Commissioner Carl Wood revisited the zoning issue in the county asking County Counselor Jim Emerson for more details on a moratorium. Emerson said that using a moratorium is a way to delay companies from building solar and wind farms as it gives the county time to update its strategic plan, zoning laws, and land usage. This is not a short process but can take a year or more to complete. Commissioners need to adopt a resolution giving Emerson the authority to draft a moratorium and hire an outside consulting firm to review zoning laws and the county’s strategic plan, which Emerson admits needs updating. Many of the county’s rural residents are opposed to countywide zoning laws, fearing it gives the county government the authority to say what is allowed or not allowed on private property. There are other options than zoning the entire county. Cities and towns are already zoned, so extending the boundaries of those zoned areas is one possible solution. Another is zoning only specific parts of the county to allow or disallow construction of alternate energy facilities. Not an advocate of zoning the county, Commissioner Bruce Blair says that some form of zoning is necessary to stop the construction of solar and wind farms in places they are not wanted. While passing zoning laws is a definite yes or no about what can be built where, a moratorium slows the process down and gives the commission and residents time to decide what is the best course of action.
Source: Morning Sun