OG&E power line proposal has landowners organizing
OG&E power line proposal has landowners organizing

Comments Comment on this article0

By Robert Medley
Published: July 24, 2008

KINGFISHER — Landowners along a proposed 120-mile wind power line that cuts through Kingfisher and Canadian counties are planning more meetings to discuss possible legal action against Oklahoma Gas and Electric Co., a spokesman for concerned landowners said.

Featured Gallery

 

Advertisement

About 100 people attended a two-and-a-half-hour meeting at Rose Rock Bank in Kingfisher on Tuesday night. Many who attended said they were not notified in advance of past public meetings sponsored by OG&E concerning the planned line.

Brent Snider, who is building a house northwest of Okarche near the proposed line, said the majority of those who attended Tuesday's meeting are willing to contribute money to a legal fund to hire an attorney.

"We are going to meet with a lawyer and we are going to get a fund going for a lawyer,” Snider said Wednesday.

OG&E officials said they are planning to build the power line between wind farms south of Woodward to a power substation between Rockwell Avenue and Council Road by 2010. The line would be carried on 115-feet poles that would cross within 500 feet of several landowners' homes.

OG&E spokesman Gil Broyles attended the Tuesday meeting in Kingfisher and told landowners he would take concerns back to OG&E officials working on the project. Broyles said OG&E officials are considering another meeting.

"There is a level of concern and confusion on this project,” Broyles said Wednesday. "We are certainly discussing the need for another meeting.”

He said OG&E agents are now talking to property owners in efforts to acquire right of way easements along the route.

OG&E's plan is for customers to pay $1.50 a month to build the $211 million line that can carry 345,000 volts of electricity, Broyles said.

Snider said, "My main concern is that we need to have another meeting. OG&E needs to set up another meeting because some landowners got their notices in the mail after the other meetings. There are other people who are elderly who could not make the other meetings.”

He said he is encouraged by the number of people who came to the Tuesday meeting.

"We will see what they (OG&E) do, but we won't wait on them,” Snider said. "We want to give everyone a chance to find out what is going on and talk to their neighbors about this.”


 


Toolbar sponsored by: David Stanley Ford

Hugh Downs Reports:
Natural discovery lowers high blood pressure and cuts artery plaque.
www.bottomlinesecrets.com

Sarah Palin
Run for 2012? 15 sec. Poll. Chance for Gift Card.
Poll-Lingo.com

shareView All

Buzz Up!


Leave a Comment

Something to say about this topic? Submit a Letter to the Editor online

Thank you for joining our conversations on newsok. We encourage your discussions but ask that you stay within the bounds of our terms and conditions. Please help us by reporting comments that violate these guidelines. To review our rules of engagement, go to Commenting and posting policy.


Log in below or sign up (it's free).






    News Photo Galleriesview all