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Overhead Line Opponents Pour Out for Hearings

In last opportunity for challenges before the Public Service Commission rules, almost all in a large turnout of citizens demands power lines be buried.

 

Hundreds of Wauwatosa and Milwaukee residents filled the chambers of the Common Council on Tuesday in hearings before the Wisconsin Public Service Commission, and almost to a single person their message was:

"Bury the lines."

In a debate that has gone on for more than a year, this was the last public part. The decision on exactly where two new 138,000-volt power lines will be routed, and whether all or parts of them will be overhead or underground, now rests with the PSC.

That decision will come in March, as the members of the PSC, their lawyers and advisers, pore through reams of technical documents and testimony.

Early this year, residents of the Fisher Woods and Underwood Creek Parkway neighborhoods, as well a neighborhood in westernmost Milwaukee, banded together to protest overhead lines along alternative routes in any of those areas.

The Common Council was persuaded to pass a resolution backing that position.

But unity among the two Wauwatosa citizens' groups broke down after City Attorney Alan Kesner, who was obliged to argue the city's official stand, proposed an underground route that still would affect Walnut Road residents in Fisher Woods.

Kesner pleaded for consensus and eventually got it from the Common Council, with the backing of a large bloc of citizens, most from Underwood Parkway but including many from all over Wauwatosa and beyond who are adamantly opposed using parkland for a utility cooridor.

The Walnut Road neighbors got some support, most notably from their alderman, Don Birschel, for placing the lines anywhere but there, and overhead if necessary. Birschel, who had developed a number of alternative route proposals on his own, none of which gained traction, argued Tuesday against both the siting on Walnut Road and the cost to rate-payerss of an all-buried route.

But the vast majority present Tuesday – and of those who sent written statements and petitions to the PSC – represented the interests of Underwood Parkway and parkland in general, or the interests of the families of Milwaukee Montessori School and St. Therese Parish in Milwaukee.

Eddee Daniel of Wauwatosa, who identified himself as a member of a number of local and national enviromental groups, made an impassioned statement against any public-private project looking first to parkland just because it would be the cheapest alternative.

"In this case, the benefits of preserving parkland, and the benefits of burying the line, outweigh the narrow, short-term economic considerations," Daniel said. "Some of the benefits are less tangible, like quality of life, but others truly are economic, like property valuations and the costs of physical and emotional health.

"These costs would not be borne by the ATC (American Transmission Co.), but by the larger community. Ultimately, the short-term economic argument makes everyone poorer."

Pat Hall, of the St. Therese community, told the commissioners that his church was one that was trying to grow while many urban parishes are shrinking. Building power line towers practically outside the church doors, Hall said, might ultimately crush the church's hopes for remaining a vibrant religious institution.

"If people looking for a new parish were to see that," he said, "why would they not drive on down the road to the next parish?"

Related Topics: ATC, Power Lines, Utilities, and We Energies

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Jim Price

9:42 pm on Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Alt, according to the official gatekeepers:
It will raise your electric bill, but only by pennies a month, as the cost will be spread over all We Energies rate-payers, something like 5 million customers.

In the long term, it could cost a fortune in property values here in Tosa, and those costs can never be recovered. The expected useful life of overhead lines is 80 years. The room they will take up crossing land that is developable after the Zoo Interchange Project is complete is a huge loss, and the loss in value to adjacent tracts is unknown but expected to be large. Over 80 years, the loss in tax base for the city, county and state is expected to far outweigh the costs of installation of the power lines if placed overhead.

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Mike

1:27 pm on Thursday, November 29, 2012

Funny they call the union members thugs when they protest and act like this. Shows that we all deserve to express our opinions.

Candy

10:05 am on Wednesday, November 28, 2012

A lot of people with way too much time on their hands. The 49%.

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Mike in Tosa

10:36 am on Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Who exactly are you referring to?

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Jim Price

9:43 pm on Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Apparently, the 47% have already grown....

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1:36 am on Saturday, April 13, 2013

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Random Blog Commenter

10:37 am on Wednesday, November 28, 2012

If the squeeky wheels of the Underwood Parkway homeowners are successful (kudos to them for their public involvement), the City of Wauwatosa needs to find a way to reassess their property to better reflect the advantages they personnally receive from their location near public property that we all own. It is not their private park where they get to dictate the use.

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Mike in Tosa

10:41 am on Wednesday, November 28, 2012

I live in Fisher Woods and I understand the arguments on all sides. The lines are not a matter of "If they are to be implemented.." rather "How are they going to be implemented?" Obviously the Fisher Woods and Underwood share the same goal, neither of our communities want these lines. So, I get it. Unfortunately, the decision and the plans for implementation will ultimately determine if my family stays in the neighborhood or not. The way things progressed, I don't hold out much hope of us staying.

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Christine McLaughlin

7:48 pm on Wednesday, November 28, 2012

No, it's not a private park. It's everyone's park, yours and your grandchildren's, Random. Do you think the (relatively smaller number of) private homeowners on Walnut have a more compelling case, one less guided by personal interest than those (greater in number and geographic location) who want all parks and parkways preserved?

Mike, In the best of all worlds ATC would have to offer you a fair price for your house if you find it impossible to live there. Since they claim proximity to lines does not alter values, they could turn around and sell it and no one has taken a financial loss. The emotional one, that's hard.

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Random Blog Commenter

10:29 am on Thursday, November 29, 2012

Ms. McLaughlin,

I said it was everyone's park and I did not pick a side in the fight. In fact, I commended the Underwood residents for making their voice heard. All I did is point out that these people derive a unique, publically sponsored benefit to their property that adds to its value. Since the city has utilized significant resources to prefer an alternative that further benefits Underwood residents, the city should find a way to better capture that status when it reassesses those properties for tax purposes.

Mike

1:33 pm on Thursday, November 29, 2012

Funny when unions express their views in the form of protests they are called thugs. I guess we all have the right to fight and protest for what we think is good for us as citizens. Hope this issue gets resolved.

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