State PUC urges landowner care regarding wind energy easements


Published/Last Modified on Thursday, Feb 19, 2009 - 06:05:24 am CST

Capital Journal staff

PIERRE — As interest and activity in wind energy grows in South Dakota, so should the amount of care landowners place in considering easement agreements offered by wind energy developers, suggests the state’s Public Utilities Commission.

“South Dakotans are generally protective of their assets and we just encourage landowners to keep that protection top-of-mind when they may be considering an easement for a wind energy facility on their property,” PUC Chairman Dusty Johnson said.

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Landowners asked to sign an easement with a wind energy developer should understand that monetary compensation is standard.

“If a developer asks a landowner to sign an easement but does not offer any form of upfront payment for the easement that should send up a red flag,” PUC Vice Chairman Steve Kolbeck said.

Landowners should seek professional advice from their personal attorney and accountant before they sign an easement. They can also conduct their own general research by reading the “South Dakota Landowner’s Wind Power Development Handbook,” accessible from the PUC Web site, www.PUC.SD.gov. The publication has been produced by the South Dakota Energy Infrastructure Authority, the PUC, and the South Dakota Attorney General’s Office.

The trade association Windustry is a helpful resource, as well. Information about easements can be found on their Web site, www.Windustry.org, under the tab labeled “Your Wind Project.”

“It’s also a good idea for landowners to learn all they can about the wind energy developer they are dealing with,” said PUC Commissioner Gary Hanson.

The Business Services section on the Secretary of State’s Web site at www.SDSOS.gov, is a helpful tool for researching companies doing business in the state.

 

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Comments

3 comment(s)

    SD resident wrote on Feb 26, 2009 11:14 AM:

    " Our PUC is a joke, they don't even care about the ratepayers. I know that they had people with utility backgrounds apply for some of their openings, but they didn't hire the most qualified, they hired a friend. This doesn't say much about the state of our PUC. I think the commissioners need to take responsibility of their executive director, she is not representing them very well with her hirings. "

    Rate payer wrote on Feb 26, 2009 8:07 AM:

    " I know I called on a docket item the other day and the PUC rep, didn't know what I was talking about and it took them over a week to get back to me and I had to call them and still didn't get a good answer. It is to bad they didn't hire anybody with experience, the one Rep they hired came from tourism the other from the department of Ag. What do they know about utility operations?? "

    landowner wrote on Feb 19, 2009 7:55 AM:

    " I find it hard to believe the PUC has any knowledge in this area, expecially with the inexperienced staff they have now. They lost some valuable people including their wind energy expert Steve Wegmen, and they filled these positions with people who have very little knowledge of utilities or wind energy. It must be politics as usual at the PUC hiring friends and family and not representing the taxpayers interestes. "

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