State of Cape Cod
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Call Me NIMBY!
The term NIMBY, an acronym for Not In My Backyard, has been bandied
about with great frequency and derision. It has often been aimed at the
opponents of the proposed wind farm in Nantucket Sound, whether or not
it applies, and at those who oppose affordable housing projects in
their neighborhoods. Not surprisingly, it is generally used in a most
derogatory, even insulting, manner by those who live far from the areas
involved and who therefore won't be effected by them. Why, you have to
wonder, is NIMBY something to be ashamed of? What’s wrong with not
wanting something you consider to be undesirable in your neighborhood?
Why should you not try to safeguard your piece of the pie?
People
work hard to be able to live in a nice area and enjoy pleasant
surroundings. It's certainly not selfish to try to protect that. It’s
bad enough when the disruption under discussion is absolutely
essential, but it’s especially galling when the project in question is
unnecessary, impractical, annoying, unsightly, or any combination
thereof. Whatever the undertaking, it will be irrevocable. Things can
never, ever, be restored to the way they used to be. Remember, no
matter how altruistically a project is portrayed, and whether or not
any benefits will actually accrue from it, the primary reason it’s
being proposed is for someone to make a profit. Money is always the
bottom line.
The so-called NIMBYs who are opposed to the
Nantucket Sound wind farm are accused of standing in the way of clean
energy and contributing to global warming, a theory still very much disputed by many reputable scientists. They are generally considered to be
wealthy folk who want to protect their ocean views. Consider this:
people move to Cape Cod for the quality of life. The sea around us and
the recreational, esthetic, and economic advantages it provides are a
large part of why most of us are here, whether or not we actually live
near the water. Nantucket Sound is still part of our ambience and vital
to our tourist oriented economy. Many who don't live within miles of
the sound want to protect it for those reasons.
Surely there's
nothing wrong with trying to protect all that from a hundred or more
unsightly wind turbines, each over four hundred feet tall, whomping
away day and night, that may or may not provide enough electricity to
make a dent in satisfying the needs of the Cape Cod population. The
wind is a capricious thing. Sometimes it blows, and sometimes it
doesn't. Everyone wants clean energy, but many believe the money and
effort would be better spent on nuclear plants, fuel cells, and solar
panels, instead of something as old-fashioned as windmills. It’s like
bringing back the horse-and-buggy in order to alleviate high gasoline
prices.
Sometimes, too, the wind blows too hard. Evidence:
recent cyclones and hurricanes across the country. How long do you
think it would take to remove a gigantic mass of twisted metal from
Nantucket Sound in the event of a natural disaster? Meteorologists are
continually warning us that “the big one is coming one of these days”.
What do we do with the mess all those downed towers will create when it
finally arrives?
The destructon of woodland for so-called
affordable housing is another case in point. Just twenty-five percent of any
project is usually designated as affordable. In return, the developer
is permitted to exceed the normal density requirements, which greatly
enhances his profits while often overcrowding the site and ruining the
area’s appeal. The remaining units are offered at market rates: far
from affordable at Cape Cod prices, even these days. Is it NIMBYism to
oppose allowing a developer to construct housing units on pristine
land? Structures which would exceed the specified density and might
require extensive infrastructure expenditures, including roads, already
strapped schools, and necessitate sewage facilities? All this just to
provide a handful of below market homes while enriching the contractors
and doing little to alleviate the high cost of housing.
Holding
in abeyance the valid question of whether or not the government should
be in the housing business in the first place, why not build only those
units necessary to comply with the state mandated affordable housing
minimum? Such units need not be palatial, simply utilitarian, and might
very well be built on land reclaimed from areas that have fallen into
disrepair. Why destroy a dwindling natural treasure when there are many
neighborhoods that could use redevelopment?
Opposing either of
the examples cited is merely common sense, not, heaven forbid,
NIMBYism! When people level the NIMBY charge they're accusing those who
don’t share their views of being selfish, when often it is really they
who are being self centered. Perhaps those opposed stand between their
accusers and an excessive profit, or possibly those in favor of the
project have been deceived by the favorable press which such
undertakings often receive. On the other hand, there is an excellent
chance that those who oppose these projects are simply smarter than
those who favor them. Perhaps they’re too wise to be duped by the
rhetoric generated by the profiteers, and blindly parroted on behalf of
those whose true agenda the supporters might be blissfully unaware.
Visit our sister site, Non Illigitimi Carborundum
11 comments
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http://imhz.livejournal.com
What has happened to the derogatory screams of horror and conspiracy?
Has CC2DAY come to its senses for a day?
I've enjoyed 3 posts in one day, even if I might digress from any of the views.
Excellent all.
That sounds mean, but it is an energy source based on an unlimited, semi-natural resource... and it sort of kills two birds with one stone, politically.
An excellent piece. Your comment about windmills being old-fashioned (among many in your article) is precisely what I have been thinking since I became aware of this project. Your comments sum up, for me anyway, this debate in one eloquent nutshell. Bravo.
capecrusader, you make my point. I have no yacht, big or otherwise, nor am I wealthy, as you'd know if you read my bio.
- The DOE "20% Wind By 2030". http://www1.eere.energy.gov/windandhydro/pdfs/41869.pdf.
- University of Delaware Mid Atlantic Coast wind resource study. http://www.udel.edu/PR/UDaily/2007/feb/wind020107.html
- Plan B 3.0's Renewable energy section. http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB3/pb3ch12.pdf
Info re: many of the questions you raise can be found within.
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About This Blog
Roger Savino is a retired teacher with over thirty years experience, twenty-three of them on the Cape. After vacationing here in the early fifties he returned often and decided it would be a good place to live. A job came along in 1974 and he and his wife moved here.
Their home town in northern New Jersey was crowded and lost in the sprawl of New York City. Cape Cod offered beautiful beaches, golf courses, friendly people, an easy life style, and space. There are, however, many of the same problems that exist everywhere; some major, others nearly insignificant. He intends to shed some light on those he finds particularly irksome and, hopefully, offer possible solutions.
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