OPINION.... Contractors and landowners who hired on
for the construction of wind turbines in the Prairie Queen turbine generation
field in Allen County have gotten their first lesson in the economic morals of
wind farms.
That lesson is this: If they don’t want
to pay you what they owe, they just don’t.
That’s reflected in a whole slew of
liens filed against the properties of landowners there who leased turbine sites
to EDP Renewables for the skyline obliterating construction project. And as
everyone eventually learns about the national financial scam which is the wind
industry in the U.S., the deal is only a deal when it benefits Big Wind.
The recent encumbrance of landowners’
properties because companies haven’t honored their word to hired contractors is
an unfortunate common denominator connecting numerous wind turbine field
developments across the country. We saw liens filed a few years ago with the
turbine field nearby in Waverly in Coffey County; projects in New Hampshire, in
New York, Oklahoma, Illinois, North Dakota and Indiana and others have seen
liens filed against participating landowner properties.
The other common denominator is the
savvy way wind companies slip the noose when they cause havoc in accounts receivable
and let the chips fall on landowners who have no interest in the project other
than hoping to collect lease payments. Anyone who’s ever actually read one of
the leases flashed in front of landowners, along with that nice signing bonus,
isn’t surprised. The mainstay of what should be company responsibility is
specified in the very language of those leases to fall squarely on the heads of
the landowners signing up with them.
The leases typically require landowners
to pay any litigation costs involving their sited, 500-600 foot tall monoliths.
They give up majority control over much of their land through site plans and
easements, which the companies use to stack equipment and parts. Worse yet, gag
clauses in those leases prevent disgruntled landowners from ever uttering a
peep against their new benefactors, lest they lose their lease payments and get
sued for breach of contract. In fact, a recent news story on the Allen County
property liens by The Iola Register quotes a sole landowner who “asked not to
be identified,” but swore he still supported the Prairie Queen project. That’s
a magnanimous perspective from someone who now can’t sell his own land until a
debt against it is paid to someone else.
Unfortunately Governor Laura Kelly’s
rural interest dog and pony show of 2019 never offered any blanket state
protections for communities and landowners beset by these unneeded, tax-credit
fueled landscape destroyers. So, the landowners whose view of their beautiful
Kansas vista was blinded by dollar signs are left to fend for themselves. ###
– Dane Hicks is publisher of The Anderson County Review in Garnett, Kansas.
Wind energy is a wast of time and money !!!
ReplyDeleteAgree,....facts have proven that. No more subsidies, let each stand on their own feet!
Deletehttp://css.umich.edu/factsheets/wind-energy-factsheet
ReplyDeleteLiens were placed on the properties of wind lease holders in Juniata Twp near Caro, Michigan in Tuscola County
ReplyDelete. Why? NextEra or one of their affiliates (you never know which company or affiliate is running the show) didn't pay a bill to an excavator and the excavator had no choice but to place liens on the wind lease property owners. That article is right on!!
I have read Dane Hicks writings for years and find he is a man with his pen and heart in the right place.
ReplyDelete