Benton Harbor- Universal Offer

Herald Palladium

BENTON HARBOR - People who own property just east of the Southwest Michigan Regional Airport have until June 26 to accept a one-time offer of $5,350 for air space above their land or risk a lesser price later.

The price could be higher in a few cases through eminent domain, but in most it likely would be considerably less, he said. The easements are needed to meet height requirements for planes that will take off from the expanded runway once it is built.

He said the $5,350 offer to each of the 160 property owners involved is based on a market analysis and typical easement value. The easements allow airport workers - at the convenience of the landowner - to go on the property to trim or cut down trees as needed. The lifetime easement goes with the property if the property is sold.

Scherwitz said all property owners in the easement area were notified by mail about the airport's need to buy air space and were invited to a meeting earlier this week. He said about 50 of the 160 property owners in an area east of North Pike Street already have taken the offer and gotten a $500 down payment. The balance will be paid in about six weeks, Scherwitz said.


Scherwitz said the voluntary easement program saves the airport money because it eliminates the need for individual appraisals, while offering a fair price to owners, he said.

"We'll work with the homeowners. We wanted the voluntary offer to be attractive to people so it would reduce our paperwork. Some have asked us to please remove whole trees," he said. "We also will provide homeowners with a list of trees that, if they want to replant, won't grow very high but will provide shade. We're not pressuring anybody. We're here to answer questions. I'm the rumor buster. We want people to have good information."

The notion of the universal “voluntary offer” does not fulfill the requirement that properties are individually analyzed. However, under Michigan law the process saves the condemner the unnecessary costs of attorney fees and appraisal costs for itself and additional reimbursements to the owner.

There are some substantial issues raised in what are considered 'small' airport easement acquisitions. What are the increased noise and other environment nuisance factors? What are the damages for the loss of the height limitations? What is appropriate just compensation?

Michigan to Get Wind Power

Click on Detroit

The skyline in Michigan's rural Thumb could look a bit like historic Holland a few years down the road under DTE Energy Co.'s announced plan to install 125 wind turbines in Huron County by 2015 -- and 280 within two decades.

DTE Energy officials told Huron County commissioners the company must add 1,200 megawatts of green power to meet the state's new energy mandate. State rules require utilities to provide 10 percent of electricity from renewable sources by 2015.

The Huron County wind turbines eventually could provide 4 percent to 4.5 percent of the company's total power, DTE says.

The Detroit-based utility now generates about 1 percent of its power from renewable energy sources, said Grady Nance, manager of DTE Energy Renewable Energy Development. He said DTE's goal is to have about 3 percent of its electricity generated from renewable energy sources by 2012.

"We're going to be running hard to do that," the Huron Daily Tribune quoted him as telling the county board March 17.

State law requires DTE to buy at least half of the remaining 9 percent of total power that has to come from renewable energy sources from a third party. DTE says it seeks to produce the other half of the renewable energy from its own projects.

It said it will do so primarily through commercial-scale wind projects and some smaller solar projects.

"We will have about 565 (megawatts) of wind energy on our own" in Huron County by 2028, Nance said.

DTE has about 55,000 acres of land easements signed, with about 7,000 more acres under negotiations, according to The Saginaw News.

In response to questions from commissioners, DTE officials said the utility expects to cap the renewable portion of its generating capacity at 10 percent. That's because green power still costs more than power from coal and nuclear plants.

DTE said construction should create about 200 jobs, with groundbreaking expected in 2011.

The new energy plan will affect our communities. Detroit Edison will build one of Michigan's first windmill projects, hopefully not to the detriment of the owners.