Sunday, August 28, 2011

Wind power supporters to hold informational session in Cape Vincent

SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 2011


CAPE VINCENT — The New York Wind Education Collaborative will hold an educational wind energy forum from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Cape Vincent Recreation Park, 602 S. James St.
The collaborative is a conglomeration of the Alliance for Clean Energy New York, Albany; Citizens Campaign for the Environment, Farmingdale; and Pace Energy and Climate Center at Pace Law School, Westchester.

Cape to fill Planning Board vacancies in November

   Link here to continue reading  Watertown Daily Times | Cape to fill Planning Board vacancies in November

PLANNING BOARD: Town accepting formal applications to review next month
By JAEGUN LEE
TIMES STAFF WRITER
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 2011


CAPE VINCENT — The Town Council has set Nov. 10 as its goal to fill vacancies on the Cape Vincent Planning Board.

Six people have expressed interest so far, and one candidate — Robert S. Brown, a Cape Vincent Zoning Board of Appeals member and past chairman and 28-year member of the town of Bern, Pa., Zoning Hearing Board — had submitted his formal application as of Friday, Supervisor Urban K. Hirschey said.

Orleans Town Council to consider strict wind power zoning regulations

  Link here to continue reading  Watertown Daily Times Orleans Town Council to consider strict wind power zoning regulations
By NANCY MADSEN
TIMES STAFF WRITER
SUNDAY, AUGUST 28, 2011


LAFARGEVILLE — The Orleans Town Council is weighing zoning law amendments that will make its rules for wind turbine placement among the most restrictive in the region.

The town of Henderson banned all wind energy towers in November. Orleans would still allow commercial and residential turbines, but the noise and setback rules would make placing turbines in the town very difficult. A public hearing continued from Aug. 11 will be reconvened at 8 p.m. Sept. 8 at the town offices, 20558 Sunrise Ave. Copies of the law are available at the town office.

Friday, August 26, 2011

Cape Vincent rescinds illegal local election law

    Link here to continue reading   Watertown Daily Times Cape Vincent rescinds illegal local election law

3-2 VOTE: Wind proponents sought to keep anti-wind seasonal residents from voting in November election
By JAEGUN LEE
TIMES STAFF WRITER
FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 2011


CAPE VINCENT — The town board rescinded Thursday an earlier, “invalid” decision to force voters to show their driver’s licenses, with a Cape Vincent address, in order to vote in a town election.

The motion was made by Supervisor Urban K. Hirschey and seconded by Councilman Brooks J. Bragdon, both of whom had voted against the Aug. 11 resolution.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Parishville puts brakes on wind law, says draft two months away

 Link here to continue reading   Watertown Daily Times Parishville puts brakes on wind law, says draft two months awayAfter months of stressing the need to have a local wind law in place, Parishville officials have put the brakes on the process.

Town Supervisor Jerry G. Moore said there is no longer a sense of urgency to develop a wind law after learning the town was years away from seeing any type of wind development.

“Let’s face it. It’s going to be a four- or five-year process, so we have plenty of time,” he said. “There is no hurry.

Tuesday, August 23, 2011

P’burgh extends wind farm moratorium - Bath, NY - The Courier

 Link here to continue reading P-burgh-extends-wind-farm-moratorium"Prattsburgh
By Mary Perham
Bath Courier
Posted Aug 21, 2011 @ 12:00 PM

NY — The moratorium on wind farm construction in the Town of Prattsburgh will continue for another six months.
The town board approved the extension at this week’s meeting by a 3-1 vote.
Prattsburgh Town Supervisor Al Wordingham said the extension will allow the town’s comprehensive plan to be completed.

Saturday, August 20, 2011

The Journal | Young Announces Hammond Council Candidacy

 Link here to continue reading   The Journal Young Announces Hammond Council Candidacy
By MATT MCALLISTER
SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 2011


HAMMOND - Republican Merritt V. Young formally announced his candidacy for town council Friday, saying he supports the direction in which the current town supervisor is taking the town.

"I think the supervisor has a healthy agenda," Mr. Young said of Republican Town Supervisor Ronald W. Bertram, who will see competition for his seat this November from Democrat Michele W. McQueer. "My main goal is to continue the progress."

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

AG calls Cape Vincent resolution unconstitutional

 Watertowntimes AG TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2011
calls Cape Vincent resolution unconstitutional


TUESDAY, AUGUST 16, 2011

At an editorial board meeting with the Watertown Daily Times, the state's lawyer said that he's glad he hasn't had to deal with Cape Vincent's law requiring that voters have driver's licenses with CV addresses.

"Because it's unconstitutional," Mr. Schneiderman said.

So that should put this puppy to rest.

For background: Cape Vincent is in the middle of a fight over wind turbine projects. To outsiders, wind turbines seem like the most inoffensive source of energy ever — wind can't be depleted, and it's not like wind turbines are going to throw the Earth of its axis (for the culturally unhip: The Onion is satire).   link here to read entire story


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Tuesday, August 16, 2011

AG calls Cape Vincent resolution unconstitutional

AG calls Cape Vincent resolution unconstitutional

At an editorial board meeting with the Watertown Daily Times, the state's lawyer said that he's glad he hasn't had to deal with Cape Vincent's law requiring that voters have driver's licenses with CV addresses.
"Because it's unconstitutional," Mr. Schneiderman said.
So that should put this puppy to rest.

Friday, August 12, 2011

" DONNY'S LAW "~ 2 Audio interviews Donny Mason & Urban hirschey

Channel 7 has for some reason disabled this video and removed this story from their website. there is a transcript from the video below






Story Published: Aug 12, 2011 at 6:39 AM EDT
link here
(Story Updated: Aug 12, 2011 at 6:39 AM EDT )
A divided town council in Cape Vincent decided 3-2 Thursday night to require people to produce a driver's license before they can vote.

The license would have to show a Cape Vincent address.

The vote came as supporters and opponents of wind power each try to control town government.

There are more seasonal residents than permanent residents in Cape Vincent, and wind power opponents have encouraged seasonal residents to change their voting registration to Cape Vincent.

Thursday night's law is a way to stop that: presumably, most seasonal residents would not change their driver's licence.

Town council member Donald Mason, who introduced the law, told 7 News "This isn't a wind issue. This is a voter fraud issue as far as I'm concerned."

But the two council members who voted against the law quickly dismissed it as illegal.

"I guess we're gonna leave it to the courts to decide, but it clearly violates any voting regulation that I know of, " said town supervisor Urban Hirschey.

Several experts in state voting law told 7 News the law is not legal. In general, election laws do not require voters to present additional proof before voting.




Thursday, August 11, 2011

Donna Essegian Privledge of the Floor Cape Vincent TB 8/11/2011

Donna Essegian
Comments to Town Board August 11, 2011
Tonight I want to express my concerns about any PILOT that could come through industrial wind development and also express my concerns about the Acciona economic Impact Report presented last evening in Three Mile bay.
I attended the Acciona presentation on their Economic impact study. One of the papers that Mr. Conboy provided explained the pilot payment process. Remember that PILOT (payment in lieu of taxes) allows a developer to make payments at a significant reduction of the regular tax rate. Mr. Conboy explained that the Acciona Pilot would split payments to five jurisdictions: Town of Cape Vincent, Thousand Islands Schools, Jefferson County, Town of Lyme and Lyme Central Schools. HE used the Galloo Island PILOT as an example to show how the money could be divided. The Galloo Island PILOT gives 50% of payments to Jefferson County, Sacketts harbor Central Schools get 35% and Town of Hounsfield gets15%.

Any PILOT to be negoated for the Acciona industrial wind development would not have to be divided this way, but it will be split among five entities, not three. Using Mr. Conboy’s example of the payment rate at 8,500 for each megawatt of power developed, Acciona would pay a little over $20 million for the St. Lawrence Wind Farm over 20 years, or about $1 million a year. That has to be divided five ways, not three as in the case of Galloo island. I listened carefully to this example and became very concerned about the actual amount of money that would come to our town and school district. Although Mr. Conboy ‘s report states that there will be no reduction of property values in our town, there is much evidence to the contrary, a fact that he simply rejected last night. If our town assessments are lowered and if we lose any tourist dollars, I believe that this town could actually lose money from three PILOTS being suggested by both the proposed Acciona and BP projects. We cannot afford to have this happen. As town leaders, you must devote time to develop full understanding of all the possible income sources to our town and what impact the PILOT might be able to provide. I am worried that it will not be to our advantage and I believe it is your job to question everything any developer presents to you. Overall, this very complex issue cannot be taken lightly. At the end of the evening last night , I thought to myself… maybe Don Mason is right on this one… he told me twice in the past year that a PILOT will not lower our taxes, maybe just not have them go up so fast.

Overall Acciona Economic impact study is simply disturbing. The data used to prove no loss of property values was collected from 1996- 2007 and the sample of home sales had 86% of the sold homes having no turbine view. Even though they were in a one – five mile radius of a wind turbine. This is due to geography of the area. Our town is basically flat and both the Acciona and BP view shed information they have provided states that almost all of the proposed 137 turbines will be visible to most homes in our town. This major difference makes the study cited by the Acciona report irrelevant to our town. He also noted that because the number of visitors at Cedar Point and Burnham State parks showed a slight increase from 2009-2010 that we would not lose tourists to our town. I simply fail to see that connection! Last, he said there were 54 leaseholders in the Acciona project and that the payments to them are cash crop payments that would save the dairy farmers. We have only 10 active dairy farms in Cape Vincent, so all those leaseholders are not farmers. Overall the quality of the report is poor and I would hope that you spend no time reviewing this document… instead focus on understanding not the unique situation of any possible PILOT that has to be divided five ways, not three like the rest of the projects in NYS!


Donna Essegian
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Additionally, before Donna Essegian was able to return to her chair Donny Mason felt it necessary to give a rebuttal to Donna's statement ~

Don Mason is right on this one… he told me twice in the past year that a PILOT will not lower our taxes, maybe just not have them go up so fast.
Mason denied saying any such thing.


Clayton wind amendments adopted, council to tackle noise levels next

  Link here to continue reading  Clayton wind amendments adopted, council to tackle noise levels next
By JAEGUN LEE
TIMES STAFF WRITER
THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2011


CLAYTON — The Town Council, upon approving a stricter wind-power zoning law unanimously Wednesday night, pledged to put a stricter cap on wind turbine noise levels soon.

“I think we all agree that we need to drop this level from 50,” said Christopher D. Matthews, referring to the town’s 50-decibel noise limit for commercial wind turbines under Local Law No. 1 of 2007.

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Wind meeting yields many questions, fewer answers

 Link here to continue reading   Watertown Daily Times Wind meeting yields many questions, fewer answers

By MATTHEW BULTMAN
JOHNSON NEWSPAPERS
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 2011


HOPKINTON — Don’t expect to see wind turbines popping up around Parishville and Hopkinton in the near future.

The towns held a joint meeting with Iberdrola Renewables Inc. on Monday night to discuss the power company’s interest in creating a wind farm in the area. But about the only thing the power company could say with certainty is that a lot of questions remain.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Vote to take back the Cape Vincent board

Vote to take back the Cape Vincent board

THURSDAY, AUGUST 4, 2011


The Cape Vincent Town Board has been called a circus. The reasons are simple: conflict of interest, unethical behavior, secret meetings, slush fund ($160,000) and missing funds.

Don Mason, Marty Mason and Mickey Orvis are the circus. Their three votes control everything, including who will be on the Planning Board. As you have seen at the last appointments, these same three men appointed Patrick McCarthy, who never showed up for an interview. Then he quit. Also, appointed to the Planning Board was Tom Rienbeck after the people voted him out as supervisor, and he also quit. These three men also have condoned Chairman Richard Edsal’s arrogant, disrespectful treatment of the people at the meetings. The board demands respect and rightfully so, but don’t the people, taxpayers deserve the same courtesy? The Town Board has 60 days to name a Planning Board chairman. I wonder who Mason, Mason and Orvis will pick? How can they vote on whom to put on the lead agency (the Planning Board) when they have signed a contract to help the wind companies and are receiving funds from them. Imagine that.

It’s been said the Republican Party has been hijacked. Why? Because we have more people going to the meetings. We have a fundraising committee with money in it. We also have good candidates running. Remember, folks, the good ole boys, the Republican co-chairmen, refused to endorse or help their candidates in the last election. Now one of them, Marty Mason, wants your vote. Right.

Folks, let’s hijack our town board. We can start in September with the primary. Vote Urban Hirschey, Clifford Schneider, John Byrne and Colleen Knuth. They are people who will represent us, the folks, not themselves, their families and friends.


I’ve written many letters asking what about the people? Now I have to ask, what’s wrong with us people? Folks, I know it’s much easier to voice your concerns to friends, family and neighbors, but it does little good. Not registering to vote, not voting and not attending the meetings is worse. Remember, by not getting involved we are condoning this corruption.

If you love this town as I do, please vote, voice your concerns, and we can take our town back, as we did the Republican Party.

In closing don’t refer to Mason, Mason and Orvis as clowns in this circus. Clowns are supposed to be amusing. These guys are not. These guys are messing with the biggest financial investment you have made, your home value, and that is not funny. With your help, and I’m begging you, help us shut down this circus. Help us bring back the respect and dignity the town of Cape Vincent once had.

Harry Landers Jr.

Cape Vincent

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Vote Cape wind leaseholders out of office

 Vote Cape wind leaseholders out of office
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 3, 2011

While registering people to vote in Cape Vincent, a gentleman informed me that the wind-leaseholding town board members Marty and Donny Mason have never voted on any wind issue.

In just the past 10 months, the following acts demonstrate the councilmen with wind leases have used their official capacity to advance their private wind business.

In October 2010, the Masons did indeed abstain from voting on doing a valid sound study. Their ally, Micky Orvis, voted no and the motion failed. A valid sound study would have protected the community as a whole, but it would have slowed their wind projects.

In December 2010, they tabled a resolution which would have required now ex-Planning Board Chairman Richard (Richie) Edsall to recuse himself from both wind projects since he is a leaseholder. They said, “Talk to Richie.” Richie was never “talked” to.


In December 2010, they appointed Patrick McCarthy to the Planning Board. He has resigned, without notice, saying he was put on the board to do wind and since Article X is passed, he is out of there. His lack of concern for the other issues before the board, like the Angel Rock development, is disturbing, but even worse is what it means about the leaseholding councilmen who put him on the Planning Board. That apple did not fall far from its tree.

In January 2011, at the request of Acciona project manager Tim Conboy, the leaseholding council members voted to have the town supervisor investigated for releasing Freedom of Information documents proving the sound study of British Petroleum and Acciona was fraudulent.

This is a very clear example of using official positions to protect their private business. The wind leaseholding greenshirts called it “payback” during that meeting’s privilege of the floor. The supervisor has been officially cleared of any wrongdoing.

At a town board work session, Donald Mason said he would vote on a wind law. A law firm specializing in wind development told him he could. The fact that that law firm, White, Osterman and Hanna, also represents our Planning Board is further proof of malfeasance by the leaseholding officials who hired a law firm that specializes in skirting laws to install wind complexes.

We, as citizens, have the obligation to vote out of office the leaseholding council members who cannot seem to understand what a conflict of interest is.

Please register to vote, and vote for Urban Hirschey, Clif Schneider, John Byrne, Colleen Knuth and John Blodgett.

Hester Chase

Cape Vincent

Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Hirschey, supporters resort to censorship

Hirschey, supporters resort to censorship

TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2011

Something interesting is happening with comments posted under articles in the Times on the wind issue in Cape Vincent lately. Supporters of Urban Hirschey, the town supervisor running for re-election, like R. Wiley, owner of the blog Jefferson’s Leaning Left (JLL), seem to be deleting their own posts as soon as the debate questioning the actions of their candidates becomes uncomfortable. Instead rebuttals appear on Wiley’s blog where it is a nice safe environment for them to “debate” without challenge. A place where JLL censors comments, just as he does mine.

Apparently they can’t keep up in an uncensored forum. Having to run away and hide on a safe blog to make comments that support their candidates makes their candidates look weak and disingenuous, especially when those candidates run on the mantra of “open government” and use these very blogs as a platform for their message. How can you promote open government and discussion when you have to protect your candidates by running away to a blog where comments are censored and only one side of the important wind debate gets discussed?

Mr. Hirschey, Clifford Schneider and John Byrne, who know this is going on, should stand up to the debate and publicly distance themselves from this nonsense on both Cape Vincent blogs. Any candidate running on open government and open discussion who endorses a blog and supporters who must hide from the debate under the cover and protection of a tightly controlled blog, calls these candidates’ integrity into question. Especially when these candidates know what their supporters are doing.
What are they afraid of?

The blog JLL and the Cape Vincent blog Pandora’s Box of Rocks, as well as the Wind Power Ethics Group e-mail list, all of which were open to all kinds of wind discussion, are now on a tight information lockdown in order to get the Hirschey candidates elected, candidates who ironically preach “open government.”

Like it or not, these blogs have been the open line of information and communication on the wind issue in the small, relatively isolated community of Cape Vincent. But suddenly on an issue of historical importance, everything is being filtered through the voice of one candidate and his supporters. As I said, if Hirschey, Byrne and Schneider are strong, responsible candidates for Cape Vincent, they should not tolerate this from their supporters, nor should they need censorship from their supporters to protect them.

Art Pundt

Cape Vincent

Seasonal residents could determine the outcome of Cape Vincent’s Republican primary in September

   Link here to continue reading  Watertown Daily Times Seasonal residents could determine the outcome of Cape Vincent’s Republican primary in September

cape vincent grassroots efFort: Wind power development sparks push in September GOP primaries
By JAEGUN LEE
TIMES STAFF WRITER
TUESDAY, AUGUST 2, 2011


CAPE VINCENT — The town is headed into a heated Republican primary in September with a large number of seasonal residents signing up to vote since the launch of a “grassroots” voter registration drive in May.

As of Monday morning, 213 residents have registered to vote in Cape Vincent over the last three months, 195 of them as Republicans, according to the Jefferson County Board of Elections.

Monday, August 1, 2011

A protest petition signed by Land owners that oppose the updated zoning law

August 1, 2012 The Cape Vincent Town Board  held a public meeting to adopt the newly updated Comprehensive Plan and zoning law. 
A protest petition signed by Land owners that oppose the updated zoning law