Ontario fails to respond to thousands of wind turbine noise complaints
Incident reports released under Freedom of Information show government unable or unwilling to act on noise complaints from residents living near wind power projects
OTTAWA, May 31, 2017 /CNW/ - Documents recently released by the Ontario Ministry of the Environment and Climate Change (MOECC) under Freedom of Information show a deeply flawed process for responding to complaints of excessive noise levels from industrial-scale wind turbines, Wind Concerns Ontario says.
Documents released to Wind Concerns Ontario, a coalition of community groups and citizens, show that almost 3,200 reports of noise complaints were made in 2006-2014. In more than half, the government took no action.
"When Premier Dalton McGuinty brought in the Green Energy Act in 2009, he promised the people of rural Ontario to address concerns about health and safety from the turbines," Wind Concerns Ontario president Jane Wilson said. "But they already had multiple complaints about wind turbine noise from 2006 onward, and they were unable and even unwilling to deal with them. This is failure of a government to protect people.
"Their goal appears to be protecting the interests of power development corporations instead."
Ontario families called the MOECC hotline to report sleep disturbance, headaches, and dizziness from the wind turbine noise emissions. Some were desperate and reported not having slept for days, even weeks at a time.
The reports show, however, that ministry staff had no protocols or guidelines to deal with noise complaints and that high-level directives blocked staff from responding. Staff were told to rely on computer noise models provided by power developers instead of actual noise measurement.
"The noise models said that the turbine noise levels were safe, and within regulations," Wilson explains, "but complaints continued — the Ministry did nothing. The MOECC chose power developers, their 'clients,' over Ontario families."
Many reports referred to vibration or "pulsing" sensations from the huge turbines, but the MOECC restricted responses to audible noise alone.
"People just gave up and stopped calling," Wilson, a Registered Nurse, says. "Then, in many cases, the Ministry simply closed their files. There was no help for these people from their government."
A revised Compliance Protocol was released by the government on April 21, but contains no substantive change to the complaint process.
Wind Concerns Ontario recommends that no more approvals or Notices To Proceed be granted for wind power projects, and that the government develop and enforce new, tougher noise standards.
Wind Concerns Ontario is a coalition of community groups, families and individuals concerned about the effects of industrial-scale wind turbines on the environment, the economy, and human health.
For a full report: www.windconcernsontario.ca
"… noise emissions are causing an adverse effect.." Note by MOECC field officer, March, 2010
"…no resources for after-hours monitoring…" Note by MOECC staff November, 2015
[Wind turbine noise] "Sounds like a jet engine roaring" Citizen report, March, 2013
"House [is] vibrating…" Citizen report, February, 2011
"Staff have no options to address complaint" MOECC staff, November 2015
SOURCE Wind Concerns Ontario
Jane Wilson, President, 613-489-3591/613-725-7120, [email protected]; Warren Howard, Director, 519-291-6950/519-571-4501
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