LETTER: Wind turbines can impact people
How would you feel if you and your kids started feeling sick? What if you, your wife or your kids suddenly started having headaches, earaches, nausea, dizziness and couldn’t sleep well anymore. In your own home. And you knew it wouldn’t go away?
To the Editor:
How would you feel if you and your kids started feeling sick? What if you, your wife or your kids suddenly started having headaches, earaches, nausea, dizziness and couldn’t sleep well anymore. In your own home. And you knew it wouldn’t go away?
This is the experience some people have when Industrial Wind Turbines (IWT’s), they’re nearly twice as tall as the state capitol building, are built too close to people’s homes. Wind turbines aren’t necessarily a bad thing; we should just make sure they aren’t making people sick.
Some people experience very serious symptoms like high blood pressure, tinnitus, ear pressure, vertigo, visual blurring, heart arrhythmia, irritability, problems with concentration and memory, even panic attacks when they are near IWT’s. They emit high levels of low frequency noise which makes people sick. When these people are not around IWT’s, their symptoms vanish. It’s not hard to connect the dots.
At least three families from my district have abandoned the homes where they were raising their children and planned to retire because IWT’s have made them sick. These houses sit empty now, no one wants to buy them, and these families are stuck paying two mortgages.
You may be asking yourself, why are wind farm developers allowed to build IWT’s so close to people’s houses. So close that it makes them sick? Why doesn’t the government prevent this?
By law, IWT’s are regulated by the Public Service Commission (PSC). The Doyle PSC appointed a Wind Siting Council to create rules regulating safe setbacks for wind turbines. These rules eventually became PSC 128. The problem is, PSC 128 doesn’t protect families from harm. Because the Wind Siting Council was largely filled with wind farm developers and connected interests.
State Statutes expressly say the PSC was supposed to take possible health effects caused by the IWT’s into consideration when writing their rules, sadly this didn’t happen.
Amazingly, the council didn’t even have a qualified medical expert on the panel and numerous peer reviewed studies showing how IWT’s make people sick were ignored. My office has a stack of these studies, it’s over a foot tall.
The only doctor on the panel, Javon McFaddon, a faculty member at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, stated that he did not feel comfortable answering questions about the negative health effects caused by IWT’s because he was not an expert in the field. It’s really no wonder people are having problems.
We’re not here to point fingers and assign blame. We’re here to fix a problem.
That’s why my office is asking that PSC128 be suspended until new regulations that protect innocent people from IWT’s are created. To do that, we need to create a new Wind Siting Council that gives normal people a place at the negotiation table and includes medical experts who understand how to keep people from getting sick. A wind siting council with less wind developers and more concerned citizens.
I really don’t think that’s too much to ask.
State Sen. Frank Lasee
(R-DePere)
Tags: letters to the editor, opinion
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