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Supervisors fund EIR for wind turbine ordinance
By Joe
Naiman
The Alpine Sun
SAN DIEGO — San Diego County Board of
Supervisors voted to streamline the process for meteorological
equipment testing for wind energy turbines while directing county
staff to return to the board with an analysis on developing a
two-tiered ordinance, which separated domestic and commercial
systems. On May 12 the supervisors established $350,000 of funding
to prepare an Environmental Impact Report analyzing the impacts
related to implementing a two-tiered system.
The allocation was part of a 5-0 vote to approve the
county’s third-quarter budget adjustments. Mid-year budget
adjustments allow not only for the elimination of expenditures but
also for the appropriation of one-time revenues such as grants, user
fees, and insurance or legal settlements. Fund balances from
previous years may also be appropriated during mid-year adjustments.
The $350,000 for the wind turbine EIR was derived from
a 2007-08 general fund balance, while the $453 million net increase
of appropriations was due primarily to the issuance of 2008 pension
obligation bonds and appropriations of $443.5 million from the bond
proceeds.
The proposed two-tiered ordinance for wind turbines
would allow a turbine for agriculture, residential, or small
business use by right with limitations to be established for such
domestic systems while a commercial wind system would still require
a Major Use Permit. Although the supervisors did not provide a
threshold between domestic and commercial systems in their motion,
county staff has proposed a threshold of 50 kilowatts.
The limitations for the smaller systems would cover
height, setbacks, parcel size, and other zoning matters.
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