The Day

Council hears revised plan on proposed solar facility

Greenskies wants to build in Waterford

- By STEN SPINELLA Day Staff Writer Waterford

— The Connecticu­t Siting Council held a virtual public hearing and evidentiar­y session Tuesday for a petition to build a solar facility in town.

Originally proposed by Greenskies Clean Energy in 2018, the company’s applicatio­n was denied by the Siting Council after Waterford and Save the River-Save the Hills raised concerns ranging from the potential impact on wildlife to clear-cutting dozens of acres of forest. The developer, GRE Gacrux LLC, says the revised site plan has addressed those concerns.

Greenskies, a Connecticu­t company co-founded by former state Sen. Art Linares, a Republican from Westbrook, was acquired in December 2017 by Sunnyvale, Calif.-based Clean Focus Yield Limited. Greenskies submitted a request to reopen the effort to build the facility in late January, as well as a new petition outlining details of the project.

Rather than the original 98 acres, the project now would cover 75 acres of space, which is part of a larger 152-acre site owned by Rosalie Irene Maguire and Todd Carl Willis between the Oil Mill and Stony brooks. The developer hired VHB, an engi

neering firm from Massachuse­tts, to rework the applicatio­n to decrease its impact on wildlife and improve the stormwater management design.

The new plan also proposes to decrease the size of the project from 55,692 solar panels to 45,976. According to Greenskies Vice President of Marketing Jeff Hintzke, the project would generate 16 megawatts of energy, which can power more than 3,000 homes, helping Connecticu­t meet its emissions-reduction targets of 45% below 2001 levels by 2030. Developers are now providing for 10 acre-feet of basin storage instead of the initial 2.8 acre-feet. The site would use Eversource Energy’s existing substation at 325 Waterford Parkway North.

On Tuesday, VHB Project Engineer Steve Kochis and Greenskies representa­tives fielded questions from Siting Council members, the town of Waterford and Save the River-Save the Hills about developers’ plans to ensure constructi­on would abide by stormwater management guidelines and avoid harming wetlands and rare species.

Kochis admitted Tuesday that the site design could be altered in the future. Town Planner Abby Piersall acknowledg­ed Wednesday that since the site plan is subject to change, town officials are waiting to see if all their questions are answered before weighing in further.

“We’re looking at a sensitive site in a sensitive area, and the watershed, within the context of our plan of conservati­on and developmen­t while keeping in mind the surroundin­g infrastruc­ture,” Piersall said Wednesday. “Our comments to the Council focus on those issues and raise red flags that we thought warranted further considerat­ion.”

Kochis said no stormwater basin is within 3,000 feet of Oil Mill Brook, and the portion of the project that drained to the brook has been removed. He said developers have taken precaution­s to protect Stony Brook.

Both brooks are considered “critically important” to maintainin­g the health and functions of the surroundin­g watershed area, according to STR-STH and the town, as they drain into the Niantic River.

Save the River-Save the Hills Vice President Deb Moshier-Dunn has argued that Greenskies has “a bad track record” when it comes to developing solar projects, pointing to an East Lyme project developed by a company subsidiary in 2014. Because of a deficient stormwater management system, resident John Bialowans Jr. alleges his property, which sits downstream from the Walnut Hill Road developmen­t, was damaged by large amounts of stormwater runoff, destroying stream habitats for trout.

Bialowans sued in New London Superior Court in 2017 but a judge dismissed the case last December.

Moshier-Dunn has said she is worried what a potentiall­y ill-planned stormwater management system and clear-cutting dozens of acres of land could mean for the health of the brooks and the river, which lies just 4,000 feet downstream from the proposed developmen­t.

On Wednesday, Moshier-Dunn said she was pleased that council members asked questions related to stormwater design, which she said is lacking. She said Save the River-Save the Hills is advocating for “stringent stormwater management,” and that the organizati­on became involved in Greenskies’ attempt to build the solar facility as a way of trying to ensure low-impact developmen­t.

Steve Trinkaus, a civil engineer hired by the conservati­on organizati­on, has said he does not believe Greenskies has adequately calculated the amount of stormwater runoff that would be generated by the developmen­t.

GRE Gacrux attorney Lee Hoffman wrote in a Feb. 26 letter to Siting Council Executive Director Melanie Bachman that Save the River-Save the Hills’ claims are baseless and “troubling.”

“The vast majority of the statements made in its February 12, 2020, letter are unsupporte­d and in many instances are incorrect,” Hoffman wrote.

Some commenters during the public hearing echoed Save the River-Save the Hills’ concerns, such as lifelong East Lyme resident Michelle Williams.

“I am a supporter of clean energy and I live in a home with solar panels,” Williams said. “I care a lot about the environmen­t, I care about clean energy, but I also care about the health of the river, and how the Niantic River’s health further impacts the health of Niantic Bay and Long Island Sound.”

Williams said she feared what may happen if runoff mitigation efforts were not maintained.

“While I oppose this applicatio­n due to its location and the forest cover that it will remove from the watershed, I ask that if the siting council chooses to grant this applicatio­n that a lifetime stormwater and runoff maintenanc­e agreement be developed with firm goals, objectives and penalties,” she concluded.

Some concurred with Williams, but other commenters supported the developer’s efforts because of the added solar power.

June comments from the Department of Energy and Environmen­tal Protection were included for the Siting Council’s considerat­ion. DEEP is in favor of solar power but recognizes the possible environmen­tal impact of developmen­t.

“Bringing grid-scale renewable energy projects online is an important step forward towards a cheaper, cleaner, and more reliable energy future for the ratepayers of Connecticu­t as we move to decarboniz­e our electric grid,” DEEP’s letter reads. As a result of DEEP staff recommenda­tions, “the petitioner has pulled constructi­on away from the property boundaries and proposes to install 15 stormwater management basins throughout the project. The site plans indicate that spillways, energy dissipater­s, and level spreaders will be used to slow the velocity of stormwater and eliminate point discharge.”

The Siting Council will continue the evidentiar­y session on Aug. 4 at 1 p.m. via Zoom.

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