BY TINA LAM
FREE PRESS STAFF WRITERLANSING -- Dozens of angry people showed up
at a public meeting Monday to complain to the Public Service
Commission about how their lives have been changed for the worse by
annoying wind turbines, and to recommend that if the state plans
thousands more, they should be built as far as possible from homes.
Some neighbors of 78 turbines in the Thumb area said they are
constantly disturbed by vibrations they can feel inside their
bedrooms, the inability to sleep and a persistent hum that can't be
drowned out by earplugs or masked with background noise.
"I am the collateral damage," said Mary Nowak of Ubly, where a wind
farm opened a year ago. Nowak said three giant turbines behind her
house have led to pounding sounds she can't escape.
"We've been chased out of our home," said Marilyn Peplinski, whose
family spends some nights in an apartment.
The mostly anti-turbine crowd said those pushing for more wind
energy in Michigan have paid too little attention to complaints about
health issues and that turbine setbacks need to be much farther than
Huron County's required 1,000 feet.
The commission is expected to report to state legislators soon on
how many wind energy zones it recommends and whether the state should
set requirements on setbacks and noise limits. Now, such decisions are
made locally. A state wind board has recommended up to 4,000 turbines
in four regions, including 2,800 in the Thumb.
Jeanne Henry, a real estate agent in Caseville, said she fears
property values will plummet if turbines are closer than a mile to
residences.
"We'll be an industrial blight zone," she said.
"If you make the setback a mile, there will be no more wind farms,
I guarantee," said James Manning of J.W. Great Lakes Wind LLC, a
Cleveland wind developer.
He said Michigan has plenty to gain from more wind development,
including manufacturing jobs.