By 2g1c2 girls 1 cup

Banner

Order Classified or Subscription

Print Subscription

Order a Print subscription
  1. Please use this form to order a subscription to the print edition of the Duxbury Clipper. If you have an existing subscription your order will automatically start when the current one runs out.
  2. Subscriber name(*)
    Invalid Input
  3. Mailing address(*)
    Invalid Input
  4. City(*)
    Invalid Input
  5. Zip Code(*)
    5 digits
  6. Phone(*)
    Invalid Input
  7. Email(*)
    Invalid Input
  8. Length of subscription(*)
    Please choose subscription
  9. Special instructions
    Invalid Input

  10. Invalid Input
  11. All fields are required. We will contact only if there is a problem with your order. After you click on button you will proceed to PayPal page for payment. Your order will not be processed without payment.

Classified

Congratulations

Clipper classified order form
  1. Please use this form to submit a classified ad for the Duxbury Clipper. Your classified is published in our print and web editions for one low cost. Add our sister publications in Pembroke, Hanson & Whitman for an extra $6/wk.
  2. Name
    Please enter your full name
  3. Address
    Please enter your billing address
  4. Town
    Invalid Input
  5. Zip code
    Invalid Input
  6. Phone
    Invalid Input
  7. Email
    Please enter valid email
  8. Confirm Email
    Please enter valid email
  9. Classified category
    Invalid Input
  10. Headline (max. 25 char.)
    Invalid Input
  11. Enter classified here
    Invalid Input
  12. How many weeks
    Invalid Input
  13. Special instructions (if any)
    Invalid Input
  14. Help us prevent spam. Please enter the three letters below:
    Help us prevent spam. Please enter the three letters below:
    Invalid Input
  15. After you click on button you will proceed to PayPal page for payment. Mastercard, Visa, Discover and American Express all accepted. Your order will not be processed without payment.
  16. You do NOT need a PayPal account to enter your payment.

Most read

Travelling Clippers

This week

SEC-A-Page-01.jpg

Special Sections

Search

Town Hall

781-934-1100

Town Manager
Ext. 141

Board of Health
Ext. 140

Assessors
Ext. 115

Town Clerk
Ext. 150

Veterans' Services
Ext. 108

Council on Aging
781-934-5774

ZBA
Ext. 122

Planning Board
Ext. 148

Conservation Commission
Ext. 134

Solar farm site plan approved
By Susanna Sheehan   
Wednesday, October 24, 2012 12:32 PM

This week, the solar farm slated to be built on the town’s capped landfill on Mayflower Street gained site plan approval from the planning board, getting it one step closer to construction.

In 2011, a special town meeting approved a solar farm on the town’s old landfill, which is a two-acre area behind the transfer station.

Thomas Melehan of American Capital Energy, Inc. of North Chelmsford, told the planning board Monday night that he had addressed some concerns raised by the board last month. They included tree removal, glare, noise, theft and an easement on an abutting property.

Initially, Melehan said his company planned to ask for tree clearing at the entrance to the landfill but decided against it. However, 77,000 square feet of trees will have to be cleared on the site to make way for the solar panels, he said. Some of the taller trees must be removed because they will block the sunlight from the panels, but the underbrush will remain and can grow as tall as ten feet, said Melehan.

As the 500 kilowatt solar array is considered a utility, it is exempt from the zoning bylaws that regulate land clearing over 30,000 square feet, said planning board chairman George Wadsworth.

Melehan said he will not be seeking an easement over an abutter’s property for more tree clearing, as he had previously considered.

“It’s not ideal, but we will live without it,” he said.

The solar panels will rest on concrete blocks that range in height from two feet to six feet, and the panels will be surrounded by a chain link fence. A gate and road will be constructed for emergency vehicle access. Melehan said he had consulted with the fire department and made sure the access road through the middle of the solar panels is designed so it can accommodate fire vehicles.

Vice chairman Brian Glennon asked Melehan about glare from the solar panels into the new police station being built adjacent to the solar project and also into the abutting Cranberry Hill neighborhood. Melehan said the panels are designed to absorb the sun’s rays not reflect them like windows. He said there would be some glare but for someone to see it, “they would have to be eight stories up.”

Glennon also asked about noise related to the project. Melehan responded that the noise was minimal as there would be an inverter that contained a small fan and a transformer that would make a humming noise.

“In terms of noise, it would be far less than a window air conditioning unit,” said Melehan. “ Also it’s off during the night.”

Planning Board member Cynthia Ladd Fiorini asked about panel theft, noting that thieves had stolen panels from solar arrays in other towns.

Melehan said that theft is “always a concern” but he pointed out that the landfill is a “controlled site” that was fenced and the solar panel project was fenced as well. He added that his company is insured if any panels are stolen.

Construction on the solar project had been slated to start this fall but that time frame has been pushed off to the spring, according to Alternative Energy Committee member Josh Cutler, who is also a planning board member. He said American Capital Energy is waiting for NSTAR to approve a connection agreement.

The Alternative Energy Committee has said previously that the solar project could provide approximately ten percent of the town’s electrical needs, saving the town thousands of dollars on its electricity bill.