Farm Bureau members invited to solar energy briefing

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Champaign and Miami County Farm Bureau members are invited to a briefing on solar energy development at 7 p.m. Monday, March 25, in the county Community Center. The event is sponsored by the Champaign County Farm Bureau Board of Trustees and Public Policy Action Team.

The program will be facilitated by Dale Arnold, director of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation’s Energy, Utility and Local Government Issues. “Over the next several years Ohioans will be involved in a variety of energy generation, transmission and distribution projects. These include several utility-scale solar generation projects being considered in Champaign and Miami counties.” Arnold said.

During the briefing, Arnold will discuss potential solar energy generation evaluation activities in the area, energy market trends, remediation standards, as well as regulatory agencies governing different types of energy development. Issues concerning eminent domain and farmland preservation will be explored, as well as what landowners should consider as they evaluate lease and easement agreements.

“Pipelines, transmission line refits, generation technology – There are a variety of projects being developed in and around the community, all with their own regulatory and procedural structures,” said Tom Nisonger, president of Champaign County Farm Bureau. “Many Farm Bureau members have questions. As community stakeholders they want to know how each project developer will address soil and water conservation issues, land remediation standards, use of local roads and safety procedures. Our Public Policy Action Team is looking at these issues and have invited other interested county Farm Bureau members to join them for this briefing.

“If asked to sign complex agreements, releases and associated paperwork, landowners have the right to have their legal counsel examine all materials,” Nisonger said. “Community stakeholders are realizing that many aspects of an energy development project are not necessarily boilerplate; there are still a variety of individual landowner and community decisions to be made. Our input is important.”

Arnold has been involved in energy and utility-related issues since 1995. He represents farm and rural residential energy consumers on a variety of government working groups and public utility advisory boards concerning energy development. He has extensive experience working with county Farm Bureaus and local residents, helping communities evaluate development projects concerning electric generation, transmission and distribution infrastructure.

The Ohio Farm Bureau Federation is the state’s largest general farm organization, encompassing 86 county Farm Bureau organizations and over 143,000 member families statewide. Champaign and Miami County Farm Bureau leaders are active on state and local action teams working on legislation, regulations and issues that impact agriculture and its relationship with rural, suburban and urban communities. Locally, over 2,200 member families belong to Champaign and Miami County Farm Bureaus.

Learn about solar energy projects under consideration

Submitted story

Submitted by the Champaign, Clark, Darke, & Miami County Farm Bureau.

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