Tuesday, August 11, 2009

New brunswick turbine burns


CBC News

A wind turbine near Moncton went up in flames Saturday morning.

Officials with TransAlta Corp., the company that operates the 32 turbines on the Kent Hills Wind Farm, are investigating how the fire broke out. The farm is located in Elgin, N.B., about 30 kilometres southwest of Moncton.

Jason Edworthy, a spokesman for the Alberta-based company, said the fire is very unusual and the company that supplied the turbine will be involved in the investigation.

The Elgin Fire Department and employees of TransAlta responded to the fire at about 9 a.m. Saturday and were able to contain it. Three TransAlta employees on site were alerted to the problem by the turbine's sensor.

The loss of one turbine will not affect the ability of TransAlta to supply NB Power, Edworthy said.

The Kent Hills facility began operations on Dec. 31, 2008, and was slated to provide 280,000-megawatt hours of power per year to meet the electricity needs of approximately 17,300 homes.

Replacing the turbine is estimated to cost between $4 million and $5 million.



http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/story/2009/08/10/turbine-fire.html



YouTube video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkGXoE3RFZ8

Monday, August 10, 2009

Are wind farms a health risk? US scientist identifies 'wind turbine syndrome'



Noise and vibration coming from large turbines are behind an increase in heart disease, migraine, panic attacks and other health problems, according to research by an American doctor


By Margareta Pagano
Sunday, 2 August 2009
The Independent


Living too close to wind turbines can cause heart disease, tinnitus, vertigo, panic attacks, migraines and sleep deprivation, according to groundbreaking research to be published later this year by an American doctor.

Dr Nina Pierpont, a leading New York paediatrician, has been studying the symptoms displayed by people living near wind turbines in the US, the UK, Italy, Ireland and Canada for more than five years. Her findings have led her to confirm what she has identified as a new health risk, wind turbine syndrome (WTS). This is the disruption or abnormal stimulation of the inner ear's vestibular system by turbine infrasound and low-frequency noise, the most distinctive feature of which is a group of symptoms which she calls visceral vibratory vestibular disturbance, or VVVD. They cause problems ranging from internal pulsation, quivering, nervousness, fear, a compulsion to flee, chest tightness and tachycardia – increased heart rate. Turbine noise can also trigger nightmares and other disorders in children as well as harm cognitive development in the young, she claims. However, Dr Pierpont also makes it clear that not all people living close to turbines are susceptible.

Until now, the Government and the wind companies have denied any health risks associated with the powerful noises and vibrations emitted by wind turbines. Acoustic engineers working for the wind energy companies and the Government say that aerodynamic noise produced by turbines pose no risk to health, a view endorsed recently by acousticians at Salford University. They have argued that earlier claims by Dr Pierpont are "imaginary" and are likely to argue that her latest findings are based on a sample too small to be authoritative.

At the heart of Dr Pierpont's findings is that humans are affected by low-frequency noise and vibrations from wind turbines through their ear bones, rather like fish and other amphibians. That humans have the same sensitivity as fish is based on new discoveries made by scientists at Manchester University and New South Wales last year. This, she claims, overturns the medical orthodoxy of the past 70 years on which acousticians working for wind farms are using to base their noise measurements. "It has been gospel among acousticians for years that if a person can't hear a sound, it's too weak for it to be detected or registered by any other part of the body," she said. "But this is no longer true. Humans can hear through the bones. This is amazing. It would be heretical if it hadn't been shown in a well-conducted experiment."

In the UK, Dr Christopher Hanning, founder of the British Sleep Society, who has also backed her research, said: "Dr Pierpont's detailed recording of the harm caused by wind turbine noise will lay firm foundations for future research. It should be required reading for all planners considering wind farms. Like so many earlier medical pioneers exposing the weaknesses of current orthodoxy, Dr Pierpont has been subject to much denigration and criticism and ... it is tribute to her strength of character and conviction that this important book is going to reach publication."

Dr Pierpont's thesis, which is to be published in October by K-Selected Books, has been peer reviewed and includes an endorsement from Professor Lord May, former chief scientific adviser to the UK government. Lord May describes her research as "impressive, interesting and important".

Her new material about the impact of turbine noise on health will be of concern to the Government given its plans for about 4,000 new wind turbines across the country. Ed Miliband, the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change, has made wind power a central part of his new green policy to encourage renewable energy sources. Another 3,000 are planned off-shore.

Drawing on the early work of Dr Amanda Harry, a British GP in Portsmouth who had been alerted by her patients to the potential health risk, Dr Pierpont gathered together 10 further families from around the world who were living near large wind turbines, giving her a cluster of 38 people, from infants to age 75, to explore the pathophysiology of WTS for the case series. Eight of the 10 families she analysed for the study have now moved away from their homes.

In a rare interview, Dr Pierpont, a fellow of the American Academy of Pediatrics, told The Independent on Sunday: "There is no doubt that my clinical research shows that the infrasonic to ultrasonic noise and vibrations emitted by wind turbines cause the symptoms which I am calling wind turbine syndrome. There are about 12 different health problems associated with WTS and these range from tachycardia, sleep disturbance, headaches, tinnitus, nausea, visual blurring, panic attacks with sensations of internal quivering to more general irritability.

"The wind industry will try to discredit me and disparage me, but I can cope with that. This is not unlike the tobacco industry dismissing health issues from smoking. The wind industry, however, is not composed of clinicians, nor is it made up of people suffering from wind turbines." The IoS has a copy of the confidential manuscript which is exhaustive in its research protocol and detailed case series, drawing on the work of leading otolaryngologists and neurotologists – ear, nose and throat clinical specialists.

Some of the earliest research into the impact of low-frequency noise and vibrations was undertaken by Portuguese doctors studying the effects on military and civil personnel flying at high altitudes and at supersonic speed. They found that this exposure may also cause the rare illness, vibroacoustic disorder or VAD, which causes changes to the structure of certain organs such as the heart and lungs and may well be caused by vibrations from turbines. Another powerful side effect of turbines is the impact which the light thrown off the blades – known as flicker – has on people who suffer from migraines and epilepsy.

Campaigners have consistently argued that much research hitherto has been based on written complaints to environmental health officers and manufacturers, not on science-based research. But in Denmark, Germany and France, governments are moving towards building new wind farms off-shore because of concern over the potential health and environmental risks. In the UK there are no such controls, and a growing number of lobbyists, noise experts and government officials are also beginning to query the statutory noise levels being given to councils when deciding on planning applications from wind farm manufacturers. Lobbyists claim a new method of measuring is needed.

Dr Pierpont, who has funded all the research herself and is independent of any organisation, recommends at least a 2km set-back distance between potential wind turbines and people's homes, said: "It is irresponsible of the wind turbine companies – and governments – to continue building wind turbines so close to where people live until there has been a proper epidemiological investigation of the full impact on human health.

"What I have shown in my research is that many people – not all – who have been living close to a wind turbine running near their homes display a range of health illnesses and that when they move away, many of these problems also go away."

A breakthrough into understanding more of the impact of vibrations came last year, she said, when scientists at Manchester University and Prince of Wales Clinical School and Medical Research Institute in Sydney showed that the normal human vestibular system has a fish or frog-like sensitivity to low-frequency vibration. This was a turning point in understanding the nature of the problem, Dr Pierpont added, because it overturns the orthodoxy of the current way of measuring noise. "It is clear from the new evidence that the methods being used by acousticians goes back to research first carried out in the 1930s and is now outdated."

Dr Pierpont added that the wind turbine companies constantly argue that the health problems are "imaginary, psychosomatic or malingering". But she said their claims are "rubbish" and that medical evidence supports that the reported symptoms are real.

Case study: 'My husband had pneumonia, my father-in-law had a heart attack. Nobody was ill before'

Jane Davis, 53, a retired NHS manager, and her husband, Julian, 44, a farmer, lived in Spalding, Lincolnshire, until the noise of a wind farm 930m away forced them to leave

"People describe the noise as like an aeroplane that never arrives. My husband developed pneumonia very quickly after the turbines went up, having never had chest problems before. We suffer constant headaches and ear nuisance. My mother-in-law developed pneumonia and my husband developed atrial fibrillation – a rapid heartbeat. He had no pre-existing heart disease. Our blood pressure has gone up. My father-in-law has suffered a heart attack, tinnitus and marked hearing loss.

" I understand this can be regarded as a coincidence, but nobody was ill before 2006."

The defence: 'Wind turbines are quiet and safe'

The British Wind Energy Association, UK's biggest renewable energy trade association, said last night: "One of the first things first-time visitors to wind farms usually say is that they are surprised how quiet the turbines are.

"To put things in context: the London Borough of Westminster registered around 300,000 noise complaints from residents in 2008, none from wind turbines. The total number of noise complaints to local councils across the country runs into millions.

"In contrast, an independent study on wind farms and noise in 2007 found only four complaints from about 2,000 turbines in the country, three of which were resolved by the time the report was published.

"Wind turbines are quiet, safe and sustainable. It is not surprising that, according to a DTI report, 94 per cent of people who live near wind turbines are in favour of them. There is no scientific research to suggest that wind turbines are in any way harmful, and even many of the detractors of wind energy are honest enough to admit this.

"Noise from wind farms is a non-problem, and we need to move away from this unproductive and unscientific debate, and focus on our targets on reducing carbon emissions."

http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/green-living/are-wind-farms-a-health-risk-us-scientist-identifies-wind-turbine-syndrome-1766254.html

Monday, July 27, 2009

Shear Wind Nearing July 30th Deadline for Response to EA Investigation

ShearWind must respond to claimed inaccuracies in their EA statement by July 30th, one of which is detailed in the most recent press release from Eco Awareness Society (see below).


~~~~~~~~~~~~~


Why is Shear Wind Afraid of Dr. Pierpont?


Dr. Nina Pierpont M.D. is a graduate of the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. In the abstract to her upcoming book Wind Turbine Syndrome: A Report on a Natural Experiment, one reads:

“This report documents a consistent and often debilitating complex of symptoms … [that] include sleep disturbance, headache, tinnitus, ear pressure, dizziness, vertigo, nausea, visual blurring, tachycardia, irritability, problems with concentration and memory, and panic episodes associated with sensations of internal pulsation or quivering that arise while awake or asleep. The study is a case series of 10 affected families, with 38 members age <1>

In their November 27, 2008 addendum to their Environmental Assessment registration documents, Shear Wind Inc., in describing Dr. Pierpont’s work, misrepresents the maximum distance from a turbine as only 457 meters instead of 1.5 km; this is more than three times less than what the abstract states. In fact, there are seven homes closer than 1.5 km to turbines in Shear Wind’s Glen Dhu project. For this and five other statements of questionable truthfulness in their addendum, Shear Wind is under a Section 115 investigation by Nova Scotia Environment with a response due July 30, 2009.

Now, in their July newsletter to the community, Shear Wind again seeks to discredit Dr. Pierpont’s work, this time by claiming her view “that people living in proximity to wind farms may suffer from ‘Wind Turbine Syndrome’ … is not supported by scientists.” Shear Wind cites the Canadian Wind Energy website where links to seven articles authored by these scientists ostensibly support this claim. It is reasonable to expect that these authors reviewed Dr. Pierpont’s work and criticized her methods or “wind turbine syndrome” itself. However, a thorough reading reveals that five of the articles do not even mention Dr. Pierpont and only one article makes reference to her case series study stating, “One cannot discount the information.” Shear Wind is again misleading our community. While these authors do in fact “not support” Pierpont’s work, neither do they refute it, as Shear Wind would have us believe.

In contrast, Dr. Joel F. Leher, MD, F.A.C.S., one of the four doctors and scientists who, as referees, have peer reviewed the manuscript for Dr. Pierpont’s upcoming book, states, “This [report] addresses an under-reported facet of Noise Induced Illnesses in a fashion that is detailed in its historical documentation, multi-systemic in its approach and descriptions, and painstakingly and informatively referenced…. [It] opens up the area of low frequency vibration to the medical community….I applaud her.”

Based on the growing body of evidence, doctors, such as Dr. Pierpont, are calling for a minimum 2 km wind turbine setback or construction moratorium until an independent study can assess the full impact of wind turbine noise. However, as long as Shear Wind can create doubt through disinformation, our government and the general public will turn a deaf ear to such reasoned caution and Shear Wind can continue to site turbines based on financial convenience and to recklessly gamble with the health and well being of our rural communities.


Kristen Overmyer, M.S.M.E.

Baileys Brook

Friday, July 10, 2009

Some Green Collar Workers' Jobs as Intermitant as the Wind

Workers at P.E.I. wind turbine company say they haven’t been paid in eight weeks

The Canadian Press

CHARLOTTETOWN — A wind turbine maker in Charlottetown is under investigation by P.E.I.’s Labour Relations Board after employees complained they’re owed up to eight weeks of back pay.

Entegrity Wind Systems sent most of their workers home late last month after running into financial trouble.

But most of their 50 employees haven’t been paid since mid-May.

The company has not filed for bankruptcy.

Roy Doucette, director of labour and industrial relations with the Labour Department, said they are still trying to determine the status of the company.

The department issued an order this week that requires Entegrity to pay its employees.
The company has 10 days to appeal. If they don’t pay, the Labour Department will issue a judgment against Entegrity in the courts.

“We don’t know a whole lot yet, except for the fact we have employees obviously who have not been paid,” Doucette said. “We have authority to put third-party demands on monies coming into the company.”

Entegrity has offices in Charlottetown and Boulder, Colo., and a production plant in Albany, P.E.I.

http://www.amherstdaily.com/index.cfm?sid=268027&sc=508

~~~~~~~~~~~

Wind company ordered to pay back wages

CBC News

The P.E.I. Labour Department ordered a wind energy company this week to pay its employees the back wages owed to them.

Some employees who work for Entegrity Wind Systems have told CBC News their employer hasn’t paid them in weeks.

In mid-June, Entegrity told all of its 35 employees to stay home after it began to experience financial troubles.

Most of the employees affected worked in Charlottetown while some worked at a factory in Albany, P.E.I.

Malcolm Lodge, the chief technical officer with Entegrity, said the company did not see any problems beforehand.

"It happened fairly quickly and some large customers who had gone part of the way into purchases of numbers of machines scaled back their purchases," Lodge told CBC News on Friday.

"We had thought we would ride it through. We've now had to downsize the company a bit," he said.

Entegrity, which has been operating in the province since 2004, manufactures 50-kilowatt wind turbines that are suitable for small businesses and farms.

The company maintains operations in Prince Edward Island and in Boulder, Colo.

Entegrity sent a letter to its suppliers and customers in June to inform them that the economic slowdown in the U.S. has affected its overall sales.

The provincial government lent approximately $400,000 to the company. Lodge said a portion of that loan has been repaid.

Lodge said the company is currently seeking financing from both the public and private sectors so it can continue its operations.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/prince-edward-island/story/2009/07/10/pei-entegrity-layoffs.html

Wednesday, July 8, 2009

Study to determine health effects of turbines

Sarah Boesveld

From Wednesday's Globe and Mail

By now, the residents of Wolfe Island, Ont., are getting used to the whirr and thump of wind turbines overhead. By next year, they'll get a glimpse of whether those whirrs and thumps could be damaging their health.

Researchers at nearby Queen's University have embarked on the first study to probe whether wind turbines built over communities can cause adverse health effects. The study measures residents' health and well-being before the turbines arrived on the island, again when the turbines were built but not yet operational and again after they'd been operating for a few months.

People living close to turbines in other regions have reported nausea, headaches, dizziness, anxiety, sleep deprivation and tinnitus - an incessant ringing in a person's ears.

However, there has yet to be any substantive research linking those ailments to the presence of windmills, says lead study author Neal Michelutti, a research scientist in the Queen's University biology department.

"To our knowledge, this is the first time that people have acquired a snapshot of community health prior to wind turbines," he says. "It gives us [a sense of] community health that we can use in a before-and-after comparison."

The issue of health has become a lightning rod in the debate dividing communities where wind farms have been built, Wolfe Island being no exception.

While the Ontario government recently legislated a 550 metre setback for wind turbines, the 86 machines on Wolfe Island that officially hissed to life on June 26, are only 400 metres from people's homes.

Last July, Dr. Michelutti and his Queen's colleagues mailed out 1,000 SF36 surveys, a standard, multipurpose health questionnaire, to every registered address on Wolfe Island. Between 150 and 200 people returned the anonymous surveys.

On the survey, residents gave a snapshot of their general health, describing any illnesses or health problems both physical and emotional and sharing their level of physical activity and mental concentration. The researchers sent a second questionnaire asking about symptoms commonly reported by people living near wind turbines and for the residents' attitudes toward the wind project.

The same survey was completed this spring and another will be mailed in late August after the turbines have chopped the air for two months. When the third round of surveys comes back, Dr. Michelutti and his colleagues will analyze the data to find out whether community health has suffered, he says.

They plan to follow up on an annual or biannual basis for a number of years to see whether the health impacts, if any, continue to persist or crop up later. It's tricky to attribute ill health effects to turbines, without knowing a person's health beforehand, Dr. Michelutti says, which is why a before-and-after comparison is so crucial.

"A lot of these symptoms are pretty commonly reported symptoms - anxiety, sleeplessness, these sort of things," he says. "It's difficult without having that baseline data to attribute them to a specific cause and effect like the windmills."

Questions in the second survey which ask whether a respondent is for or against the wind farm may help them find out if symptoms are psychosomatic, he says.

Previous research, much of which has not been peer reviewed, links wind turbines with a variety of physical and emotional problems. Researchers in Portugal claimed the turbines contributed to "vibroacoustic disease," a full body reaction to low frequency noise that affects the auditory and vestibular system, which controls a person's ability to balance. A pediatrician in the United States coined the term "wind turbine syndrome" to describe the symptoms people experience from living near wind turbines, such as sleep disturbance, headache, vertigo, ear pressure, tachycardia (rapid heart rate) and concentration and memory problems.

Wind-farm construction has polarized communities across the country. Those in favour of wind energy say the environmental and economic benefits are plenty. Those against the farms have argued that they are annoying, disruptive and that they are harming the health of residents.

Dr. Michelutti says he and his colleagues are neutral on the issue and have not accepted funding from any anti-wind turbine groups or wind-energy development companies.

"What's important to note is no one on this study is against windmills," he says. "I think most people think windmills are great, but the question is does it make sense to build them on top of communities? Really what we're hoping our study can contribute is information on proper setbacks for the turbines."

Conducting unbiased research on the health effects of living near wind turbines is key, says Robert McMurtry, a professor emeritus at University of Western Ontario and former assistant deputy minister of population and public health at Health Canada. Such a hot button issue deserves proper tracking in order to advise on setback rates for future wind farms, he says.

"Repeating it in year two and three will really add important information to the understanding," he says. "And then if you start doing correlations between setbacks and health problems, that will be very important too."


http://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/health/study-to-determine-health-effects-of-turbines/article1210357/

Monday, June 29, 2009

Digby wind project slowed

Environmental approval requires more information

PLANS TO BUILD a wind turbine park for Digby Neck hit a snag this month when Nova Scotia’s deputy minister of environment told an executive at Skypower Corp. in a letter that more information about the project is needed before an environmental assessment application is approved.



Skypower Corp. of Toronto and Scotian Windfields of Dartmouth have jointly proposed a 30-megawatt wind farm on Digby Neck comprised of 20 wind turbines, each generating 1.5 megawatts of electricity.

The proponents have said they hoped to begin construction by September, pending permits and approvals.

On June 19, deputy minister Nancy Vanstone released the decision on behalf of the environment minister. In it, she said local residents expressed concern over the potential noise from the wind farm.

"The registration document failed to provide sufficient detailed information about the proximity of nearby residents to the turbines," she said.

She asked for more details, including the number of homes, daycares, hospitals or seniors residences located within intervals of 600 metres, one kilometre, 1.5 kilometres, and two kilometres of the proposed turbines.

New information must be submitted within a year as an addendum to the original environmental assessment application, said Ms. Vanstone.

The minister would then have 50 days to make a decision, she said.

"The actual (environmental assessment application) wasn’t denied. The minister has just requested more information," said Tanya Bragg of Skypower.

She said the company plans to meet soon with environment department officials to find out what else they might require.

"We’re going to provide that to them," she said Thursday from Toronto. "We’re hoping it will not take a year."

Municipality of Digby Warden Jim Thurber said Thursday that he doesn’t know much about the request for additional information.

"I haven’t even seen (the) letter. We didn’t receive a copy of anything," Mr. Thurber said.

"In speaking with Skypower not too long ago, they had more or less told me that they were going to try and switch some of the turbines around to have all of them more than 600 metres from the closest home."

"It’s a project that...I support and I hope is able to go forward," he said.

A group of concerned residents held a public meeting last month, where it was said 20 homes were located within 700 metres of a proposed turbine, and 70 homes were found within 1.2 kilometres of a proposed turbine.

Evelyn Hayden lives in Rossway, on Digby Neck, and said she’s glad more work has to be done.

"I’m very, very pleased," she said Thursday.

Ms. Hayden said she lives 600 to 650 metres from one of the proposed wind turbines, according to information she’s seen.

"I’m glad they really took it to heart and looked at it very deeply and thoroughly," she said about the environment department.

"All we’re asking for . . . is to get these things set back away from the homes. I mean, why won’t they do it?

"At least one and a half kilometres from any building that is occupied by humans — that’s all we ask."


http://thechronicleherald.ca/Search/1129222.html


Minister's decision can be found at:

http://www.gov.ns.ca/nse/ea/digby.wind.sky.power.asp

Monday, June 22, 2009

While we hold our breath waiting for July 7th .....

.... when the RFP for small renewables are due for submission to NSPI, following are a few pieces from other places around the world. The people of the Gulf Shore are not the only ones with concerns and questions.

This is an editorial from today's East Orgegonian.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Slow down the rush of siting wind turbines in our Blue Mountains

Successive generations of children growing up in Eastern Oregon may never know we were once surrounded by an expansive and majestic landscape devoid of wind turbines. Already the foothills that display a beauty all their own are becoming something of an anomaly.

Wind turbines - and the necessity of high-voltage power lines to access the energy they produce - are the most recent threat to our Blue Mountains.

The initial step in the wind turbine issue begins Thursday, when the Umatilla County Planning Commission holds the first of several meetings to consider a local proposal to protect a chunk of our county as a viewshed (a subsequent meeting is set for July 23).

The commission's charge will be to decide whether the area is a "significant resource" to protect.

Of that, there is no doubt. That means the next steps - including an analysis of economic, environmental, energy and social impacts - will determine the future of wind turbines in northeastern Umatilla County. We ask for a slow, thoughtful process that provides a reasonable set of guidelines. Those guidelines must consider a balanced approach.

While we strongly support the environmental benefits of wind energy, we also must remember that wind is an emerging technology. There are many unanswered questions about it.

The wind isn't a consistent source of energy, for example, something highly important to energy resource managers. The wind also blows primarily at night, when energy usage is at its lowest. So, storage of electricity becomes a major issue.

Other concerns include the effect on wildlife - for example, sediment runoff from the roads necessary for the operation of the wind turbines could negatively effect salmon runs. There's also the potential harm to birds and the possible negative impact of noise on elk herds. One thing is for sure: There needs to be much more independent research on wind energy.

The rush to obtain wind turbine easements and leases by a number of new companies - including some foreign-based firms - is also a concern. Just ask some of the landowners in oil- and gas-rich states how they or their relatives were duped by wildcat well exploration drillers. There is also the troubling issue about what happens if the turbines become obsolete or are abandoned. There are many areas of this country where the extraction of coal and other natural resources have left the land scarred and almost worthless. Rusting oilfield equipment is also commonplace in the Southwest U.S.

We know contracts for wind turbine leases have provided an economic boon for some in this region at a time when it was desperately needed. Lands that offered a marginal subsistence are, at least for now, somewhat economically viable. That's important for the health of the region.

To that end, we urge a strong measure of caution as we seek to balance the short- and long-term benefits to our economy from this new source of revenue with the overarching need to preserve our viewscape now and for future generations.

Thousands of wind turbines are already marching across vast areas of Eastern Oregon - many are almost obscured from sight. Does it not make sense to continue developing out-of-sight wind farms without completely submitting our entire panorama to a parade of towering steel sentinels? After all, these are not small structures. These are massive structures - up to 400-500 feet in height. By comparison, the KOIN Center in Portland is 509 feet tall.

We wonder, in retrospect, if Celilo Falls would vanish if the decision on hydro power was being made today. Are there areas so important for their beauty they merit preservation? Could we have harnessed the potential of the Columbia River without sacrificing a natural wonder? Today, there's not an inch of Eastern Oregon where the Columbia still flows freely.

Certainly, Eastern Oregon is a resource-based economy. Our land, our timber and our water have long contributed to our well-being. We attempt to carefully use what we have to sustain our economy. It's a delicate balance between the present economy and choices that could obliterate the landscape.

We simply ask for a dose of good sense in siting decisions. While we can't totally harness the wind, we can demand a slow and thoughtful process for the placement of wind turbines in our region.

To achieve that, the county - as well as the state - should not approve random sitings without a master plan. That will require time and cooperation. The first step begins Thursday.

Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board, comprised of Associate Publisher Kathryn Brown, General Manager Wendy DalPez, Managing Editor Skip Nichols, News Editor Daniel Wattenburger and Senior Reporter Dean Brickey. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian.

http://eastoregonian.com/main.asp?SectionID=14&SubSectionID=50&ArticleID=94268