Tuesday, May 15, 2007
from the Kennebec Journal
PROPANE NO QUICK FIX
AUGUSTA Penny saved is a stamp forever Cost to mail regular letter rises 1 cent on Monday
CENTRAL MAINE Area residents' scrap metal rising to top of heap
Dunn celebrates 35 years as fire chief
Maranacook set for budget tests
FARMINGDALE NEVER FORGET
HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL ROUNDUP: Rankin sparks Black Bears
Morang stymies Bulldogs in only 2nd varsity start
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Kennebec Journal
from the Morning Sentinel
Auctioneer sues woman over $300,000 Internet purchase
Prison time awaits
Waterville writer wins this year's Young Lions Fiction Award
Rising prices for scrap metal attract sellers to local facility
Colby seniors celebrate end of classes
JUDGES CHOOSE YOUTH OF YEAR Gary Fearon a 17-year-old member of Penobscot Nation Boys & Girls Club, a satellite unit of Waterville Area Boys & Girls Club
Biathlon might skip out on Fort Kent
HUSKIES COLLECT 1ST WIN
All of today's:
News | Sports
from the Morning Sentinel
Voters will decide June 12 whether or not to repeal the Commercial Development Review Ordinance, which they approved in August of last year.
A public hearing to discuss the ordinance has been scheduled for 7 p.m. tonight at the Grange Hall.
The ordinance was developed in response to Portland-based Competitive Energy Services plans to install three electricity generating wind turbines on Beaver Ridge.
While the Planning Board approved the turbines, the Board of Appeals rejected the project in March after finding it failed to meet the noise levels and bonding requirements spelled out in the commercial development ordinance.
Competitive Energy has since filed an appeal in Waldo County Superior Court, but Glen Bridges, who organized the petition drive to force the June 12 vote, hopes the court action will be dropped if voters rescind the ordinance.
"The town passed the ordinance because they wanted the wind power project," Bridges said. "They thought the ordinance would guide it. The townspeople never expected this to kill the project."
Bridges believes the ordinance's shortcomings are too numerous to try and correct, but Steve Bennett, whose property abuts the Beaver Ridge site, and who has opposed the project, believes repealing the ordinance would leave the town wide open to any number of projects that residents would not favor.
"They're going to repeal the whole thing in order to eliminate any restrictions that have to do with turbines," Bennett said.
"That's like throwing the baby out with the bath water. It's pretty irresponsible for any town not to have a commercial site review ordinance," he said.
The hearing, and the vote in June, are technically a referendum on the town's ordinance and not the proposed wind project, but voters know the implications, Bridges said.
"We felt the town should have a right to vote on this, but it's also an up-or-down vote on the wind project," she said.
Craig Crosby -- 861-9253
ccrosby@centralmaine.com


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