Concerned citizens ask, ‘What are they doing to Dover?’

DOVER — When the Dover Planning Board meets on Monday, Jan. 23, not much will have changed as far as the petition for a new power substation is concerned. A 16.3-acre facility at 2238 Route 22, the substation will consist of three giant power towers, three transfer stations, nine tall lighting masts, and a lot of heavy electrical equipment as well as high voltage power lines.

It will help send power from Connecticut to points east in New York for Consolidated Edison (Con Ed).

A group called Concerned Citizens of Dover (CCD) has asked, on its website, for the planning board not to prioritize industrial infrastructure. Cricket Valley Energy Center, LLC, at 2241 Route 22, is not far from where the substation is proposed. Highly controversial at the time of its inception, the Cricket Valley Energy Center was approved in 2012 and began operations in 2020.

The message on the CCD site says that the residents don’t want to be “a cluster of power facilities . . . whether heavy or ‘light,’ as mentioned in the town’s proposed Comprehensive Plan.” The group is asking that the town representatives put the citizens of Dover, their health, the environment and their property values first.

There have been questions about whether the area is an “environmental justice” area. In an email communication on Oct. 4, 2022, Lance Caldwell, who works for the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) said that the EPA sets the 80th percentile as a red flag for EJ concerns; one shouldn’t dismiss any number below 80. Any number above 50 is above the national and state medians.

There are other projects in various stages of development. Iroquois Gas Transmission facility, at 186 Dover Furnace Road, wants to add an additional 12,000 horsepower gas-fixed turbine on a new site with an associated filter separator and other facilities. It has a 24-inches-in-diameter main line and wants an expansion of an existing compressor station fence, likely doubling the size of the existing site.

Iroquois Gas is also looking to expand its Athens plant as well as two sites in Connecticut. These upgrades will aid in the incremental firm natural gas transportation service to two existing customers of Iroquois: Con Ed and KeySpan Gas East Corporation d/b/a National Grid (“National Grid”).

A public hearing is set for Tuesday, Jan. 31, by the Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC). To register to attend the virtual meeting and/or to speak, call the DEC at 518-402-9003.

Another project, though one that’s still in the “talking stage,” is the Daroga Hydrogen Regeneration Plant. This would be located at 18 Vincent Road next to Cricket Valley Road. According to the CCD website, the plant would extract 200,000 gallons of water daily from the town aquifer, it being the only source of water.

Residents are concerned that it might not only deplete the wastewater supply, but could also contaminate it. The aquifer is located in a valley and therefore, can be polluted by any wells located above it.

CCD also worries that “dirty grid power” could be used to feed into the pipeline. Located near the Great Swamp National Preserve, there is no guarantee that wastewater won’t be allowed to discharge into the Swamp River, which empties into the Ten Mile River.

As the CCD website also points out, Dover could use a grocery market, a medical facility and a town center.

With all the energy facilities wanting to move into Dover, joining with the Cricket Valley Energy Plant, the small town of 8,700 residents is concerned that will be in danger of losing clean water, that its real estate values could plunge, and it may lose many natural habitats along with endangered species of animals and plants.

What it is gaining is tall lighting masts, towers, electrical power generators and more gas lines. Many of these power facilities cater not to this area but to other areas.

It will be interesting to watch the upcoming meetings and public hearings; no doubt many residents will be at both with plenty to say, and the power companies will also be there with in-depth presentations and promises.

As they say, the proof is in the pudding; in five years’ time, we may take a ride down Route 22 through Dover and find out which side of the controversy has won.

The Monday, Jan. 23, meeting will take place at 7 p.m. at the Dover Town Hall, 126 E. Duncan Hill Road.

For further information or to get the link to watch the meeting online, go to the Town of Dover website www.doverny.gov.

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