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 Today is December 01, 2008 Current Temperature: 36° in Lewiston, Maine 


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Power struggle
CMP in power struggle with Lewiston residents

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Saturday, August 2, 2008
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LEWISTON - When Joe Elie bought 15 acres on Old Webster Road last year, he dreamed of building a house. The Lewiston engineer loved the area, loved that he could live close to work but away from the hustle and bustle of the inner city.


He cleared a patch of land and planned to start building in the next few years.

Last week, he learned that Central Maine Power Co. wants to set 370 miles of high-capacity power lines between Eliot and Orrington. Some of the highest voltage lines would run through Lewiston and within 200 to 300 feet of his future house.

Suddenly, Elie said, his dream house wasn't such a dream.

"They're putting in some really, really big lines, much bigger than anything that's ever been done around here," he said. "There's health effects and property value effects."

Elie and other property owners say high-voltage lines buzz, require taller and wider poles and emit a high electromagnetic field that they fear could cause cancer. They're asking the Maine Public Utilities Commission to consider the project's ramifications before giving it an official OK.

CMP says it needs the massive upgrade if it's going to improve reliability, harness more environmentally friendly energy from the north and head off significant power outages in the years to come.

"We need to balance our energy needs against the types of objections people will have," CMP spokesman John Carroll said.

The project - called the Maine Power Reliability Program - calls for redoing a nearly 40-year-old swath of power lines. The swath starts south in Eliot and passes through central Maine in Litchfield, Monmouth, Leeds, Greene, Lewiston and a corner of Auburn at the Durham line. It stops in Orrington, where it connects with lines from Canada.

In some places, lines would be rebuilt or replaced. In other places new lines would be added. The project is expected to cost more than $1 billion and take three to five years to complete.

Elie and others in and around Old Webster Road are upset about the project's plan to place some of the highest voltage lines through their neighborhood - the areas of Routes 196 and 126, and the back edge of Thorncrag Bird Sanctuary. Currently, 115 kilovolts lines pass through much of the area. CMP wants 345-kV lines there. A kilovolt is 1,000 volts.

Both 115 kV and 345 kV are cross-country lines and do not run along streets or roads, according to Maine's Office of the Public Advocate.

While 115-kV lines are common in Maine, the more powerful lines are not. The 345-kV poles are wider, can require dozens of feet of additional land and are, depending on location, about 20 to 25 feet taller than the lower-voltage poles.

Residents say the higher voltage lines also make noise - buzzing regularly and sizzling or popping when raindrops hit them. Although high electromagnetic fields have not been proven to cause health problems, the possibility scares people.

They also worry about the value of their property if it sits in the shadow of major power lines.

Sandra Brown-Eustis and her husband live near Elie's property. They'd planned to sell their home and retire in a couple of years. But they believe 345-kV power lines are set to go within a couple hundred feet of their house, and they can't imagine anyone will want to buy it.

"Then what are we going to do?" she asked.

Elie, Brown-Eustis and several others have filed with the PUC to become "interveners" in the project. That means they'll be able to attend witness hearings, ask questions and generally participate in the process as the PUC considers the project. Anyone affected by the CMP proposal can ask to be an intervener or a less official "interested person."

The city of Lewiston has filed as an intervener. Although the city has no official position on the project, Deputy City Administrator Phil Nadeau said Lewiston is concerned about planned placement of some of the lines. It also wants up-to-date information to answer people's questions when they arise.

The PUC is expected to spend months holding hearings and gathering information. It likely won't have a decision until May, a spokesman said.

The PUC's approval is required for CMP to move forward with its project.

Although CMP spokesman John Carroll declined to address Lewiston residents' specific concerns, he acknowledged that there was some worry about the project, particularly among the 4,000 abutters statewide.

CMP's plan is a good one that addresses Maine's growing power needs, Carroll said.

"If those are four big concerns - price, environment, reliability and economic growth - this is a plan that lands smack in the middle," he said. "The question is, are we ready to embrace a solution?"

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Who: Central Maine Power Co.

What: Public meeting on the Maine Power Reliability Program

When: Sept. 9, 6:30 to 8:30 p.m.

Where: Ramada Inn, Lewiston

To be considered an intervener or interested person by the PUC, contact:

PUC Administrative Director

Maine Public Utilities Commission

242 State St.

SHS 18

Augusta, ME 04333

FAX: 287-1039

Be sure to note docket No. 2008255, Maine Power Reliability Program

Copies of the petition to intervene should also be sent to:

Regulatory Services

Central Maine Power Co.

83 Edison Drive

Augusta, ME 04336

CLICK HERE To Show/Hide Discussion Thread - (13 Comments)
Comments
Posted By:Ernest at August 2, 2008 7:48 AM (Suggest Removal)
There is no need for these lines. The solution is simple. Candles, Ice Boxes, Wood Stoves, Clothes Lines, Laundry Wash Tubs, and elimination of everything that runs on electricity from every home and business. Is that what you really want??

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Posted By:Joe at August 2, 2008 8:07 AM (Suggest Removal)
Ah, but then it's not in your backyard now, is it, Earnest?

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Posted By:someone at August 2, 2008 8:18 AM (Suggest Removal)
Well if this is so then tell CMP to buy your land...

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Posted By:kellie at August 2, 2008 9:12 AM (Suggest Removal)
Living under power lines is unhealthy, yet if he bought the house after power lines, then doesn't CMP have the right to upgrade as much as they need to. Ernest has a point, when we decide to reduce our electrical demads, then and only then will CMP not need to upgrade. So lets all do this guy a favor, shut off your lights and TV's! oh, and your computers as well!

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Posted By:pluto at August 2, 2008 9:55 AM (Suggest Removal)
Buyer beware. If you buy property next to power lines, expect them to be upgraded to handle increased demand, not just from current customer consumption, but also from population increase. It's the same as if you move to a suburb, expect urban sprawl and the health effects of the pollution that comes with it, if you buy a house near a small airport, expect it to expand to accept larger aircraft and the the health effects of the fuel and noise pollution that comes with it, if you move to the shore of a lake or the ocean, expect residential and commercial coastal growth and the personal effects that come with it. Sorry Mr. Elie, you gambled and lost.

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Posted By:melvin at August 2, 2008 10:49 AM (Suggest Removal)
CMP's plan is a good one that addresses Maine's growing power needs, Carroll said. ......... What growing power needs?

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Posted By:Mark at August 2, 2008 1:34 PM (Suggest Removal)
Waaa, it would be like buying a house next to the dump and complaining 5 years later when trash starts piling over onto your yard. He probably bought the land for cheaper because there is ALREADY power lines there.

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Posted By:gil at August 2, 2008 1:43 PM (Suggest Removal)
Everybody wants improvements, no one wants them in their backyard. Don't buy property next to a power line and then cry foul when the utility company needs to expand. You can't even go NIMBY on us, because it was already in your backyard.

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Posted By:JayTee at August 2, 2008 2:17 PM (Suggest Removal)
The seers should look more closely into their crystal ball. In a state that uses about one-half of the electricity now generated within its borders, where is the need for additional transmission lines? Do we anticipate that enormous manufacturing corporations will embrace this state with its already high cost of electricity? Can we expect lower user fees with a projected cost of $1 billion for this project?

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Posted By:ROBERT at August 2, 2008 3:53 PM (Suggest Removal)
I sympathize with both sides . ACMP buy out would work!

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Posted By:j at August 2, 2008 6:49 PM (Suggest Removal)
NIMBY

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Posted By:Bob at August 2, 2008 8:37 PM (Suggest Removal)
The 345kv lines are not for Mainers, they will make it possible to send more power to the rest of New England. At present, during peak usage days, such as hot summer afternoons, current power generation in Maine is sufficient to meet Maine's need, and transmit the maximum amount possible over the 115kv lines south to the rest of ISO New England. Since there is no significant new generation being built, with the new 345kv lines, far more power can be sent south. So in the future, on peak usage days, the majority of Maine's power generation will go south to feed ISO New England, and Maine will be subject to voluntary power loss, then rolling involuntary power losses. Maine is having to pay for the lack of power generation in the rest of ISO New England.

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Posted By:tapped out at August 3, 2008 10:36 PM (Suggest Removal)
i cannot believe people would be so off if space that they cannot see the real reasoning why these power lines are being built. we will pay higher electric bills and they will sell the power to the other states who have undergroud lines. i think what they are doing to people's land and homes is horrible. i can understand that there are idiots out there who don't understand but if it was their land or home they would be the first out there screeming. this is not good for any of us so wake up and some of you stop being idiots.

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