Lawrence-Douglas County Planning Commission members voted on a 4-4 tie to recommend denial of a permit for a massive solar farm north of Lawrence after a meeting that stretched hours into early Tuesday morning. The permit will soon go to the Douglas County Commission for consideration. City Planner Mary Miller outlined the project and said city staff recommended approving the permit. The motion included recognition of a series of conditions that the planning commissioners had discussed in order to ensure certain topics would be forwarded to the county commission. The Kansas Sky Energy Center, a 159-megawatt solar farm, would be built, owned and operated by Evergy with designs provided by Savion LLC, a division of Royal Dutch Shell based out of Kansas City. If approved, the solar facility, set to be located north of Lawrence, will begin construction in early 2025. The solar farm would comprise 237,300 solar modules, 43 inverter stations, and solar tracking systems. Much of the multiple hours of deliberation centered around the tension between two competing environmental goals: the need for renewable energy and the need to preserve agricultural land. Commissioners Gary Rexroad, Prasanth Duvvur, David Cartaar and Sharon Ashworth voted in favor of the permit. Commissioners Charlie Thomas, Mike Kelso, Chelsi Hayden and Jane Eldredge voted against the permit. Commissioner Steve Munch recused himself from consideration for the solar farm permit at the beginning of the meeting and did not participate in discussion.  Citing both environmental and economic concerns, Kelso said he didn’t think the project was compatible with the character of the neighborhood. Eldredge agreed that the location was not the right spot for the development. “I don’t think we need it in this location,” Eldredge said. “And I think there’s still so many unanswered questions.” Both Thomas and Hayden said they thought the process was too quick for such a massive development. Both expressed that they thought the application and the idea of solar energy were necessary but they said they still had major questions about the specific solar project.
Source: The Lawrence Times