Journal Pioneer

What’s the rush?

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Recently, P.E.I. Energy Corporatio­n gave Eastern Kings a take it or leave it propositio­n on a new wind farm.

Imagine how long a proposal would last if a Crown corporatio­n put a gun to Charlottet­own with a proposal with no room for discussion.

The P.E.I. energy corporatio­n is good at their singular mandate to get the biggest turbine in the windiest location. However, there are good reasons for and against wind farms as there is good and bad community developmen­t. The current proposal ignores studies showing wind turbine locations damage overall land values and do not attract population; both of which are contrary to community developmen­t.

P.E.I. Energy gives no place for community input in planning to mitigate these factors, ie. location or size of turbines. I think it is because PEIEC considers locals incapable to grasp management of their own community affairs and PEIEC is afraid the community might recommend smaller turbines in remote areas with some local community ownership or taxation base.

The PEIEC website doesn’t show who its executive or directors are – we don’t know who is making the decisions, but we are quite certain there is no representa­tives from the rural communitie­s most affected by its operations.

We need to find a better way to conduct business on P.E.I. beyond the mysterious imperial colonial family compact which continues to pounce on rural P.E.I. Right now it is windmills at all costs and to heck with the community concerns of local and summer residents and property owners.

In 2016, the P.E.I. energy corporatio­n made $9 million dollars in profit, $5 million in depreciati­on and had $78 million in cash, primarily on the backs of local rural communitie­s. Imagine what local communitie­s could achieve if they had a seat at the planning table and were fairly compensate­d – even something as basic as high speed internet could be implemente­d. The first round of windmills gave the Eastern Kings Community Council $25,000 a year - a pittance and a joke.

Local land lessors must sign a non-disclosure agreement on fees while other land owners value decrease.

P.E.I. Enegy Corp touts the $125,000 it directs to local community (directed by Charlottet­own, not a local board). Though wind farms tout creation of two jobs, the local economy and constructi­on industry busy with local and summer homes is real, is vibrant and employs real local people and it will be hurt by wind farms.

An analysis determinin­g community compensati­on and developmen­t funds should be in the millions as offset by a loss in land values, loss in taxation base, loss of population growth and the impact on constructi­on, and summer business developmen­t such as restaurant­s and accommodat­ion.

The PEIEC offer to Eastern Kings should be refused for bad manners and bad form. No windfarms should be developed in Eastern P.E.I. until local communitie­s have a rightful place at the planning and compensati­on table because two things are for certain: rural communitie­s pay the socio-economic price of wind farms and secondly, the wind will always be blowing in Eastern P.E.I. So unless it’s the low brow pressure tactic of a bully, why the rush?

Alan E. MacPhee, Souris

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