouldn't be given a share of the earnings from them. Likewise, everyone in the entire nation--since we all share the harm caused by coal, oil, and gas--should be given an equal share of their profits because of the harm shared by all of us.

This is all there is to a carbon fee and dividend. But the coal, oil, and gas companies hate this simple idea. Think about it.
panther123456
|
November 29, 2012
We don't need Wind TUrbines in Cherokee COunty. The are noisy and ugly and think of all of the Cherokee Electric workers that they will put out of business. I think things just need to stay like they are.
ffa_girl
|
October 27, 2012
I think Cherokee County has been waiting on this for a long time. CC needs a way to be a part of the alternate energy boom. Cherokee County as a whole is small and is getting smaller every day. Somethng like this can bring better industry to Cherokee County, providing jobs for hundreds!IN addition, the turbines will boost the economic situation of the county by lower energy costs to families.
panther123456
|
November 29, 2012
But you have to consider, pretty much everyone in Cherokee County supports some type of Farmland. WE have prided our selves on being a beautiful place to come home to, but if there are large wind turbines all over the area, then our beautywill greatly decrease, our tourism will decreas and the area will die. I don't think this is what we really want for our county. The Wind Turbines need to stay out.
ffdparker
|
October 19, 2012
I say bring them on! As of right now, taxes included, plus the other fees we pay for being on a Co-Op, we pay 12 cents per kwh.These turbines, if the power is planned to be wired into a local grid, would drastically reduce that cost from that which is purchased from one power company, marked up, then sold again! Having the turbines would give our community a "sustainable" power source in case of catastrophic mainline outages. It is likely that we would see a decrease in cost of power generation, less outage times, and Cherokee County would become an example to other areas with similar terrain. Folks, whether we like it or not, we have got to think of the future. Sure, we have a hydro-electric dam in our county, but it's not owned by the Co-Op... It's owned by Alabama Power Co. and us on the Co-Op do not get to use that power source without paying for it. Having a self-sustaining system, with little maintenance needed, means lower energy cost. I don't mind telling you. I would certainly enjoy a power bill that was less than 1/8 of my total monthly income... Wouldn't you?
ffdparker
|
October 19, 2012
But, I would consider a different area than Cherokee Rock Village, one of this area's hidden treasures. I live in Leesburg, just 5 or 6 blocks from two noisy plants, and am used to a steady noise of the plants at night, but people that are not used to it need to be warned that they will be able to hear these turbines humming all down in the valley of Leesburg. As far as the aesthetics, and being pleasing to the eye, they are not pretty, but they are certainly less-costly to keep running than coal or hydro. As a matter of fact, within a few years, people may be able to see one in my yard, if the wind test is sucessful!
ffdparker
|
October 19, 2012
Oh, I must have missed the part where this power will be used by TVA, and not to help Cherokee Electric customers. That's like placing a restaurant in a town that no locals are allowed to eat at! Why doesn't Cherokee Electric approach this?

Without it impacting the electric costs locally, I am now against it.Why TVA?
mdjones622
|
October 17, 2012
I do not want to see this when I drive in that area. It is absolutely beautiful the way it is. To put these things there would ruin the beauty of it. I don't care that it is a "prime spot." They will make the view hideous. I'm for progress, to an extent, just not when you are trying to destroy a landmark we have here in this county. Who on earth would want to go up on the mountain with those there. Rock Village is used for many things, and it should not be used for this. Find another way.
JohnCB82
|
October 15, 2012
I grew up in Rome and Cedar Bluff. Graduated in 1982. I live in NY state now and see wind turbines all the time. There are hundreds here, maybe over a thousand in the state by now. They'll never replace nuclear ( I work at a nuclear plant) but they are a good idea. That ridge above Leesburg is a prime spot for wind. Don't stand in the way of progress. The vast majority of people in the rural parts of NY, where I live, support them.
Wind turbines may mean huge boon to Cherokee County — or maybe not!
by Terry Dean
Oct 15, 2012 | 9982 views | 10 10 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
WIND TURBINE PRESENTATION. David Savage of Green Energy gives a slide presentation on a proposed wind turbine project for Cherokee County during a recent meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board. The board recently voted 2-1 in favor of the project which Savage said could provide energy for 6,000 local homes and bring in revenue of approximately $300,000 a year to Cherokee County.
WIND TURBINE PRESENTATION. David Savage of Green Energy gives a slide presentation on a proposed wind turbine project for Cherokee County during a recent meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board. The board recently voted 2-1 in favor of the project which Savage said could provide energy for 6,000 local homes and bring in revenue of approximately $300,000 a year to Cherokee County.
slideshow
It appears that wind turbines and the energy created from them are in Cherokee County’s future. But there are some who are less than enthusiastic about the proposal. During a recent meeting of the Cherokee County Parks and Recreation Board, members voted 2-1 in favor of the project.

Following a presentation by David Savage of Green Energy, a Texas-based, company. Board Member Virgil Adcock motioned to enter into the agreement with Green Energy and Board Member Gary Bannister also voted for the project. Board Chairman Scooter Howell voted no, saying he thought the board needed more time to discuss the issue and Board Members Henry Wright and Daphne Rogers were silent throughout the vote.

There was some question following the meeting as to whether the motioned passed with only two yes votes.

Attorneys for both the park board and Green Energy, however, concluded that the vote was legal and binding.

Currently the plan is to place approximately 10 turbines on the mountain above Leesburg that would generate electricity for Tennessee Valley Authority.

Savage said the project could mean approximately $9 million in tax revenue for the county over the life of the project could increase tourism for Cherokee County, bringing in extra dollars from outside the area. The project will also result in new jobs, during both the construction phase and afterward with tentative plans for a visitor center, which will be shared by Pioneer and the Park Board that will offer educational programs promoting and explaining clean energy. The completion date for the project could be as soon as December of 2013.

Projected revenue could mean up to $300,000 a year over a period of 30 years for the county if the project along a ridge of Cherokee Rock Village proceeds. The project would generate up to 20 megawatts of energy, which is enough to provide electricity close to 6,000 local homes.

The turbines, more than 400 feet high, would be place approximately a quarter of a mile apart and would be located at least 1,000 feet away from any permanent residence(s), Savage said.

Savage said an environmental study by TVA is required before going further with the project.

During a more recent meeting of the park board, however, some 20 citizens attended to express their views on this project, including Carlo and Angela Whitehead, who didn’t get to speak at this meeting but are scheduled to speak at the next meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board.

The Whiteheads reside on Cherokee County Road 70 in Sand Rock, at the base of the entrance to Cherokee Rock Village.

“We went to the parks and recreation board meeting and they talked about the windmill project they were going to put on the mountain,” Carlo told the Herald following the Wednesday, Oct. 10 meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board. “We didn’t get to express our views and there were about 15 or 20 people in the hallway that weren’t able to make it in the room with us because it was too full that were against this idea of having windmills on top of Cherokee Rock Village, area, Sand Rock mountain. Because we believe it is going to take away from the beauty of the mountain.”

“Who in the world would want to camp under these giant windmills when they are going out to be a part of nature?” Carlo asked. “They make movies on this mountain because it is pristine, it is beautiful. Who would want to make movies on this mountain (with the wind turbines)? And I think it is a terrible thing to do to this mountain and I think the parks department, if they let this project go through, they are getting so far away from what they started out doing, with these campsites where people can go up there with their families and kids and enjoy the campsite, they are just way off base and getting out into the left field into the weeds where they don’t need to be with this windmill project. I don’t see somebody being in a tent camping and listening to the roar of one of those generators above their head all night long and enjoying it.”

Whitehead said he has seen these windmills first hand in the state of New York.

“Go up under one, stand under one and see how much you like it,” said Whitehead. “With the vibration of the ground, you are going to feel it when the wind is turning. It is going to shake the ground it is so massive. I just think it is a bad idea and I am honestly I think if they actually let people know more about what it is going on, there would be a lot more against it. I was lucky enough to find out about it last night and to come up and express my thoughts about it.”

“What about the medical aspects of it, making people sick from the generators and stuff like that,” asked Angela. “It is not even something I want to look at every day. I see that mountain every day.”

“I have seen with my own eyes how busy that place is with all the cars and stuff coming down, people with their tents, like on the Fourth of July, and the revenue the campsite is bringing to the area I think is good,” said Angela. “But as for the windmills, I am like him. I think it is just blowing money away by having the campsites built and a windmill right on top of it. I am not happy at all about it. I am not budging off my decision or my opinion.”

Stay tuned! The next meeting of the Cherokee County Park Board is Wednesday, Oct. 24, at 1 p.m.

Comments
(10)
Comments-icon Post a Comment
anderlan
|
April 15, 2013
“Who in the world would want to camp under these giant windmills when they are going out to be a part of nature?”

I AM GOING TO CAMP UNDER THESE GIANT WINDMILLS WHEN I AM GOING TO BE PART OF NATURE. And there are plenty of other folks who think like me and will be excited to see Alabama's first wind farm(s) go up!

Think about this, as much as these white towers interfere with the view of nature, the things they are replacing interfere with nature much, much, much more. Too much coal and gas are insidiously invisible in their malevolence.

People say they support science and knowledge and truth and the posterity, but to proceed making energy the same way we have been is to say otherwise. Business as usual using coal and gas is not acceptable. I am proud of Alabama's tiny but growing solar, of its hydro, and even its nuclear. I will be proud of these machines, in graceful synchrony with the nature above which they tower.
anderlan
|
April 15, 2013
This is not to say that those who live near turbines, and who feel there is a cost to them, shouldn't be given a share of the earnings from them. Likewise, everyone in the entire nation--since we all share the harm caused by coal, oil, and gas--should be given an equal share of their profits because of the harm shared by all of us.

This is all there is to a carbon fee and dividend. But the coal, oil, and gas companies hate this simple idea. Think about it.
panther123456
|
November 29, 2012
We don't need Wind TUrbines in Cherokee COunty. The are noisy and ugly and think of all of the Cherokee Electric workers that they will put out of business. I think things just need to stay like they are.
ffa_girl
|
October 27, 2012
I think Cherokee County has been waiting on this for a long time. CC needs a way to be a part of the alternate energy boom. Cherokee County as a whole is small and is getting smaller every day. Somethng like this can bring better industry to Cherokee County, providing jobs for hundreds!IN addition, the turbines will boost the economic situation of the county by lower energy costs to families.
panther123456
|
November 29, 2012
But you have to consider, pretty much everyone in Cherokee County supports some type of Farmland. WE have prided our selves on being a beautiful place to come home to, but if there are large wind turbines all over the area, then our beautywill greatly decrease, our tourism will decreas and the area will die. I don't think this is what we really want for our county. The Wind Turbines need to stay out.
ffdparker
|
October 19, 2012
I say bring them on! As of right now, taxes included, plus the other fees we pay for being on a Co-Op, we pay 12 cents per kwh.These turbines, if the power is planned to be wired into a local grid, would drastically reduce that cost from that which is purchased from one power company, marked up, then sold again! Having the turbines would give our community a "sustainable" power source in case of catastrophic mainline outages. It is likely that we would see a decrease in cost of power generation, less outage times, and Cherokee County would become an example to other areas with similar terrain. Folks, whether we like it or not, we have got to think of the future. Sure, we have a hydro-electric dam in our county, but it's not owned by the Co-Op... It's owned by Alabama Power Co. and us on the Co-Op do not get to use that power source without paying for it. Having a self-sustaining system, with little maintenance needed, means lower energy cost. I don't mind telling you. I would certainly enjoy a power bill that was less than 1/8 of my total monthly income... Wouldn't you?
ffdparker
|
October 19, 2012
But, I would consider a different area than Cherokee Rock Village, one of this area's hidden treasures. I live in Leesburg, just 5 or 6 blocks from two noisy plants, and am used to a steady noise of the plants at night, but people that are not used to it need to be warned that they will be able to hear these turbines humming all down in the valley of Leesburg. As far as the aesthetics, and being pleasing to the eye, they are not pretty, but they are certainly less-costly to keep running than coal or hydro. As a matter of fact, within a few years, people may be able to see one in my yard, if the wind test is sucessful!
ffdparker
|
October 19, 2012
Oh, I must have missed the part where this power will be used by TVA, and not to help Cherokee Electric customers. That's like placing a restaurant in a town that no locals are allowed to eat at! Why doesn't Cherokee Electric approach this?

Without it impacting the electric costs locally, I am now against it.Why TVA?
mdjones622
|
October 17, 2012
I do not want to see this when I drive in that area. It is absolutely beautiful the way it is. To put these things there would ruin the beauty of it. I don't care that it is a "prime spot." They will make the view hideous. I'm for progress, to an extent, just not when you are trying to destroy a landmark we have here in this county. Who on earth would want to go up on the mountain with those there. Rock Village is used for many things, and it should not be used for this. Find another way.
JohnCB82
|
October 15, 2012
I grew up in Rome and Cedar Bluff. Graduated in 1982. I live in NY state now and see wind turbines all the time. There are hundreds here, maybe over a thousand in the state by now. They'll never replace nuclear ( I work at a nuclear plant) but they are a good idea. That ridge above Leesburg is a prime spot for wind. Don't stand in the way of progress. The vast majority of people in the rural parts of NY, where I live, support them.