One thing that has become clear over the past couple of years is that notwithstanding their reputation for being green, grassroots Vermonters have no inclination to grant free rein to renewable-energy developers. While they recognize the environmental imperative to promote sustainable energy, they are not about to subordinateย their reverence for the stateโ€™s landscape or itsย tradition of local control to accomplishย that worthy end.

The most prominent Upper Valley example, perhaps, was Green Mountain Powerโ€™s bid to erect 19,000 solar panels on about 35ย acres of state land at the Southeast Correctional Facility in Windsor, a proposal thatย collapsed in Januaryย amid intense local opposition. Not only would the project, one of the largest in the state, have encroached on land with panoramic views that had been prizedย for decades by birdwatchers, hikers and hunters, but also the town and its residents were informed of its existence only after GMP and the state had been in negotiations on a lease agreement for 10 months or more. The process as much as the proposal outraged the town.

In Windsorโ€™s case,ย GMP withdrew the projectย after the Selectboard voted 5-0 to opposeย it;ย thus it never reached the stateโ€™s Public Service Board, the three-member quasi-judicial body that, under currentย law, exercises authority overย solar and wind projects in furtherance of the stateโ€™s aggressive goals for developing renewable energy. As the number of proposed projects has spiked, so have complaints that municipalities and ordinary citizensย have too little say in the process. More thanย 100 communities have petitioned the Legislature for a more meaningful role in siting decisions.

The result is a bill passed by the Senate at the end of Marchย that isย now being considered in the House, where its future is uncertain at best. The legislationย attempts to address the concern over local participation by establishing a new municipal and regional planning process for utility-sized projectsย to which the PSB would be obliged to defer unless thereย was clear evidence that aย projectโ€™s public benefit outweighed the priorities delineated in a municipal plan. It does not, however, provide communities with veto power over projects withinย their borders;ย the plans, which would be subject to stateย certification, would have to identify acceptable sites as well as land that townsย want to protect or consider otherwise unsuitable.

The Senateโ€™s handiwork has critics in both camps. One sideย complains that it does not provide municipalities with any real authority, leaves too much control with the PSB and does nothing substantive to address ongoing noise concerns associated with wind projects. For her part, Public Service Board member Margaret Cheney, of Norwich, last week identifiedย for two House committees flaws she foundย in the bill and detailed efforts the PSB was already undertaking to make it easier for the public to participate in a complex regulatory process. According toย VtDigger, Cheney, a former lawmaker,ย criticized as vague and subjectiveย some of the key language and standards that would be established, and argued that the regime proposed by the Senate failedย to provide needed โ€œconsistency and predictability.โ€

Just because a proposedย solution draws fire from opposing sides doesnโ€™tย mean that it is an effective, down-the-middle compromise. Yet we think that what the Senate is attempting is worthwhile and how it is attempting to do it reasonableย โ€” striking a balance amongย important values. The leaders of the green revolutionย needย millions of followersย to man the barricades if climate change is to be subdued. The way to create a mighty army of Vermonters is not toย ignore theirย rightย to meaningful participationย or toย despoilย iconic landscape, even if the cost is a somewhat more cumbersome review process for renewable energy projects. Inviting the people in is never a bad idea in the mansion of democratic politics, even if they make things a little messier.ย ย 

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