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November 25, 2024

36 Property Owners Sue Macon County Board and Wind Turbine Farm –

By John Kraft & Kirk Allen

On December 9, 2015

Macon Co., IL. (ECWd) –
Failure to provide hearing notice in accordance with law, failure to provide essential information regarding the hearing, and failure to issue hearing notices to landowners surrounding the proposed wind farm.
This is a classic example of why adherence to the law and meeting/hearing notice requirements must be followed. Had they been, this lawsuit could have never happened.
The proposed wind farm is owned by E.On and its attorney is reportedly Mike Blazer, whom we have written concerning Vermilion County and other wind farms and their hearing processes.
For the list of defendants and plaintiffs, see this page on Judici. To keep updated on the suit’s status, go to this page.
This article appeared in the Decatur Herald-Review:

Landowners demand court review of wind farm project

 

  • RYAN VOYLES H&R Staff Writer

 
DECATUR — Macon County officials failed to provide statutory notices for a public hearing as well as essential information in-regard to the proposed wind farm project, a petition for review filed by landowners near the project’s location claims.
There are 36 plaintiffs named in the claim filed Monday in the Macon County Circuit Court, with hopes to put a stop to a plan to build 139 wind turbines across 24,000 acres near Maroa and Warrensburg.
Defendants listed includes Macon County and all 21 members of the county board, who approved the special-use permit to construct the wind farm at the board’s September meeting. That includes board members Matt Brown, who voted against the project, and Grant Noland, who abstained from voting on four turbines located on property his family rents and operates on.
Other defendants includes E.On, the American unit of Germany’s largest utility company, and its subsidiary companies Twin Forks Wind Farm and EC&R O&M, which submitted the original application and would oversee operation of the wind farm.
The case seeks an end to any further development of the wind farm at its proposed location as well as to prevent the county board from assisting E.On with further site development or building permits.
Multiple causes are given in the claim for the court to overrule the county’s initial decision. Richard Porter, a Rockford-based attorney representing the plaintiffs, said the “fatal flaw” of the county’s process was in how it issued notices to residents who could potentially be affected by the wind farm of the original Aug. 11 Zoning Board of Appeals meeting to discuss the project.
Illinois statute requires at least 15 days’ notice before any board of appeals, and the notices must include the time, place and date of the hearing. The case claims that various plaintiffs did not receive a notice before the required 15 days, while others say they received a notice with the wrong date of the meeting. Other plaintiffs claim they did not receive any notice at all.
“I have never seen such an egregious violation of due process,” Porter said when reached Tuesday afternoon.
Other issues the claim raises includes how residents who sought information on Twin Forks’ application were not given a copy until after the initial Zoning Board of Appeals meeting, which the case states prevented opposition from gathering…continue reading at the Decatur-Herald (HERE)
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