If not you, who? If not now, when?
 

• Charles Bates in a Letter to the Editor, Pendleton-Times, 20 January 2005 Pendleton County Commissioners and EDA members should carefully consider the close similarity of eminent domain to armed robbery. Both acts involve the taking of legitimate property by force, against the will of the property owner. When is it moral for a group to do that which is immoral for a member of that group to do alone? How dare anyone even think of eminent domain in this situation?

Bob Tuckerman in a Letter to the Editor, Pendleton-Times, 13 January 2005 It is a known fact that the 100 to 150 foot rotating blades of wind generators do create unacceptable interference with microwave link radio equipment often used in communications systems. I have no knowledge of the potential interference with other types of communications systems. Will the whirling blades affect your satellite TV reception, cellular telephone use and the satellite positioning (GPS) system that is becoming important in emergency response?

I am sure, however, that detailed studies of this potential problem need to be investigated extensively by experts in the field. Such investigations should be made by independent organizations not connected in any way with the company proposing the wind generators in the county.

Tom Firor in a Letter to the Editor, Pendleton-Times, 13 January 2005 The force driving this project is the big profits to be made by people outside this county from Federal Government subsidies and tax breaks. All the developers and two of the three parties leasing the land for the 400-foot towers are from outside Pendleton County.

Based on Tucker County's experience, virtually no local people were hired for construction because it takes specifically trained workers to do the technical work of assembling these 400-foot towers according to specifications so the warranty will be valid. In Tucker County, 200 jobs were promised and fewer than 10 local people were hired.

Several acres of mountaintop will have to be cleared for each 400-foot wind turbine which will be mounted on a massive concrete pad half the size of a football field. There will be huge disruption of our county during construction with heavy construction equipment, concrete trucks and trucks hauling the colossal sections of these 400-foot towers from the railroad in Petersburg through our county to Jack Mountain.

Paulette Roberts, in a Letter to the Editor, Pendleton-Times, 20 January 2005

Developer Tom Matthews, resident of Pennsylvania, president of US Wind Force, a Delaware-based company, while defending the agreement with the County Commissioners to provide eminent domain for the developers' benefit, stated, "I'm going to give you a little tough love here. If this community takes the position that we want electricity but don't want it generated in my back yard, well that's not my definition of looking at the greater good — [Pendleton County needs] to step up and provide more power for the rest of the United States."

I say it is not energy that Mr. Matthews and US Wind Force is concerned with but millions of dollars from tax-free profits and incentives. I say NO to Mr. Matthews. Pendleton County owes him nothing! We do not want our land spoiled for his benefit. How dare he! West Virginia has given and given and given. Of its resources, its veterans (more killed per capita in all 20th century wars than any other state), and its people. NO, Mr. Matthews, we don't owe you a thing!

Teresa (Rader) Hannon in a Letter to the Editor, Pendleton-Times, 13 January 2005

I have just noticed two of three test towers installed over a year (maybe two years) ago on Jack Mountain about three miles from Brushy Hill and Doe Hill, VA. They are not imposing and I wonder if that was Liberty Gap's plan so they could collect all their wind data and do planning with as little public knowledge as possible.

One can view the towers if you take 220 south, make a left at Cave Country Store, then take Rt. 20, Thorn Creek Road, for 5.5 miles (stay to the right at road fork at Totten Cemetery) you can see Jack Mountain to your right. I was led to believe in the newspaper reports that this wind farm idea had just cropped up over the past few months, but in conversations with a few people in the area, I found out that the small towers I had witnessed along the ridge were installed as long as two years ago. The people I spoke with didn't realize the ramifications these test towers would have.

I have to admit that I may have noticed them earlier but just thought they were cell towers and had dismissed them as harmless; little did I know that they are just a tiny hint of what is to come. I have now become more observant as I drive around the area and am surprised to see a lot of large white plus symbols on the ground. They are used for aerial surveying.

Upon further inspection of the targets [that] I know were being used for the wind farm, I found a yellow cap on the rebar in the center of each white plus that said, "TRIAD WINC." I think they are doing additional surveying to find alternate routes for their transmission lines, maybe a route to the Naval Base so they can bypass Franklin and thus calm some of the high-powered opposition. So ask yourself when you see the large white targets near your land, are they going to put the transmission line in this area and over me? Or maybe they are planing for future wind farms.


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