From time to time Mr. Wiley on his Cape Vincent blog JLL tells us regarding industrial wind development that we must be good "Gate Keepers" to protect the 1000 Islands. I couldn't agree more! Looks like Clayton is a better "Gate Keeper" than CV on that account...well sort of!
As part of
the Art. X process regarding the siting
of the BP Cape Vincent Wind plant, CV has asked Clayton as a stakeholder to
support CV’s zoning law and wind regulations. The TI Sun has reported that the Clayton Town
Board is willing to support CV’s right to home rule, but won’t support CV’s
zoning because it allows industrial wind turbines too close to the scenic 1000
Islands and the St. Lawrence River.
Now this is
a hoot! Clayton doesn’t think CV’s wind
zoning is tough enough on the scenic protections. Can you imagine that???? In fact I have been
doing a series of posts on this zoning law issue and it’s failures in scenic
protections in an effort to appease Art. X. So this fits right in.
Note to CV zoning experts: Clayton is right! Well sort of!
In light of
this it is extremely ironic that the Cape
Vincent Town board was willing to have someone arrested at a public hearing on
their law because the citizen wanted a little extra time to speak on that very
point of insufficient scenic protections from industrial wind development in
the CV law, rather than a ridiculous three stinking minutes! Clayton took a couple weeks and came to a
somewhat similar conclusion. Geee I
wonder if the CV Town Board will march down and demand that the Clayton Town
Supervisor Justin Taylor be arrested!!!
Funny…it seems
to me there have been some people (me for one) saying for
a very very long time what the Clayton Town Board is now finally waking up to,
that CV’s traditional zoning law approach
does not sufficiently address the scenic protection issue. But we are called radicals, extremists,
fringe voices, nut cases, and lunatics
having hissy fits when we talk about serious protection efforts that might
actually make a difference to protect our communities and region from the
visual blight of industrial wind development.
Of course
our solution is not to be swept up in this ridiculous Art. X setback game like
CV AND Clayton, but to create an effective solution and demand and declare the
rights to enforce it, and prohibit what is painfully obvious can’t be mitigated
by zoning, and really protect the precious scenic resources of our area.
But step back Clayton and don’t pat yourself on
the back too hard! Just like CV you are playing this same inane setback game
deluded into thinking you can actually control the visual impact of gigantic
500 ft. towers with spinning blades and flashing lights with traditional
zoning.
All the Clayton zoning does is force the terrible impacts further back
and on someone else who apparently they think like CV doesn’t deserve the same protections. This is
the extreme fallacy of wind zoning. You can
rearrange the deck chairs on the Titanic all you want, but the ship is still
going to sink and somebody WILL have to pay the price for this type of flawed push
back zoning thinking.
The Clayton
Town Board’s awakening that CV’s law is not sufficient scenic protection is
just one more step in the long tedious and painful evolutionary thinking
process I have watched since 2006. It
will at some point drive people to the realization that traditional zoning is a
mistake and cannot effectively protect us from an impact too large to
control. Removal is the only viable sane
solution if you really want to talk about the protection of our treasured
scenic 1000 Islands region.
If we all
have a responsibility to be “Gate Keepers”
for the protection of the 1000 Island region, like Wiley says on his JLL blog, then
before it is too late we better wake up and ALL OF US better lock the f*!%ing gate!!!!
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