Pine Plains solar project faces new headwind

PINE PLAINS — Some residents near the proposed 10-megawatt community solar project at Pulver’s Corners are mounting opposition to the project by hiring an environmental land use, zoning and real estate law firm.

Grant and Lyons LLP of Rhinebeck will present a case for the residents at an upcoming public workshop scheduled for Saturday, March 11, by the Town Planning Board.

The meeting will be held in the Community Room of the Pine Plains Free Library at 7775 S. Main Street at 10:30 a.m.

Attorney John Lyons will submit written comments to the Planning Board based on expert reviews of the project.

Carson-Power of New York City proposes  to install a 43-acre solar farm comprising 24,000 panels on 171 acres of agricultural and forested land located at 454 Bean River Road. Access is planned to be sited just west of the Central Hudson Gas & Electric’s Pulver’s Corners substation near the intersection of Route 199 and Prospect Hill Road.

At the public workshop, Lyons plans to submit assessments to the Planning Board from experts in environmental impact, visual impact and from a planner examining the impact on community character. The expert group includes: Erik Kaviat, cofounder of Hudsonia Ltd; George Janes, a planner; and Nan Stolzenburg, a community and environmental planner.

“Our main thrust is that we’re going to be advocating for the issuance of a positive declaration. We think there are lots of significant adverse environmental impacts that are presented by the project,” Lyons said.

A positive declaration would require Carson Power to prepare an environmental impact statement that studies the significant adverse environmental impact and proposes mitigation.

In January, more than 60 residents showed up at a Planning Board public hearing on Carson Power’s  application to state concerns and their largely overwhelming opposition to the project.

In an interview March 3, Kathleen Augustine, a longtime Pine Plains resident  who is among the residents represented by Grant and Lyons, asked: “Is the project really green? Who owns and operates it? Does it really benefit the local people?”

Carson Power plans to partner with SolaREIT, a real-estate investment trust in Vienna, Virginia, which would be the owner of the 171 acres. Another partner, Nexamp, would be a co-developer and manage construction, operation and subscriptions.

According to Carson Power, subscribers to the community solar plan would receive a electricity bill from Central Hudson Gas & Electric that would show a line item offsetting what they would owe to the utility. The  subscriber would pay Nexamp at a discounted price, Andrew Gordon, a Carson Power representative, has said.

Carson Power’s project calls for a six- to eight-month construction period. The company also said the life cycle of the project is 25-40 years, after which time the solar farm would be decommissioned and the 171-acre property would be put into a permanent conservation easement.

Carson Power’s Gordon has stated that the project involves removing 25.8 acres of trees. Gordon also has said 21.8 acres of agricultural fields will also be removed and 33 acres will be preserved and conserved.

At the January public hearing, Gordon said there are no wetlands and no critical habitats for threatened or endangered species that would be affected.

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