Local News
Rural couple wants wind turbine
Lebanon — While sprawling wind farms in Benton County are pumping power into Indiana’s electrical grid, Jeff and Melissa Gerard of rural Lebanon are thinking of generating power on a smaller scale.
They want to erect a wind turbine on a 100-foot tower near John Bart Road and County Road 150 South.
The BWC EXCEL turbines, first sold in 1983, have been installed in 900 locations, the company said. The Gerards plan to buy a used model.
“This won’t be enough to meet half of my electric bill,” Gerard said. But she wants to encourage wind power in Boone County. Lebanon High School and Lebanon Middle School are within walking distance of their home. The Gerards want to make the wind turbine available for educational purposes. “This would be a great learning lab for them,” she said.
Neighbors think it’s a great idea, she said. Some have asked if the Gerards will install a larger turbine and share the power. “One of my neighbors even thinks this is pretty,” Gerard said.
“I have very progressive neighbors," Gerard said.
“We’ve been thinking about this for a few years," Gerard said.
The used turbine would be atop a 100-foot-high monopole tower, for which Gerard needs a waiver from the Boone County Board of Zoning Appeals. Anything higher than 35 feet is not allowed in the area, said Steve Niblick, executive director of the Boone County Area Plan Commission.
The turbine tower is an approved use, but the county Board of Zoning Appeals will have to approve a height waiver, Niblick said.
“It’s for residential use, yes,” Niblick said. “Nevertheless ... you still have height requirements.”
Boone’s zoning ordinances do not cover wind farms, Niblick said.
In energy production terms, the turbine tower is no different than having a propane tank in her yard, Gerard said.
Gerard wants to be on the BZA’s agenda for August, she said.
Niblick said a company is investigating areas of Boone County for wind power potential.
A test tower — “it’s literally just a big pipe,” Niblick said — has been erected in western Boone County to monitor wind speeds for about 12 months. “It’s a temporary structure,” Niblick said. Because it did not require a permit, there was no paperwork and Niblick does not remember the company’s name.
Wind speed maps show areas of northwestern Boone County could be “farmed” for electricity.
The Gerards are among hundreds of Hoosiers who are interested in cutting their power bills by generating and possibly selling electricity.
In October 2004 Indiana passed a law encouraging the construction of solar, wind and small hydro-electric generation facilities, Lebanon Utilities General Manager Mike Martin said.
Utilities can agree to accept power from private units if those units produce less than 10 kilowatts of electricity, Martin said. A consumer’s electric bill would fluctuate based on how much power is generated vs. how much is used.
There are two ways to measure that power, Martin said.
One is with a meter that basically “runs backwards” when the consumer is sending power to the grid, and “forward when they are taking more than they are putting out,” he said. The other method uses separate meters for consumption and production.
Martin said electric utilities could in the next few years have “advanced meter infrastructure” to monitor output. “When a consumer is creating more power than they need, it could be shifted to the grid.”
- Local News
-
-
Ounce of prevention
The health department began giving these free vaccinations last April, and as of the beginning of the clinic Wednesday, McNutt said she had about 105 students left to check off.
-
Unused seat belt leads to foot chase and arrest
Carroll Wethington may be wishing he’d buckled up.
-
Community leaders join forces to start mentoring program
The Boone County Mentoring Collaborative, with the help of consultant Tracy Butler of the Indiana Mentoring Partnership, is working to create a high-quality mentoring program to help at-risk children
-
McCraw faces four new charges
Charges that he had been using marijuana before he drove a car into a home, killing a woman, have been filed against Joshua McCraw, 22, Lebanon.
-
Off-duty cop catches burglary suspect
-
Building blocks
Perry-Worth first-grader Ryan Keith counts his fingers to add a math sum while playing an educational computer game Tuesday afternoon as classmate Scout Langley, right, also intently plays during Perry-Worth Elementary School’s intervention block.
-
Boone benefits from Indiana’s conservation program expansion
Lt. Gov. Becky Skillman recently visited Starkey Farms here to announce that the U.S. Department of Agriculture has granted an expansion of Indiana’s Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program , a partnership between the USDA and the State of Indiana to address agriculture-related environmental concerns.
-
Leap placed on unpaid suspension
Lebanon Police Patrolman Jason Leap is on unpaid suspension pending the result of an Indiana State Police investigation into allegations he pointed a handgun at a bar patron while off duty.
-
West Nile pops up in Boone
The West Nile Virus has been detected in adult mosquitoes in Boone County.
-
A cross-country summer
Lebanon resident Richard Lyons flew to the Pacific coast in Oregon in June to explore the area on his bicycle. He told his family he was going to ride around for a while and then head back home.
- More Local News Headlines
-





