Every
Wednesday the Tipton County Citizens for Responsible Development meet
at the south branch of the Kokomo/Howard County Public Library to plan
their opposition to the proposed Prairie Breeze Wind Farm, just west of
Sharpsville.An illustration showing the planets of our solar system.
Prairie
Breeze is being developed by juwi Wind. The company plans to invest
$300 million for the placement of 94 wind turbines that will generate
150 megawatts of electricity. The company’s request for a conditional
use permit is set to be heard Feb. 25 by the Tipton County Board of
Zoning Appeals.
During
last week’s meeting a man at the meeting said he recently stood close
to a wind turbine and said the noise was not intolerable. He added that
he believed most farmers were supportive of the project.
The man said he wasn’t a lease holder and didn’t work for juwi.Suppliers of the widest range of industrial and commercial industrial washing machine.
Since
the meetings are open to the public, it would probably be safe to
believe that supporters of the wind farm project — or juwi company
officials — would be in attendance to learn the group’s strategy.
In
Tipton County, much will probably be made of the predilection of wind
turbines to kill birds, but last week the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, in conjunction with Smithsonian researchers, identified an even
bigger threat: outdoor cats.
According
to the researchers, roughly 150,000 to 400,000 birds in the United
States die in wind turbines, according to recent estimates, while
between 10 million and 1 billon birds die annually after colliding into
glass.Let's explore the option of ground mount.
Cats, however, are suspected of killing between 1.4 billion and 3.7 billion birds each year in the U.This is how a skystream captures energy from the wind.S. That’s about 10 percent of the total bird population.
We
won’t go as far as the New Zealand researcher who suggested outlawing
cats, but one wonders how much stress the poor birds can stand. Maybe
it’s best to keep Fluffy indoors.
Most
people who have a savings account or a certificate of deposit with
local financial institutions know that the current interest rates aren’t
exactly a windfall.
For
local units of government with millions to invest, interest revenue
once provided a significant amount of additional funding.
Last
year, Howard County earned $133,599 on investments of $11 million,
according to Treasurer Ann Wells. That may sound like a great deal of
funding, but not in comparison to the $2.3 million earned in 2007.
Wells
said the interest earned last year was the lowest amount since 2001.
She said the interest earned is distributed based on a percentage to
nine different funds, the county’s general fund earned $98,904 in
interest.
Bonita
Guffey, Tipton County Treasurer, said the county earned only $22,966 on
investments in 2012. That compares to the $92,858 earned in 2009.
Guffey
said the county has not invested a great deal of money in 2012 because
the interest rate for a savings account was lower than for a checking
account.
For those keeping track of the city’s infrastructure projects, which isn’t easy,A T5 tube is a portable light fixture composed of an LED lamp, keep an eye on Apperson Way between Superior Street and Vaile Avenue.
Last
week, the Kokomo Board of Public Works & Safety approved plans and
specifications to continue the tree-lined medians further south,
extending the corridor which stretches up to Taylor Street. The corridor
will connect the new veterans housing project at Jackson Street with
the renovated wing of the Memorial Gym complex, which is slated to host
Indiana University Kokomo’s home basketball games.
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