It's messy. It slows progress. It renders everything difficult. It roils confrontation.
And it's the way grassroots democracy should work.
That's the character of the debate over the proposed 120-megawatt, 850-acre Lone Oak Solar Farm in Madison County.
Credit
opponents of the project with demanding setbacks that would keep the
farm from encroaching on the bucolic view from their homes, and for
raising questions about property values, environmental concerns and
land-use practices.
Credit proponents for speaking up for their
right to lease their land for whatever legal purposes they choose, for
the right to make a profit and for the development of clean energy
solutions.
And credit the members of the Madison County Board of
Zoning Appeals for delaying a decision on variance requests so that
members of the public can learn more about the project, ask the tough
questions and make their opinions known.
Some have lamented the controversy caused by the solar farm proposal, noting that it's turned neighbor against neighbor.
That
can be disheartening, but when the controversy passes -- and it might
bring legal challenges before it's over -- we trust that the neighborly
folks of Madison County will shake hands and respect one another.
Until that time, folks have the right to stand up and make themselves heard.
Invenergy, which would build the solar park, is a big power company
with lots of money and attorney power. And sometimes a community will
roll over in the face of such an organization.
But it's better to challenge what they say and what they're offering.
Invenergy
stands to make hundreds of millions of dollars off this project, and
the company ought to make a big-time commitment to local schools, to
4-H, to economic development and other local interests.
Sometimes
it doesn't seem like Hoosier hospitality, when a visitor like Invenergy
comes in, to ask for more than they're offering. But local folks
should, in this case. If the community is truly to be the company's
partner, the company should share it's bounty generously.
The
company has shown that it will modify its project to address opponents'
concerns, already offering to increase setbacks from non-participant
property to 250 feet. That's a far cry from the county minimum of 50
feet.
And it's enough for a nice buffer of trees and other
vegetation to shield residences from a face-full of solar panels. But
maybe the company would agree to more, and opponents are now asking for
500 feet.
As this debate continues -- the BZA has scheduled
another hearing for May 28 -- it becomes more important for people on
both sides to do as much listening as talking.
For democracy also depends on good-faith compromise and a willingness to move away from entrenchment.