Tuesday, May 19, 2009

South Project Advisory Team Meeting #1

Thursday, May 21, 2009, Idaho Power under the facilitation of Rosemary Curtin of RBCI Inc. will hold its first Project Advisory Team Meeting on the Boardman to Hemingway project, 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Four Rivers Cultural Center in Ontario.

Dave Angell, Eric Hackett, Rosemary Curtin and Kent McCarthy will be making presentations.

Meeting objectives:
• Review project background, status and the community advisory process
• Discuss purpose and need for the transmission line
• Identify community issues and suggestions

The venue has been moved from the Holiday Inn to the FRCC so there should be room for anyone who wants to attend who was not "officially" invited, although only those on the official list will have dinner provided.

We expect the Idaho Power contingent will graciously listen and respond to input from those who will be affected by this project over the next six months.

Monday, May 18, 2009

Kuna deliberates

Kuna Planning and Zoning Commission holds off on decision on comprehensive plan
Scott McIntosh/Kuna Melba News Editor
http://www.kunamelba.com/default.asp?sourceid=&smenu=84&twindow=Default&mad=No&sdetail=892&wpage=1&skeyword=&sidate=&ccat=&ccatm=&restate=&restatus=&reoption=&retype=&repmin=&repmax=&rebed=&rebath=&subname=&pform=&sc=2008&hn=kunamelba&he=.com

14 MAY. 09 Kuna Planning and Zoning Commission members Thursday night tabled a decision on the city’s comprehensive plan update. Commission members are scheduled to make a decision at their next regularly scheduled meeting, which begins at 6 p.m. on Wednesday, May 27, at City Hall.

Commission members heard from about a dozen residents, most of whom expressed support for the plan in general. A number of people spoke against a version of the future land use map that contained a swath of land on the south of town that clears a path for a massive 500,000-volt Idaho Power transmission line.

. . . Commission members Curt James and Stephanie Wierschem sought more time to consider the testimony and letters, while commission members Stan Sanders, Carl Trautman and chairman Dave Case said they were prepared to recommend approval of the comp plan with the map that discluded the power line.

In the end, James made a motion to table the matter, Wierschem seconded it and Trautman acquiesced out of respect for fellow commission members’ desires to take more time.

Sunday, May 17, 2009

Residents talk about power line concerns

Written by CHRIS COLLINS Baker City Herald May 15, 2009
http://www.bakercityherald.com/Local-News/Residents-talk-about-power-line-concerns

Residents of Northeastern Oregon got a brief chance to bring their concerns about Idaho Power Co.’s proposed 500-kilovolt transmission line to members of the Oregon Department of Energy’s Energy Siting Council Thursday night.

The session, scheduled to end at 8 p.m., was extended by more than an hour, but still left many in the audience frustrated by the time constraints they faced after being invited to speak before the council.

Thursday’s session began with a brief overview of the council’s role in the process by Adam Bless, an energy facility analyst with the Department of Energy. Next to speak was Eric Hackett, project manager for Idaho Power Co., and Kent McCarthy, Idaho Power Co. planner, who has been charged with leading community advisory process as the plan moves forward.

Ted Davis, acting field manager for the Bureau of Land Management in Baker City, explained how the BLM will consider the environmental impact of Idaho Power’s plan under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA).

The meeting was opened to public comment at 7:50 p.m.

The 92 people assembled at the meeting combined their comments or deferred to others to speak for them as they worked to make the most of the schedule that was left to them. Council members were asked to consider the impact the transmission line would have on livestock and farm production in the areas as well as the region’s historic and cultural resources and the health of residents.

Nancy Peyron, a founder and chair of the Baker County group Move Idaho Power, said the people she has talked to today said they were disappointed that there was nothing new presented by agency representatives during the meeting and yet members of the public were restricted in their ability to express their concerns.

“They really didn’t want our input,” she said of Thursday’s meeting. “So they shouldn’t have said they did.”

The meeting was attended by W. Bryan Wolfe of Hermiston who chaired the session, and fellow council members Cheri Davis and Lori Brogoitti. They began the day with a tour of Malheur County, led by Roger Findley of the Stop Idaho Power citizens group, and were reluctant to extend Thursday’s meeting past three hours.

Wolfe said the tour gave the council a better understanding of how residents of the area would be affected if the power line ran through their property.

“It was a very good turnout,” he said, adding that he extended the meeting’s length as a courtesy to the large crowd. “There were a lot of people here with things to say and I wanted to let them have the opportunity to speak.

“This is an open process,” he added. “They should realize that their voices are heard and that their thoughts and opinions are considered.”

McCarthy said that since Idaho Power took its original plan off the table in March, the company has been working to organize committees of residents in each region between Boardman and Hemingway, Idaho. The two end points are all that remain of the original siting plan for the transmission line.

A meeting is scheduled June 4 for residents of Baker and Union counties.

We wonder how much comment time will be made available to members of Kent McCarthy's Community Advisory Committees . . .

Friday, May 15, 2009

Malheur County's "Finger Lands"

Click for larger picture

Jim Johnson of the Oregon Department of Agriculture supplied us with this map of Northern Malheur County. In it you can see irrigated Exclusive Farm Use land in orange, Exclusive Range Use lands in green, and gray BLM-owned federal lands.

If you include the rest of Malheur County, (note the white & yellow map in an earlier post,) you would see no more EFU land and a great deal more federally owned land.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

"A Working Landscape:" Oregon's Energy Facility Siting Council Tour

Adam Bless of the ODOE, Roger Findley, EFSC member Bryan Wolfe, County Planner Jon Beal, Clinton Kennington, and Larry Price at Trenkel Overlook

Thursday morning, members of Oregon's Energy Facility Siting Council plus several other state agency officials, two Idaho Power representatives, and a number of SIP members boarded a school bus and toured the diverse, intensively cultivated and irrigated "finger lands" of Malheur County's main industry, agriculture.
The Energy Facility Siting Council is the 7-member appointed citizen body that makes the final decision whether a utility's proposed route will be acceptable under state law.
"The best mitigation is avoidance when it comes to linear utility facilities":
Jim Johnson of the Oregon Dept of Ag, EFSC member Cheri Davis, and Bruce Corn of Corn Farms
First we stopped at Farrell Larson's Select Onion facility off of Stanton Blvd and cried as we observed the peeling, cutting, sorting, cooking and packing of onion ring varieties. We got samples, too, and hopefully they will be available retail some day.
Malheur County is the #1 onion producing county in the U.S, with $280 billion in sales at the farm gate. A warm dry climate and irrigated land make it possible to produce the consistently large onions used in facilities such as Select Onion. 70% of the value to Oregon agriculture comes from irrigated land.
As Jim Johnson of the ODA said, "This is not open space. This is a working landscape."
We are glad to say that Stacie Trenkel finally got the chance to see the view from Trenkel Overlook on Hwy 20-26. Maybe she will take her children there some day.

Owyhee Irrigation District settling ponds north of Nyssa
11,000 square miles of Malheur County is irrigated, according to Jay Chamberlin of the Owyhee Irrigation District. There are 1200 patrons of the OID, which costs $50 an acre to deliver water. The Owyhee Dam generates 15 MW of incidental power as well.

Starvation Camp at the Snake River Crossing south of Nyssa
A member of Oregon's Wheat League, Larry Price told us that 10% of wheat grown in Oregon is here in Malheur County. We get some of the highest yields at 178 bushels per acre. 85% of northwest wheat is exported.

Alfalfa seed after defoliation at Price Farms
Malheur County is a seed producing area since it is somewhat isolated, with low humidity and high summer temperatures. Alfalfa seed is pollinated by leaf cutter bees, part of the "ag infrastructure."

Irrigated land alongside BLM land
Driving south through Adrian you can see the stark contrast between highly productive, irrigated land and dry BLM land. "Irrigation is what makes this valley what it is," according to Jim Johnson and Jay Chamberlin.

Looking toward Grassy Mountain, an alternate utility route suggested by SIP
Jean Findley, retired BLM range botanist, pointed out where the BLM has designated utility corridors on public lands. "The sage grouse is stable in Oregon," she said, which is why it is not on the threatened species list as it is in other western states.

The PP&L 500 kV line near Succor Creek south of Adrian
Alternate routes suggested by Stop Idaho Power followed the existing PP&L 500 kV line south of Adrian and then turn north through BLM ground rather than irrigated exclusive farm use land.
We would like to thank Jim Johnson and Adam Bless for their return trip to Malheur County, and to the members of EFSC and other officials who graciously accepted our invitation.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Parts of Obama's Green Energy Plan Fuel Discontent Among Environmentalists

Many local activists say the rush to renewables, backed by Obama, risks trading one power problem for another

By Dan Springer FOXNews.com Tuesday, May 05, 2009 http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/05/05/environmentalists-wage-fight-obamas-energy-plan/


A key part of President Obama's energy plan -- replacing fossil fuels with green alternatives -- is facing increasing opposition from an unlikely source: environmentalists.

Some environmentalists, who have successfully fought a wind farm on the border of Oregon and Washington, are trying to block a massive solar plant in the Mojave desert. And now an Oregon county is considering a ban on wind power in the foothills of the Blue Mountains.

"We all want to be as green as we can be. But at what cost?" Richard Jolly of the Blue Mountain Alliance. "To take everything from us? This valley could be surrounded by them."

Jolly says 400-foot wind turbines are a bird-killing eyesore. The developer argues the danger to birds is exaggerated but admits every big energy project has its downside.

"If we hold out for the perfect environmental silver bullet, if you will, it will always be 15 years down the road," he said. "We have to make incremental progress."

For decades, environmental groups have talked about "big oil," painting the petroleum industry as greedy and destructive. Now similar language is being applied to renewables. Instead of eco-friendly green power, increasingly it's "big wind" and "big solar."

Large environmental groups, such as the Natural Resources Defense Council, bristle at the idea of dissension in the ranks.

"We are working very aggressively to make a planning process happen with utilities, with industry, with local groups all at the table," said Rick Duke, director of the Natural Resources Defense Council's Center for Market Innovation.

Obama has set a goal of getting 25 percent of the nation's power from renewable sources by 2025. The White House contends that will create millions of jobs and has the support of business and environmental leaders.

But many local activists say we need to slow this rush to renewables or risk trading one power problem for another.

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

A Map of Malheur County


A smaller copy of the wall-size map Gary Pearson brought to the Salem hearing for HB 3153. The yellow portion shows the population cluster in Malheur County, basically irrigated Exclusive Farm Use land, along the rivers. The original proposed transmission line went through the middle of the section along the Snake River, i.e., the northeast corner.

Monday, May 11, 2009

The Community Advisory Process

Map of three Project Advisory Team geographic areas

We are concerned with sheer size and Oregon/Idaho differences in the "Project Advisory Team (South)" geographic area, which includes parts of four Idaho and four Oregon counties. Idaho Power clearly wants to include elected and appointed officials on the Project Advisory Team. The most glaring lack in the list of committee members chosen so far is that of private property owners, especially farmers, whose taxpaying businesses would be ruined by placement of transmission lines over productive farm ground.

We hope that elected and appointed officials will inform themselves on the issues before these meetings begin so they will be able to stand up for their cities and counties.

We expect to see the names of more private property owners appear on the PAT Committee Members list.

From the Boardman to Hemingway website: http://www.boardmantohemingway.com/idaho_power_CAP_about.aspx

Idaho Power's Commitment
Idaho Power will conduct a comprehensive and inclusive public process to locate proposed and alternative routes for the Boardman to Hemingway Transmission Line Project.

About the Process
Identify community issues and concerns and develop criteria for evaluating possible routes. Integrate community’s criteria with regulatory requirements.

Develop a range of possible routes that address community issues and concerns. Several routes will be identified through public mapping sessions. Routes that do not meet the criteria will be eliminated.

Recommend proposed and alternative routes. The proposed and alternative routes will be carried through the siting process.

Follow through with communities during BLM and ODOE-EFSC reviews. Idaho Power will resubmit applications to the BLM and the USFS, which will proceed with a review under the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The ODOE-EFSC will also proceed with a thorough review.

Key Players
The public will be involved in every step of the process, through project advisory teams, a coordinating team and public meetings.

Project advisory teams will meet in the three geographic areas - north, central and south - to identify issues and concerns and lead the process of recommending routes.

Public meetings will occur at every milestone. The public will be asked to review and comment on the project advisory teams’ work. The teams will consider and incorporate public input.

A project coordinating team, made of representatives from the project advisory teams, will bring together the work of each team and ensure the route transitions smoothly between geographic areas. Community Advisory Process updates will be posted to this Web site.

Friday, May 8, 2009

Gateway West's Wyoming Opposition

Laramie Range landowners mount opposition to wire for wind farms
By DUSTIN BLEIZEFFER Star-Tribune energy reporter
Thursday, May 7, 2009
http://www.casperstartribune.net/articles/2009/05/07/homepage_lead/doc4a02384e57641547549264.txt
Some prominent Wyoming landowners and businessmen have formed a group to fight a pair of proposed routes for the Gateway West electrical transmission project.

Kenneth G. Lay, vice president and treasurer of World Bank, along with oil and gas businessmen Diemer True and Tom Swanson, all own property in the Laramie Range and have formed the Northern Laramie Range Alliance.

The group includes dozens of landowners, according to organizers. They will meet at 7 tonight at the Best Western in Douglas to discuss organized opposition to proposed segments of the Gateway West transmission project.

Gateway West is a joint effort between Rocky Mountain Power and Idaho Power. The 1,150-mile-long transmission project would require a 2-mile-wide corridor with a right-of-way 350 feet wide for each section of the transmission line spanning from Glenrock to Medicine Bow and all the way to Boise, Idaho. . .

Also at issue is the alliance’s complaint that Rocky Mountain Power and Idaho Power are overbuilding the transmission in anticipation of more wind development in Wyoming.

“Without this (1E 230-kilovolt) line, future energy resources would require multiple lines in order to tie into the transmission system further west, resulting in a larger overall footprint,” Rocky Mountain Power spokesman Jeff Hymas said. . .

“Even in this time of economic downturn, we must plan and prepare to meet the growing demand for electricity that is expected to continue in the future,” Hymas said.

Because Gateway West would cross public lands, the Bureau of Land Management is conducting an environmental impact study. A draft environmental impact statement is scheduled to be issued in August or September.

Thursday, May 7, 2009

B2H Begins Again

Issue 1 - Spring 2009 Boardman to Hemingway Newswire
http://boardmantohemingway.com/documents/Final_B2H_JointNewsletter_web_Apr09.pdf

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the Oregon Department of Energy (ODOE) have published the first issue of the Boardman to Hemingway Transmission Line Project newsletter – the B2H Newswire. This issue includes information on:

  • Project status
  • Public scoping phase
  • Public involvement opportunities
  • Environmental review processes
  • Idaho Power’s Community AdvisoryProcess

From the newsletter:

Project Status
• Idaho Power has initiated a public “Community Advisory Process” or CAP to collaboratively develop recommendations for proposed and alternative transmission line routes (page 5).
• Idaho Power has removed the Northwest Source Station, formerly known as the Sand Hollow Substation, from the project proposal.
• Idaho Power has officially suspended its Integrated Resource Plan review with the Oregon Public Utility Commission (page 4).
• Idaho Power has agreed to a “pause” in the Oregon Energy Facility Siting Council (EFSC) certifi cate process until they are further along in the CAP (page 4).

Following Idaho Power’s CAP (page 5), the BLM will conduct additional public scoping meetings to provide information on the project and request input. Public comments received during these meetings will supplement input received following the October 2008 meetings.

• The BLM uses scoping comments to develop route alternatives, determine appropriate mitigation to reduce potential effects on resources in the study area and focus the environmental analysis on issues of concern.
• The ODOE reviews the comments to identify the issues that it will require Idaho Power to address in its Application for a Site Certificate.
• Idaho Power will use the scoping comments as it develops recommendations for proposed and alternative routes through the CAP.

How can you be involved?
Public participation is essential to thorough agency analysis and decision-making. The project includes multiple opportunities for you to participate by submitting comments, attending public meetings and keeping informed through the project Web site and newsletters.

The BLM and the ODOE will issue public notices about upcoming public participation opportunities and future comment periods as they are scheduled.

Tuesday, May 5, 2009

Letters & Pledges & a BIG THANKS

First of all, a Big Thanks for the support we have had for the past six months. What is happening now is a result of petition signatures, emails, letters, phone calls, and attendance at crucial meetings by many members of the community. It has all been worth it!

Roger Findley at the head of the class
Items on the agenda:
  • The current status of B2H, including the Community Advisory Process to choose a route by December 2009. More info coming.
  • The "thorough and intellectually rigorous" PUC Hearing for Need in late March
  • Bruce Corn, Gary Pearson and Larry Price's report on our HB 3153 testimony at a hearing in Salem April 9th and the many contacts made there; the need for action on HB 3058
  • The EFSC meeting in Baker City next week.
Two plans of action from our meeting last night:

(1) Please contact members of the Oregon House Rules Committee to prevent HB3058 from being voted into law. Include in your contacts your support of Cliff Bentz's amendments to HB3153.

Follow the link to the Northwest Property Rights Coalition for more information on HB 3058, including Rules Committee members phone numbers and email links: http://www.nwprc.org/

For more information on pipeline easements, read the Progressive Farmer article HERE.

(2) For future funding requirements, our treasurer, Grant Kitamura, has proposed we fill out pledge forms so checks will only need to be written when required. The suggested amount is $275, although with generous donations from larger organizations, and with the success we have had so far, it is possible the full amount may not be needed.

Download the pledge form HERE, fill it out and send it (without writing a check) to: Grant Kitamura, SIP Treasurer P.O. Box 9 Ontario, OR 97914.

Monday, May 4, 2009

Malheur County Board of Realtors Donation

Left to Right, SIP Director Roger Findley, Board Member John Faw, and Grant Kitamura, SIP Treasurer

At our May 4th general meeting at the Boulevard Grange, John Faw, Malheur County Board of Realtors, made a $2,000 gift to Stop Idaho Power non-profit group. John says the proposed power line has greatly affected real estate in our part of the Treasure Valley, and the Realtors appreciate the work being done to move the line off of private to public land.

We would like to thank the Malheur County Realtors for their generous gift!

More info on the meeting in our next blog post.

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Power line opponents cautiously optimistic

By JESSICA KELLER ARGUS OBSERVER Sunday, May 3, 2009
http://argusobserver.com/articles/2009/05/04/news/doc49fdf7529d562506590110.txt

ONTARIO-Members of the local grassroots effort to stop a 500-kilovolt transmission line from crossing Malheur County farmland are feeling “guardedly optimistic” about achieving their goal in light of recent developments, but Jean Findley, one of the organizers of Stop Idaho Power, said the group remains no less vigilant.

. . . “We have had a large group of citizens, and we have been very focused, and I think Idaho Power has eventually realized that the citizens’ groups were very serious in protecting their exclusive farm use land,” Findley said . . .

“I think a talented, energetic, focused group of people can accomplish a great deal,” Findley said.

The group goals have always been more than about protecting personal interests, Findley said, and have always focused on protecting a resource — farmland — that Oregon has already taken great pains to protect. . .

“I think that was the biggest thing in our court,” she said. “It just took us a long time to get the word out and keep the pressure on.”

What she said she hadn’t anticipated was how much support government officials on all levels have given the cause.

“That’s been a wonderful surprise,” Findley said. “No, we did not expect the kind of legislative support that we had, but it has been extremely gratifying, and I think it has furthered our case.”

. . . Stop Idaho Power member and Malheur County resident Patty Kennington said she is also feeling positive about the new direction the Idaho Power transmission line plan is going. . .

Kennington said, when she first saw the map of the proposed Boardman to Hemingway line and realized that she and her husband’s farm would be split in half by the proposed power lines, she knew something had to be done . . .

"I feel a lot better about things than I did six months ago,” she said.

Saturday, May 2, 2009

LNG work would sever agricultural roots of state

by Carol McAlice Currie May 1st, 2009 http://www.statesmanjournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2009905010321

Lolita Carl, a fifth-generation farmer in Marion County, was amused to learn that Rep. Tobias Read, D-Beaverton, was upset when his home was picketed by opponents of a bill to aid the development of liquefied natural gas pipeline and terminals in Oregon.

She said he should take that sensation of personal violation and multiply it about 1,500 times to get how she, her family and other Oregonians feel about companies who want to build LNG infrastructure on their land and across other parts of this beautiful state. . .

"It affects all property owners. Everyone's backyard is threatened by this bill, and we need to be passionate about stopping it."

Paul and Karen Dryden, who own a 60-acre farm south of Woodburn, agree.

. . . "We've worked our entire life to own this farm, and now that it's finally paying off, someone from out of the area wants to come and threaten it all. We want to keep this farm for future generations, and when someone wants to cut a freeway-sized swath through the middle of our prime acreage, we see nothing but damaged land and economic loss despite their promises to repair any impact they cause," Karen Dryden said.

Both families say property owners need to stand in opposition to House Bill 3058, which this week was referred to the House rules committee by Read, whose office said "he has no position on the bill at this time, believing that there are more amendments to come and be considered."

As written, the bill would change the definition of "applicant" when defining who can apply for a wetland-fill or removal permit on private or public land for a utility project.

Currently, only a landowner, someone with the landowner's permission or a utility that has condemned land in court can apply for a permit.

If the bill becomes law, a utility or pipeline company, such as Texas-based Northern-Star Natural Gas, could apply for a permit to sink pipeline or build a terminal before they had the landowner's permission or had the land condemned in court. . .

"It's unprecedented," said Brett VandenHeuvel, executive director of Columbia Riverkeeper. "They're proposing 600 pipelines to crisscross the state, and lawmakers are willing to trade off the future of farms and public land for some short-term construction work. . .

"Why is anyone trying to fast-track LNG terminals and pipelines?" VandenHeuvel asked.

"They're enormously unpopular, they harm salmon and habitat, they're going to have a huge negative economic impact, and yet they're now one step closer to reality. It's shocking."

Oregonians, take notice. This applies to you.

Friday, May 1, 2009

Kuna's major Gateway West problem

In spite of Idaho Power maintaining that it "reaches consensus with cities all the time," it is only after continuous pressure and bad publicity from elected officials such as those in Parma and Kuna that Idaho Power finally backs off its best ambition to cross private land. Idaho Power crosses private land even when public lands are readily available; in our experience, the BLM can be reasonable when offered alternatives.

Kuna may reject Idaho Power 500,000-volt Gateway West Transmission Lines project The city's proposed comprehensive plan would reject letting the utility build a new transmission line through town. BY JOE ESTRELLA 04/28/09 http://www.idahostatesman.com/newsupdates/story/749710.html

The Kuna Planning & Zoning Commission will consider the new plan at its meeting May 14. Then it goes to the City Council.

Mayor Scott Dowdy declined to speculate how the council might vote but said he had "a major problem" with where Idaho Power Co. wants to put its new 500,000-volt Gateway West Transmission Lines project.

Idaho Power spokeswoman Lynnete Berriochoa said the utility wants to reach a consensus with the city and rejected the idea that it would invoke eminent domain to acquire the land.

"We reach consensus with cities all the time," she said. "Sometimes it just takes a little longer."

The new comprehensive plan for the next 20 years projects that Kuna will grow from 16,000 people in a 16-square mile area to 70,000 in 70 square miles. The city would stretch north to Lake Hazel and McDermott roads and south to East Poen and Maple Grove roads.

City officials have been angry that Idaho Power took part in the 20-month process of creating the comprehensive plan but never mentioned that the Bureau of Land Management had decreed that the 1,150-mile Gateway West project could not be built on public land.

The proposed project originates near Casper, Wyo., and runs west to the Hemingway substation outside of Melba.

Idaho Power says it was forced to route the transmission line through Kuna when the BLM refused to allow it to run through the Morley Nelson Snake River Birds of Prey National Conservation Area south of Kuna.

As now planned, the transmission lines would run through the proposed Osprey Ridge development, a 1,500-acre, 4,500-home and mixed-used community. Officials for the planned community have said that could lead to the project being scrapped.

If that happens, City Planner Steven Hasson estimated the city would lose more than $1 billion in economic development and future tax revenues.

One interesting comment at the end of this article asks why Idaho Power doesn't plan its utility corridor with Ada County Highway District's Kuna Mora Highway in mind. http://www.achd.ada.id.us/Projects/PublicProject.aspx?ProjectID=127