Orange County NC Website
20 <br /> Chair McKee: Before we move to any other individuals intending to provide testimony I would <br /> ask if there are further questions from our Board. I would also ask our Attorney that this <br /> information will be automatically entered into the record; or do we need a formal motion to <br /> accept the material and enter it into the record, as presented? <br /> James Bryan: It would not hurt to have a clear motion on the record <br /> Chair McKee: Because this is quasi-judicial, I think I'll go with the more formal approach. Do I <br /> hear a motion to accept the evidence into the record? <br /> A motion was made by Commissioner Rich, seconded by Commissioner Pelissier to <br /> accept the evidence into the record. <br /> VOTE: UNANIMOUS <br /> Chair McKee: I will now ask if there are other individuals intending to provide testimony and <br /> evidence on this project. Yes sir, if you'll come forward, and state your name and have you <br /> been sworn. <br /> PUBLIC COMMENT: <br /> Chris Bishop: Hello everyone. My name is Chris Bishop, and I've been sworn in. In late <br /> 2013, with the goal of preventing my family's farmland in rural northern Chapel Hill from being <br /> turned into residential development—also attempting to provide a modest income for my great- <br /> aunt who'd just suffered a stroke— I sought alternatives for the use of our family's farm land, <br /> and one of those alternatives was solar. I began exploring possibilities of putting a solar array, <br /> much like the one being proposed here tonight on our family land, and worked with Sunlight <br /> partners in conducting many feasibility studies for putting this solar array in northern Chapel Hill. <br /> It was found that our site met a litany of requirements for a successful solar array, including <br /> proximity to high voltage power lines. <br /> This solar array—the proposed Binks solar array—was to power 500 homes in northern Chapel <br /> Hill, and would have prevented houses from being developed on the land for 15 to 20 years. <br /> For those impacted by this current proposal I just want to make the point that Lydia Wegman, <br /> now the Planning Board Chairman, and her husband Robert Cantwell, whose land was adjacent <br /> to our family's land — since we sold them land to build their house in the 90s— lead a successful <br /> protest of their neighbors against my solar farm, encouraging everyone to go out and get <br /> appraisals on the impact of a solar farm would have to their property. <br /> I would like to just bring up the fact that the impact study, conducted as part of the Oakwood <br /> Solar Farm (current applicant), found that solar farms do not have any negative impact on the <br /> property values of adjacent properties. On May 27, 2014, Lydia's neighbors came to the public <br /> hearing and voiced their concerns late into the night; about five and a half hours of testimony <br /> about how bad solar farms are. Some things that were voiced at the public hearing are that <br /> solar farms would harm home values—the primary reason of their opposition; it would increase <br /> traffic in the neighborhood; the solar panels would leak chemicals into the soil; the solar array <br /> would be too loud; solar panels would increase the water run off; and the solar company was <br /> from Arizona, and is thus questionable not being from North Carolina. These statements were <br /> all refuted by qualified engineers at the time. As a result of this opposition, sunlight partners <br /> withdrew its application for the Binks Array, leaving Orange County with one less solar farm. <br /> Had that not happened, this would be the fifth solar farm in Orange County. My question tonight <br />