With the possibility of wind power coming to Genesee County, the Buffalo News account of a new wind farm in Bliss is timely.
Stanley Marsh didn’t answer immediately when asked whether the wind turbine in his backyard was noisy.
“You hear anything?” he asked. Birds chirped and an electrical buzz was coming from a streetlight that wouldn’t shut off, but noise from the turbine, perhaps 1,000 feet away, was undetectable.
The region’s newest wind farm, a collection of 67 turbines perched atop 265-foot-tall towers, officially opened Sunday. More are on the way.
The most entertaining complaint about the turbines -- shadows.
Since the beginning of April, when most of the turbines in Bliss began operation, a handful of complaints have been voiced, according to Eagle Town Supervisor Joseph Kushner.
“We’ve had three or four complaints about noise,” he said. “We had one person complain of shadows.”
That person, Town Board Member Jim Barber, said he saw shadows from the turbines for 20 to 25 minutes early in the morning when the blades first started turning, but that he hasn’t seen any for the past three or four days.
It’s a minor annoyance, he said, adding that Noble Environmental Group has promised to look into possible remedies.
How the hell are shadow's a problem?
As we've noted before, there is some opposition to a wind farm in Perry, but we're still not clear why.