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sci / sci.energy / Epic battle brewing between California and deep-red Shasta County

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o Epic battle brewing between California and deep-red Shasta CountyLeroy N. Soetoro

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Subject: Epic battle brewing between California and deep-red Shasta County
From: Leroy N. Soetoro
Newsgroups: sci.energy, alt.energy.renewable, alt.politics.conservative, talk.politics.guns, sac.politics, alt.politics.republicans, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
Organization: The next war will be fought against Socialists, in America and the EU.
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2023 22:23 UTC
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From: democrat-criminals@mail.house.gov (Leroy N. Soetoro)
Newsgroups: sci.energy,alt.energy.renewable,alt.politics.conservative,talk.politics.guns,sac.politics,alt.politics.republicans,alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
Subject: Epic battle brewing between California and deep-red Shasta County
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2023 22:23:42 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: The next war will be fought against Socialists, in America and the EU.
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https://www.sfchronicle.com/california/article/shasta-wind-climate-
politics-18499963.php

MONTGOMERY CREEK, Shasta County � In the sprawling green hills of
California�s far north, where the politics run red and rowdy, a new state
law designed to clear a path for climate-friendly energy projects is
facing a tough debut.

State officials are using their authority under the law, for the first
time, to gain approval powers over a plan to build 48 giant wind turbines
in Shasta County � powers typically held by local officials. In doing so,
they�ve encountered not only opposition to the project but broader anger
in a region known for its distaste of heavy-handed government and, in
particular, Sacramento Democrats.

Previously, the county Board of Supervisors here rejected Gov. Gavin
Newsom�s COVID mandates, scoffed at the state�s support of tighter gun
restrictions and vowed to take on the Legislature over whether the county
could hand-count ballots amid concerns, though unsubstantiated, about
fraud in President Donald Trump�s failed reelection bid.

Now, the new climate law, Assembly Bill 205, has rural Shasta County in
yet another dust-up with the state. The confrontation was cemented late
last month with a lawsuit filed by county officials, challenging the
California Energy Commission�s jurisdiction over the Fountain Wind
Project.

�It�s the right thing for us to address this and fight back,� Board of
Supervisors Chair Patrick Jones said during a public discussion of the
matter.

Yet the county�s latest fight with the state is distinct in crucial ways.

Resistance in the region has typically come from the right, and recently
the far right, after a political shift sparked by pandemic-era
frustrations and fueled by a group of activists that included anti-
vaxxers, self-styled militia members and evangelicals. By contrast, the
wind project, proposed in timberlands 35 miles east of Redding, has drawn
opposition across the spectrum, including the local Pit River Tribe, which
is joining the county as a plaintiff in the lawsuit.

�All the people are on the same side now: the pagans, the Christians, the
Democrats, the Trumpsters,� said Brandy McDaniels, a member of the Pit
River Tribe, standing in front of her home one afternoon at the Montgomery
Creek Rancheria, below the project site, on a wooded slope with views of
distant Mount Shasta. �Our community is bonded by our love of the area.�

The objections to the turbines, some of which would rise 600 feet, range
considerably. They include doubts about the benefits of clean energy,
anxieties over firefighting planes navigating the tall towers, and worries
about disturbance to forests and wildlife.

The tribe helped forge the unlikely alliance against the nearly half-
billion-dollar proposal because it doesn�t want to see its ancestral lands
developed. Tribal members say the project could �erase� their people from
history.

The concerns about the wind farm reflect the unpopularity of renewable
energy ventures in many California communities that might host them � an
aversion that threatens to slow the state�s push to replace planet-warming
fossil fuels with clean sources of power. California officials have been
frustrated by what�s often perceived as NIMBYism, and for developers, it�s
a minefield.

�We need all the wind that we can get in the state to reach� California�s
energy objectives, Mark Lawlor, vice president of development at
ConnectGen, the Houston company that wants to build the Fountain Wind
Project, told the Chronicle. �There�s just not that many places that have
suitable wind with all the right resources, like transmission.�

While McDaniels is pleased to see Shasta County coming together to fight
the state and the turbines, she and others have expressed a possible
downside: Their cause could get entangled in the area�s reputation as a
hotbed of right-wing extremism.

�We�re not all insurrectionists up here,� McDaniels said. �But the
question has been posed: Will we be taken seriously because of the other
shenanigans in Shasta County?�

The path to 100% clean energy

Newsom signed AB205 into law last year, in part to help the state reach
its goal of generating all its power from carbon-free sources by 2045. The
ambitious target is one of California�s marquee initiatives to combat
climate change.

The new law, among other things, allows developers of wind and solar
projects to apply to the California Energy Commission for streamlined
review and authorization. That process has historically been handled by
cities and counties.

The change in jurisdiction, which was done with little fanfare as part of
California�s convoluted budget process, was urged by state officials who
worried about too few renewable energy projects coming online. The move is
one of several efforts by the Newsom administration to cut red tape for
vital infrastructure such as power production.

While the state has met its interim objectives for zero-carbon
electricity, getting about 37% of its energy from clean sources at last
count (not including nuclear and large hydropower), the path to 100%
remains uncertain. Increasing demand for electricity complicates matters.

�As we think about building really fast, doubling or tripling the (clean)
electric grid, the challenge identified by the administration is the
challenge of long permitting timelines,� Siva Gunda, vice chair of the
California Energy Commission, said in an interview.

Commission officials did not want to discuss specific power proposals or
Shasta County�s lawsuit against the state. But Gunda acknowledged that,
under AB205, local concerns will have to be weighed against the bigger and
broader threat of climate change.

�No matter what kind of project we�re trying to build, no matter where
we�re trying to build it, there�s always going to be potential benefits to
the community but there will also be impacts,� he said. �This is a brand-
new program. As we go through the process, the agency will learn.�

The proposal in Shasta County is among renewable energy plans that have
been shot down locally, from wind turbines on the breezy ridges of
Humboldt County to solar arrays in sunny Southern California. Los Angeles
and San Bernardino counties have gone as far as banning renewable projects
in certain places.

The Fountain Wind Project, near the foothill town of Montgomery Creek, was
denied by Shasta County�s Planning Commission two years ago after hundreds
of people poured into community meetings to protest. The Board of
Supervisors, on appeal, also rebuffed the proposal. The supervisors have
since put large swaths of the county off-limits to utility-scale wind
power.

With the passage of AB205, however, ConnectGen petitioned the California
Energy Commission to put the plan back in play, and this fall, the agency
agreed, making it the first project to be taken up under the law.

The county�s suit against the state commission, filed in Shasta County
Superior Court, argues that undoing local decisions and providing a
developer a �second bite at the apple� is inappropriate and illegal.

Absent court intervention, the commission�s governing board is expected to
make a decision on the Fountain Wind Project next summer. The timeline is
within the expedited schedule set by AB205, which requires environmental
reviews to be wrapped up in nine months.

The project would consist of four dozen remote turbines, down from 72
initially proposed, across 2,855 acres of private forest owned by Shasta
Cascade Timberlands. It would generate up to 205 megawatts of electricity,
enough to supply more than 80,000 homes, according to ConnectGen.

The site is within easy reach of existing transmission lines operated by
Pacific Gas and Electric Co. A smaller wind project already runs across
the adjacent Hatchet Ridge.

Lawlor, with ConnectGen, said the project would yield significant benefits
for the county: hundreds of construction jobs and 10 to 20 permanent
positions, $50 million in property tax revenue over 30 years and, despite
what critics say, a reduction in fire danger with the company�s plans to
build fuel breaks and increase vegetation management.

Opponents generally say they�re not against green energy, just the
location of the proposal. But at least some residents believe the historic
threat posed by climate change appropriately trumps local concerns.

�People say �no� all over the place, and that�s got to stop because we
need this energy,� said Redding resident Randy Smith, who identifies as
nonpartisan. �We�re on the edge of a warming climate that may displace us
if we don�t respond more actively.�

A tribe fears for the land

At the Montgomery Creek Rancheria, McDaniels said she selected the site of
her modest home, amid the scruffy brush and pine, because of the views of
the surrounding mountains. She fears they�ll be tarnished if the turbines
go up.

Many residents on the reservation reside in old trailers along dirt roads,
with no running water or electricity. McDaniels, a cultural representative
for the Pit River Tribe�s Madesi Band, says the primitive conditions are a
trade-off for being able to live amid the sacred hills and valleys of
their ancestors. The hardship also reflects the struggles the tribe has
endured.


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