PowerOutrage

OutRaged about Unneeded Power Supply Expansion

Archive for the ‘Tennessean’ Category

Tennessean-TVA settles on site for new substation in Rutherford County

Posted by bdy73 on September 14, 2006

From the Tennessean 9/13/2006
TVA settles on site for new substation in Rutherford County

By CLAY CAREY
Staff Writer

The Tennessee Valley Authority has identified a site in rural southwest Rutherford County for a new high-power electric substation.

A 500-kilovolt substation will be built on Coleman Hill Road, about four miles east of U.S. Alternate 31/41, TVA said in a press release.

TVA has said the new station, which could require between 50 and 60 acres, is needed in order to keep up with booming energy demands in Rutherford, Williamson and Davidson counties. Without it, the power provider had said electricity demands will overwhelm the existing power transmission system by the summer of 2010. Power use in the area has increased by an average of 3.5 percent a year.

The project will also include about 30 miles of new transmission lines on existing TVA right of way, as well as 18 miles on new right of way.

Several possible sites for the substation in Rutherford County near Eagleville were studied, TVA said. Several residents in the area organized to oppose the construction of the substation earlier this year.

TVA said construction on the new substation is scheduled to begin in the winter of 2007. It should be finished by the spring of 2010.

Posted in TVA, Tennessean | Leave a Comment »

The Tennessean-Rutherford, Williamson residents fight TVA substation plan

Posted by bdy73 on May 12, 2006

The Tennessean
Rutherford, Williamson residents fight TVA substation plan
By CLAY CAREY
Staff Writer
Published: Thursday, 05/11/06

About 30 rural Rutherford and Williamson County residents presented a petition to the Tennessee Valley Authority today challenging its efforts to build a major power substation in their communities.

“This isn’t just a bunch of people saying, ‘Hey, we don’t want to look at this,’” said College Grove resident Richard Davis, who helped organize the signature drive. “These people are saying this will destroy their lifestyle.”

TVA is considering four sites in southwest Rutherford County near the Williamson County line for a 500-kilovolt substation, which would encompass about 60 acres, and about 50 new miles of high-voltage power lines. The agency has said rapidly rising demands for energy in the area, especially in Williamson and Rutherford counties, make the new station a necessity. Without it, they say, TVA won’t be able to meet the area’s energy demands by 2010.

The community petition, which was presented to TVA this afternoon at the agency’s Murfreesboro customer service center, included around 1,200 signatures, organizers said. It was circulated in the rural areas around College Grove and Eagleville for about three weeks.

“There’s not a free flow of information,” said Williamson County resident Bryan Young, who was there when TVA received the petition.

He and others in the impacted area have said they knew nothing about TVA’s proposal until, in some cases, they learned the agency was considering land on or around their property for the project.

TVA’s proposals wouldn’t require Young or Davis to sell his property, but both said they know others in the community who would be directly impacted.

“We are not out here to say ‘No TVA, go away.’ … we are out here saying before you use eminent domain to take people’s homes, we want to see that you’ve explored all the other options,’” Davis said.

Specifically, he said, TVA should look at ways to promote conservation of electricity before looking to expand its infrastructure to accommodate rising demand.Published: Thursday, 05/11/06

Posted in TVA, Tennessean | Leave a Comment »

The Tennessean-TVA not to blame for energy consumption

Posted by bdy73 on May 11, 2006

Letters to the Editor: TVA not to blame for energy consumption
The Tennessean
Published: Thursday, 05/11/06

To the Editor:
The article, “Power plan jolts rural area,” May 6, plus the letter by Stephanie Robbins reflects the disconnect between Americans and the consequences of our lifestyle. (“TVA should look elsewhere for land,” May 10)

While I dislike the idea of a new power station that infringes upon the families and vistas in Rutherford County (or anywhere for that matter), it is important that we ask, “why this solution?” The only answer that makes any sense is to inconvenience the fewest citizens to feed America’s growing energy needs.

It is easy to blame TVA, but the burden rests on the shoulders of every citizen to use less energy. America has only 5 percent of the world’s population, but we use 25 percent of earth’s natural resources. The size of new homes in America keeps going up, meaning it takes more energy to heat, cool and light our houses. Houses are filled with power-hungry electric devices. If we maintain our current lifestyles, then some people’s dreams will get crushed to accommodate society’s appetites.

Our leaders should be asking Americans to sacrifice or (gasp) to take a less convenient path in the name of being responsible. They should promote conservation and stigmatize gluttonous consumption. Show us how not to lust for power, money and energy.

If our leaders had the guts, and individual citizens the self-discipline, this power station might not be a “need.” It is you and I who are crushing dreams, not TVA. I know, I am asking a lot, but only because I believe we can do better.

Alan Powell Nashville 37205
editorialresponse@earthlink.net

Posted in TVA, Tennessean | Leave a Comment »

The Tennessean-TVA should look elsewhere for land

Posted by bdy73 on May 10, 2006

Letters to the Editor: TVA should look elsewhere for land
The Tennessean
Published: Wednesday, 5/10/2006

TVA should look elsewhere for land
To the Editor:
I just finished the TVA article about plans to take a large area of farmland to build a substation. (“Power plan jolts rural area,” May 6)

I am totally appalled by this. Not only are they taking away farmland that has been in families up to four generations with no regard whatsoever to those living and making a life there. They feel they have the right to come in and say, “Sell to us, or we’ll condemn and get the property anyway.” That is a shameful thing for TVA to do, just shameful.

This isn’t some area that has been out of service for years and no one wants. This is some of the most beautiful farmland that Tennessee has to offer and it also serves many different people in many ways. So they wouldn’t just be “putting out” the families, they would be affecting all those who are serviced by these farms. I for one, buy hay from the Scotts and have been out to their farm many a time. It is beautiful, so beautiful in fact that my husband would love to have just 10 acres for us to live on, but you don’t see us saying, “Sell or we’ll condemn your property.”

I hope someone from TVA reads this letter and finds some commercial property that hasn’t been used in years, I’m sure there is something somewhere that they could purchase and use. I have been informed that there are two such spots that have been considered.

Please use them and stop picking on the average American farmer who is trying desperately to earn a living while preserving a little piece of family history and land for their own to have when the time comes.

Stephanie Robbins
Smyrna 37167

Posted in TVA, Tennessean | Leave a Comment »

The Tennessean-Power plan jolts rural area

Posted by bdy73 on May 6, 2006

The Tennessean
Published: Saturday, 05/06/06

By CLAY CAREY
Staff Writer

Marcie and David Silverman found their dream home in southwest Rutherford County, a simple but elegant brick house on 15 acres of pastureland, surrounded by working farms.

They bought it, Marcie Silverman says, to escape the crowded neighborhoods of Franklin. Now, the growth that drove them out of Williamson County is threatening their new home.

The Silvermans and several other families in that part of Rutherford are holding their collective breath as the Tennessee Valley Authority considers land that includes their homes and farms as possible sites for a 60-acre, steel-and-concrete substation.

Without the substation, TVA says, it won’t be able to meet the skyrocketing energy demands created in large part by growth in Rutherford and Williamson counties. Mur-freesboro could need as many as 4,000 new hookups in the city this year and 5,000 next year. Another electric provider expects to add as many as 32,000 new customers to the 112,000 it already has in those counties.

But many who live in and around the four sites selected as its possible footprint fear the substation’s forest of towers and high-voltage transmission lines will cost them their rural identity and, in some cases, their homes and livelihoods.

“We will find another place to live, but we don’t think we’ll find another place like this,” said Marcie Silverman. If TVA decides to build on a site near the intersection of Rehobeth and Patterson roads, the substation would take her family’s home, much of their property and the barn where Marcie boards horses.

“The thing that bothers us the most about it is that it’s such a wide-open community. This is going to be an eyesore to the area,” she said. “It’s just going to be a monstrosity.”

The new 500-kilovolt substation will supply power primarily to Rutherford, Williamson and south Davidson counties, according to Roger Sparry, TVA’s manager of siting and environmental design.

Rutherford and Williamson are two of the state’s fastest-growing counties. According to U.S. Census estimates, their populations grew by a combined 46 percent between 1990 and 2005.

Demand for power in the area has kept pace, increasing by an average of 3.5 percent a year since 1990, according to TVA estimates.

At that rate, Sparry said, the demand for electricity will exceed TVA’s capacity by 2010.

Two entities, Middle Tennessee Electric Membership Corp. and the Murfreesboro Electric Department, distribute most of the electricity that TVA produces for Rutherford and Williamson. Both project substantial growth in demand.

MTEMC has about 62,000 power customers in Williamson and about 50,000 in Rutherford. The power provider expects Rutherford County’s customer base to increase by 10,000 to 12,000 in five years. In Williamson County, it’s looking like 17,500 to 20,000 more customers in five years.

Larry Kirk, general manager of the Murfreesboro Electric Department, also expects big jumps. Right now, the department powers about 45,000 customers inside the city’s limits. Kirk expects 4,000 new hookups this year and as many as 5,000 next year and doesn’t anticipate that pace letting up.

Power substations “are major installations. We only build those when there are major needs in the power system,” Sparry said.

Rutherford’s new substation will require about 50 miles of new transmission lines. Some will be built on existing TVA rights of way; others will require acquisitions. TVA expects the substation and new transmission lines to cost about $96 million.

Sparry said the Rutherford sites had generated “a lot of inquiries” but little in the way of organized opposition. Often, he said, communities resist such projects.

“There may be some folks who would prefer not to live next to a substation or power lines or a food store or any other commercial or industrial effort,” he said.

Many in the substation’s possible paths say they’re still trying to figure out exactly what TVA is
proposing and what, if anything, they can do to stop it. The agency first started telling property owners about its plans at an open house last month after it had identified the four potential sites. About 800 landowners were invited.

Anita Scott went to the open house expecting to give up a little bit of land for power lines. Instead, she learned that part of the farm that has been in her family for four generations was inside the same substation footprint that would cost the Silvermans their home.

“If there is a substation here, we’ll be gone,” Scott said, choking back tears as she looked over her family farm. “That is huge. My family has lived here forever.”

Jim and Julie Vaughn are under similar stress. One proposed site would consume a large chunk of their property, Rocky Glade Farm. The farm, near Eagleville and about three miles south of Scott’s homestead, is their primary source of income — they sell beef, pork, lamb, eggs and vegetables it produces.

If TVA selects their site, Julie Vaughn said, its substation would land right in the middle of Rocky Glade Farm. “It is the best ground that we have,” Vaughn said.

They wouldn’t lose their home, but the Vaughns would probably try to sell their property anyway.

“I don’t think we could look at that every day and think about what it took away,” Julie Vaughn said.

The agency could select its preferred site in the next two to three months, Sparry said. TVA would start acquiring land for the project in fall 2007, and construction is scheduled to begin that winter.

Convenience led TVA to the four sites under consideration. The agency was looking for level land that would make for easy road and power line connections.

“We fully understand the sentimental value some people attach to their property,” Sparry said. “Obviously, we can’t address sentimental value. Those issues are very hard to deal with.”

Sparry said TVA would try to buy as much property as it needs, basing offers on comparable land deals in the area. If that doesn’t succeed, TVA has the authority to condemn land for its projects, in which case a court would set the price the agency pays for it.

“We work with property owners and really have a pretty successful track record without having to go the condemnation route,” Sparry said.

Scott doesn’t want to sell her property, but, like others in the affected areas, she believes TVA will just take her land if it is ultimately chosen. “There won’t be a choice. We were pretty well told that,” Scott said.

The Vaughns went another step. Not long after they learned their farm was on TVA’s site list, they hired a land-use attorney.

“This will impact our lives in such a huge way. We want to make sure we are informed as we can be about our rights,” Julie Vaughn said. “This is our livelihood, how we make our living. We can’t afford to make a mistake.”

Others are simply waiting for TVA to give them an idea of what the future holds. The Scotts and Silvermans are both holding off on home renovations.

“Everybody’s life is on hold,” Scott said. “We’re just waiting.” •

Posted in TVA, Tennessean | Leave a Comment »

The Tennessean-Potential TVA lines causing power struggle

Posted by bdy73 on April 25, 2006

The Tennessean
Published: April 25, 2006

Potential TVA lines causing power struggle
CHARLES BOOTH
STAFF WRITER

Neighbors want abandoned TVA right of way to stay that way

By CHARLES BOOTH

Staff Writer

COLLEGE GROVE COMMUNITY — Back in the 1970s, the Tennessee Valley Authority purchased right of way through Rutherford, Williamson and Maury counties to run transmission lines to the Hartsville Nuclear Power Plant.

The plant was never built, and the lines never went up, but the right of way remained TVA property. Now, 30 years later, TVA is looking at using this land to run 500-kilovolt transmission lines from an existing substation in Maury County to a new substation in Rutherford County.

“The project basically is what we call a bulk system upgrade because of all the growth in that area,” Myra Ireland, TVA spokeswoman, said. “The TVA needed additional power in the area, and to get that capacity we needed to build a new 500-kilovolt substation.”

This project, known as the Rutherford-Williamson-Davidson Power Supply Improvement Project, would provide more power to Williamson and Rutherford counties, where electrical load has been growing by 3.5% per year. At that rate, by 2010 the current transmission system in Middle Tennessee couldn’t handle the electrical load.

But area residents aren’t happy that the lines are going up. And they especially aren’t happy that the TVA is using right of way it bought in the 1970s.

“This is an issue that took a great many people in the community by surprise,” Richard Davis, a Williamson County resident, said. He lives near the right of way, and said he didn’t know until recently that the TVA owned this land.

“It was never used, and over time, the community has developed around this easement. It’s pretty reasonable to assume it had been abandoned,” he said. “The community developed differently over 30 years from how it might have developed had the power lines been in place. Farms have now been broken up into urban estates. People have built homes and made investments in and around this.”

Ireland said the easement would have been on the deeds if anyone bought land in that area, so it wasn’t a secret.

“One of the specifications was that no structure could be built in the rights of way,” she said. “We found a few encroachments, but most of it is still clear.”

In Williamson County, the right of way goes through the College Grove and Bethesda areas into Spring Hill.

“If you have a barn or home inside the easement, it’s going to have to go,” Davis said. “If it’s 50 feet from your house, you’ll have a nice, wonderful view of a tower.”

The TVA hosted an open house earlier in the month in Eagleville to discuss the project and alternatives for the substation site and transmission line routes.

“We’re still in the comment period, which will go until the middle of May,” Ireland said.
Residents can make public comments on the project until May 12 by calling Steve Pitt at 800-355-6372.

“We hope to have a decision for early May or this summer,” Ireland said. o

MORE ONLINE

Information on the proposed Tennessee Valley Authority substation project is available online at www.tva.gov/ power/projects/rutherford/index.htm.

Richard Davis, a Williamson County resident who lives near the planned substation, also has a Web site, www.poweroutrage.org, which opposes the project.

Posted in TVA, Tennessean | Leave a Comment »