Energy

Warwick Officials Hear from Community About Solar

Share

Some Warwick residents are concerned about four proposed solar projects, including one at Valley Country Club on New London Avenue. (Rob Smith/ecoRI News)

WARWICK, R.I. — It was standing room only in the Police Department’s community room as city officials held a solar ordinance workshop. Mayor Frank Picozzi and planning director Tom Kravitz presented their revisions to a controversial solar ordinance and invited the public to comment and suggest additional changes.

The proposed ordinance would prohibit solar development in residential neighborhoods, limiting them to industrial zoned areas. It also includes provisions for noise pollution, as many residents have said solar arrays are much noisier to abutters than people realize. While residents welcomed many of the changes, attendees were still not satisfied.

“Give folks time to see what you come up with next,” resident Barabra Walsh said during the Oct. 6 community meeting. “And maybe it needs one more revision after that, so what.”

City officials began drafting a solar ordinance last year, assembling a set of standards for future projects. A previous version of the ordinance was much more permissive to solar array placement. When Picozzi was sworn in as mayor, he halted the ordinance because of public concern.

Picozzi said he is not a fan of solar sprawl, but defended the rights of developers and property owners to apply for variances before the Zoning Board of Review.

“Everyone has that right, and should it be approved I don’t wanna see the nightmare on West Shore Road anywhere else,” he said.

Warwick has three existing solar projects: one on East Avenue; one off Jefferson Boulevard on Kilvert street; and one along West Shore Road. The ground-mounted arrays were zoned as electrical plants after project developers applied for variances. But residents complained of noise pollution, and called them eyesores that hurt property values.

Residents are currently concerned about four possible new solar developments. ISM Solar, a renewable energy development company based out of East Providence, has secured leases from the Kent County YMCA on Centerville Road and the Little Rhody Beagle Club off Cowesett Road for ground-mounted solar projects. Both leases have been filed with the city, and a freshwater wetlands permit has been approved by the Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management.

“The Y didn’t get approved; no one has submitted anything to the city,” Picozzi said.

Neighbors of the Valley Country Club on New London Avenue were well represented at the recent workshop. Many carried yellow signs protesting a solar development on country club property.

Residents expressed concern about a solar development proposed for Scott Elementary School, also on Centerville Road.

Residents also gave input on the new solar ordinance. Some expressed the need to add specific policy goals. Bob Oberg, reading off a pre-written statement, said language should be added “to protect Warwick natural resources, including open space, farmland, forest and other natural habitats … the city encourages development of solar energy on commercial, industrial and other developed land and locations.”

Others expressed concern about ensuring a carveout alternative space on homes for rooftop solar panels. Residents said installing solar panels on a home’s roof can violate the warranty, since solar installation requires cutting holes in the roof itself. The current version of the city ordinance prohibits solar panels on the ground of a residential property.

Not everyone agreed that the entire old bill was bad.

“It’s two steps forward with [tossing out] the overlay and new prohibitions, but a step backwards in terms of project-level site requirements,” said Jane Austin, who has urged the city to adopt an ordinance that directs solar development to its developed, commercial, and industrial areas.

Austin noted while the newer draft of the ordinance is shorter, clearer, and more succinct, any bill on solar standards should be both clear and as comprehensive as possible. She said she wanted to see more about setbacks, noise standards, screening, and buffering. She said maintenance requirements should be written into the ordinance.

Others agreed with an idea Kravitz made during his presentation about relegating solar projects to commercial solar canopies or industrial areas only.

“Solar is really good and it should be done responsibly, but not in neighborhoods,” one resident said.

Some looked for increased protections for the city’s remaining forests. Nathan Cornell, vice-chair of the School Committee, pledged not to support solar projects on forested areas.

Residents also questioned how closely city officials would adhere to the zoning prohibitions of solar, and sought assurances zoning officials would not rubber stamp any requests from developers.

“What you’re doing here will not affect the two developers that have approached you,” Walsh said. “It will affect us for the next 20 or 30 years to come.”

Local officials said each solar development project would be decided on a case-by-case basis. Even with a strict prohibition along zoning lines, in a small city like Warwick there are plenty of gray areas.

“The short answer is, it’ll be tested,” Kravtiz said.

The proposed ordinance is expected to be voted on by the City Council later this month, but officials have indicated an openness to holding off on the vote.

“There’s no reason to rush something we want to get right,” City Council member Vincent Gebhart said.

“You can’t go back once you do it; the land doesn’t come back,” replied a resident.

Categories

Join the Discussion

View Comments

Recent Comments

  1. Wow. What noise do solar panels make?
    Isn’t there a climate crisis?
    Shouldn’t we be doing our best to reduce carbon dioxide and hydrocarbon pollution?

  2. AJ Paris, Like you, I used to think solar was a good idea. I live in Smithfield in a neighborhood where most of us have a few acres. Behind our houses is a forest with a lot of wildlife. It is the only corridor for wildlife between Rt 7 and Providence/Branch Pike. My neighbor decided he wanted to place 17 acres of solar panels in this forest, cutting down about 20 acres of forest, plus build an access road, etc etc. All of us had to get together to fight this to protect the land and the wildlife. Also, the materials these panels are made of are absolutely toxic. There really is no “green” energy. It’s degrees of things, but clearing forest land in RI (which is happening) is not the answer either. The transformers are large and extremely noisy. The issue is more complex than I ever realized.

  3. @AJ Paris – Look into where the materials are made for solar panels, how far they’re transported & the lack of proper disposal of them if they become damaged or need replacing… They seem great at first, but we can do A LOT better. I live on East Ave close to where they put in the solar project. It was devastating to the eco-system here. At least 40 trees were taken down, including ones that had song bird nests in them; the field that was once a haven for wildlife in the area – deer, foxes, birds, rabbits, squirrels, etc. is surrounded by a 6′ high or so fence, further minimizing their habitat and food sources; we’ve noticed the wind impact has increased significantly from the many angled panels being right behind our home; the very loud work on the project would begin at 5:30 am and went on for months; there is noise generated from the connected "box" as well… it really opened my eyes to the problems with solar power, especially on wild/open land vs a paved lot or arrays on top of buildings. I really feel we shouldn’t allow open land to be used this way, private or not, and especially not in residential areas. There are so many empty commercial lots available in Warwick (paved) that could be utilized for such projects. Yes, we have to make changes and tackle climate change, but the "solutions" are not so black and white… Clearly, there are a lot of issues with solar power – even if they’re only allowed on paved, commercial lots – as I said before, still fossil fuels are used in the making of the materials (often in other countries), transportation of the materials, etc. + lack of proper disposal options for the dangerous materials if damaged or needing replacement.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Your support keeps our reporters on the environmental beat.

Reader support is at the core of our nonprofit news model. Together, we can keep the environment in the headlines.

cookie

We use cookies to improve your experience and deliver personalized content. View Cookie Settings