May 1, 2012

By Tom Shevlin

NEWPORT -- City Council members last week received a series of proposed principles submitted by the Planning Board to provide the city with a basis for governing residential and commercial wind turbines.

The proposal, which was endorsed as the Planning Board's April 16 meeting, is the result of three scheduled Planning Board meetings and one special session held over the last several months.

While still a working document, Planning Board members recommended creating an overlay district outlining the area where wind turbines may be allowed either through permit or by right.

Utility scale turbines, which can often have 300-400-foot towers and large rotor assemblies, would not be permitted anywhere in the city.

Meanwhile, commercial scale turbines would likely be restricted to Commercial Industrial and Traditional Maritime zones such as the State Fishing Pier and Newport Shipyard. And residential scale turbines would likely be limited to residential districts land area greater than 10,000 square feet – except for in the Historic District.

"The Planning Board regards the local Historic District as an inappropriate location for wind turbines unless the subject property has greater than 40,000 square feet in land area," the Board wrote.

In December, councilors voted 6-0 to adopt a temporary nine-month moratorium on wind turbine development in order to develop a comprehensive policy on the subject.

The vote came on the heels of an Eastnor Road resident’s request to construct a residential wind turbine in his densely populated Fifth Ward neighborhood.

A final proposal is expected to be drafted by early this summer.

May 1, 2012

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