Listen: Power Lines
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An MPR Special, titled “Power Line Dispute,” looks into the controversy over high voltage power lines planned in numerous rural counties in order to bring additional electrical power to Minnesota and the Twin Cities.

The thirty-minute special news presentation gives a chronological history and various commentary and viewpoints from government officials, farmers, law enforcement, and the power line industry.

Awarded:

1976 United Press International Award-Minnesota Broadcasters Organization UPI Award, Documentary for Radio Stations category

Read the Text Transcription of the Audio.

The following Special Report is a news presentation of Minnesota Public Radio. I will not point a gun at either the farmer or a surveyor. We must stop and we will stop disturbing. I wish they would make up their mind and the health of the people be damned. We could not find him a search literature significant scientific studies validating health effects and let him make the decision. I don't think this is the electric power line. It'll be more than 400 miles in length stretching across most of North Dakota and Minnesota. The 400000 volt line will win its way Eastward to the Twin Cities along its path live hundreds of Minnesota Farmers and they fought the lines construction for more than eight months. It's a point that has led the corps challenges angry protests couples with Law Officers and just recently arrest good evening, Greg bear on in the Special Report will examine the major developments in this so I'm going country. And attempt to better clarify some of the many questions raised by this unsettling story in recent weeks the disturbances among farmers and Law Officers has spread from Central Stearns County where it all began to to other areas of the state and last week for the first time farmers were arrested and cited for contempt of court at a survey site in Polk County, Minnesota Public Radio reporter John Muir Lake covered many of the major events in this controversy since its beginning and provides this chronological history of those events through tonight. They all important certificate of Need for CPA and UPA to bill. The 400000 volt line was granted by the Minnesota Energy agency in early April 1976. And that's when angry Farmers along the proposed route Carter fig and stepped up efforts to organize themselves and when they began their vocal highly visible battle against the line several Farmers later to swell to several hundred Farmers from Central Stearns County and surrounding areas formed. Does United for Rural environment refer to as simply cure the farmers none of them experts and other scientific or environmental matters protest at the high-powered line for three basic reasons why they objected to the line at self crossing their Farmland to no specific cost of the line to Rural Electric co-ops was it says and three the ozone factor or more accurately the unknown ozone Factor. These early concerns were Express to NPR and this conversation of May 7th with Belgrade former Bruce Polson and pure Consulting Jim Dunlop first Polson dinette no specials on it, but supposedly when dust gets on the line sparks fly off in this part creates ozone which and any Bradley plan play God's eye beans Navy beans tomatoes. It's always the one that has damage to the cells in the leaves where when the damage is done to the cells. They don't they die or done don't produce as much as if they hadn't been damaged ozone is a very serious air pollutant and as far as crops plants and vegetation and so forth go it is the most serious of the pollutants are the air pollutants and it has been shown the utilities in their Consultants admit to acknowledge that there will be ozone pollution coming off of this line from Corona loss and so far we would like to see a dentist put underground where it doesn't affect us Belgrade former Bruce Polson and pure consultant Jim Dunlop speaking in St. Cloud in early May about the same time the Dunlop sent a letter to PCA director Peter Gould suggesting that the pca's draft environmental impact statement did not contain all available environmental information on the proposed line, especially some general data recently. Assembled in New York state on the alleged Health dangers from AC power lines. The Minnesota line will be only the second major DC line built in the United States Dunlop was referring to research conducted by doctors Andrew Moreno and Robert Becker of Syracuse University with a New York data and hand Dunlop 24 the eqc on June 3rd to see to reopen the just completed eqc public hearing because of the lack of information in there and and the lack of the other definitive incomplete record on the potential ozone damage and also the health information on the candlelight very late, and I might add there was no reason for that in my mind the the health information from doctors Marino and Becker in New York. I don't know how many of you people are aware of it or how many of you on your stabs were aware of an inductor Lawson Stafford. Just what but you all seem to express some surprise when cure brought this information forward. Remember the health department came over to my house. To pick up the testimony from the New York State case. It's this approach of build now and study later and the health of the people be damned eqc. Had Vanderpool told Dunlop that some published literature on the matter was not included in the impact statement because it was released just recently again Dunlop. Staff of the state organizations in Minnesota know about that information that's been around for 15 years Peter. Well, yes it has he been doing it for 15 years a problem. Take a look. Common sense that information was entirely negative. We could not find from a search of literature significant scientific studies validating health effects. We have reviewed and I've only had access to a doctor Marino's testimony recently. And even in that testimony, they they state that they're dealing with their Studies have dealt with the AC current and that they admit in there they stayed in their own testimony that they have not analyzed the direct current case and they cannot come in at their their information there suggested but effects on the biological system simply cannot be translated as by their own testimony from a-z situations of DC situation June 3rd State Health commissioner Warren Lawson that same weed doctor Moreno told NPR that although his data concerning possible harmful emission effects of ac lines. Was his belief that possibly similar alleged effects might exist on DC lines that you QC at this stage of the Powerline proceeding was confronted not only with regular audiences of irate Farmers, but several proposed routes for the 402 Mile Line from North Dakota under the state power plant siding Act of 1973 and eqc's interpretation of that act eqc had 180 days from certificate of need approval. And what's the grant align Carter ^ coops, the eqc could not reject the lines construction or postpone it and affect their hands were tied. It was at this June 30 QC meeting that the council approved both the line building permit and the designated line route Carter frustrated and somewhat perplexed at the narrow guidelines, which greatly limited the qcs options and dealing with the line. He remembers most of whom at this point. We're Stearns County Farmers sought other methods of stopping moves to build the line soon after the eqc is June meeting. Co-op surveyors began appearing at sites near where the line would be built and Farmers began gathering at those same locations to stop the survey work these early confrontations and Stearns County were generally peaceful, but on June 8th to remember virtual folks was arrested and charged with two felonies the general charge allegedly trying to run surveyors off land adjacent to his farm. What is tractor by the end of June the friction between farmers and surveyor showed signs of igniting into serious physical confrontation and all eyes turn to Stearns County Sheriff Jim ellering on June 29th. Finally said what he would not do The people whose land is affected a vehement Lee objected as Sheriff of this County. I became involved when the landowners and other concerned citizens objected to trespass of their property. In the meantime the power companies expect my department. Do use unlimited Force if necessary to accomplish their survey and ultimately the routing of the power line. In my opinion, this is a situation that began the with the Environmental Quality console at the request of the power companies. And that's where the problem should be remanded for resolution. I will not point a gun at either the farmer or a surveyor. The point the gun is to be prepared to shoot and this situation certainly does not justify either. Yep, does justify a review of the conditions that bring about such citizen resistance June 29th Stearns County Sheriff Jim ellering at this point conflicting. Rumors were everywhere of just what confrontations between farmers and surveyors had taken place and whether Firearms were used to shoe off Electric Co-op Personnel from private Farmland to remember John Tripp following sure FL Rings announcement. Well, we're going to continually place all our roads and Fields under surveillance and try it. We we must stop and we will stop disturbing which we think is it illegal to start the farmers have firearms with absolutely not absolutely not held and prove generally ineffective by this time to officials had discovered that the official testimony from to previous public hearings were missing from the eqc transcripts. It turned out that one virtue. Folks the same cure member arrested for the alleged assault on surveyors with his tractor and recorded both those hearings on his own cassette recorder at the eqc is August 4th meeting to attorney Norton Hadley presented the council with the missing testimony from the Painesville Hearing in passing that I have listened to a part of the Litchfield. Tape which occurred on April 14th or not finished with that review yet ourselves. I think there are holes in it. How of a magnitude equal to or worse than what we see in the April 13th play transcript record. It would be more than 3 and 1/2 months before a ruling was made their tried to buy public opinion through this method of advertising campaign. And now apparently they're trying to buy off the farmers and it isn't going to work. I mean the farmers are way by early August the power Co-op space with what appeared to be growing public Sympathy for the farmers began a media advertising campaign United power and Cooperative power associations. Also offered Farmers more money for land needed for the Powerline Carter pure protested both moves UPS. Spokesman Don Jacobson for a long time many of the farmers out there and cure in particular have been saying that we have not been offering nearly enough for these men across their land and we should do review our schedule. Offer them more what they consider to be a true value for what they're giving up and we have re-evaluated we have increased the payment. And now when we do that, they turn right around and say well we're trying to buy them off. I wish sure it's a most people out there would make up their minds never the last the confrontations and Stearns County persisted and on August 11th, a temporary restraining order halting survey was issued in St. Cloud the eqc Met again on September 14th, and again pure was pushing for reopening of the hearings now not on the pending missing transcripts, but on what attorney Hatley call the possible cumulative effect of the unknown ozone Factor on the environment near the power line. Nobody can sit in this hearing room this morning and say that the testimony in this case doesn't point to some Danger. Not one of the witnesses for see you ever said that the ozone off. This line was not dangerous. Question is is the ozone from this line when taken together with all of the other polluting effects from every other polluting entity traveling all over the state of Minnesota. The question for you to resolve the director of the pollution control agency Peter Gould responded to Hadley's comments and park this way. It's true that these are quality parameters do in a relate. It's true that they perhaps have a cumulative effects. I guess where we we differ is this if we had a Excursion over the ozone standard today, and we nearly had one yesterday in Southeastern Minnesota are there's nothing that I could do nor the governor of this state nor John Graff the National Weather Service NORAD buys anyone in the state to do to change that. Beyond our control the ozone that has a cause problems in the state the last several years and I'm thinking particularly of the incident two weeks ago where we had a three-day period of elevated ozone levels. That was that was materials that in all probability were transported from St. Louis and Chicago agreed to hold general public hearings on the possible health hazards of DC power lines that would follow a literature search and the conclusion of similar hearings in New York state those hearings could begin in Minnesota sometime this spring. I tried to take the sign away from them. Timer October 1st Farmers survey or confrontations which had stomped and Stearns County. We appeared in Meeker and Meeker County Sheriff. John Rogers voice the same complaint that had been expressed by other Law Officers. I am going to the governor and let him make the decision. I don't think this is Van. It is an accounting matter anymore when you got six counties involved and I think it's about time the governor gets involved in this here and Because it's more than what we can handle if it comes up again. Why we just can't handle it. That's all there is to it through the entire power line dispute Anderson maintained a low profile refusing to take emergency measures and hopes that the law would be upheld piece. He did meet with a small group of Pope County Farmers and st. Paul but as low profile was a x severely criticized by farmers who suggested that Anderson was politically motivated in an election year in recent weeks farmer survey crew confrontations of taking place in Polk County or last week in the most serious confrontation to date several farmers were cited for contempt of court for a survey interference on Tuesday, November 23rd to officials filed an appeal to the Minnesota Supreme Court of a judge's ruling in Polk County that court order issued on a motion from United Power Association instructor the county sheriff to carry out arrests if survey interference persistent and on Tuesday November 30th today that you QC held a special meeting of the missing transcripts asp If it's public hearings as expected the council approved hearing officer 10 lbs recommendation made public earlier this month as you know, we spent considerable time energy and good number of taxpayers dollars reviewing these tapes and we now come to the conclusion that the is encompassed in the in the resolution. There was nothing in the tapes to change. Mr. Mel B's mind and I don't think there's anything the tapes that would have changed the decision I voted on last June and I trust that the most others on the council will I think we should we should move on signify by saying I sorter in recent days the commissioner of the Minnesota Supreme Court acting on Kira's appeal filed last week as requested all pertinent records in the power lines story for possible consideration by the high court or Joe fooks trial for his alleged assault on Co-op surveyors has been postponed until these legal matters are Included following today's eqc meeting to attorney Hadley said his group chances of favorable Court action in the future may have been increased by the apparent admission by the eqc that it's official transcripts were not a complete record a QC member and DNR commissioner. Robert Herbst said at one point no transcript is totally complete in every respect in this special report. We are focusing on just one power line disputes one that has generated unusual a widespread controversy. There are of course other power lines and plans being proposed around Minnesota. And at least one development farmers are getting into the process early northern states power company is now seeking an MBA certificate of Need for power plant facilities in southern Minnesota and although a site for the plan has yet to be announced local communities are beginning to keep a watchful eye on current proceedings. And this is indeed a head start. The NSP plant is not expected to be built until 19. 85 C's role in the Powerline controversy probably ended today, but the larger questions of Minnesota's energy consumption and Environmental Protection have not yet. Been resolved Farmers consistently attacked. The high-voltage lines is unhealthy environmental and health agencies disagreed Farmers claim that they didn't really need any more energy that the line was going to supply Metropolitan users opposition the energy agency and the power Cooperative vehement Lee deny. Finally Farmers Express repeated dissatisfaction with the whole process of Regulation. They said it shut them out while some government officials, praise. The procedure is democratic Rachel Kranz has investigated various energy questions in Minnesota, and she's been investigating this one Rachel first. What about the proposal that came up a few times during the hearings the suggestion that the power lines be put underground wouldn't that have solve the whole problem or was not feasible? Cure wasn't particularly committed to that. That was just a suggestion it made to express his dissatisfaction with the government wasn't looking at more Alternatives. But even if they had really been pushing that particular alternative most other people seem to agree that first of all, the line underground would have been 5 to 16 times more expensive and secondly the environmental damage from an underground line is far greater, according to most people you have to put an oil sheets around the line, which means there's a danger of oil spills the line heats up the ground which means you can't use it for Farmland. There's a lot of digging a lot more construction heavy equipment and so on disturbing the land mixing up the soils than you'd ever get with an overhead line. What about the energy that the line is supposed to provide is everybody agreed that Minnesota does need more energy. What is using up all that energy. The power plant is supposed to provide a thousand megawatts. That's to make up the difference between the projected capability of the two coops of about 600 megawatts as opposed to Projected demand obligation of about fifteen hundred megawatts that's by 1980s. So not only our needs Rising but sources Elsewhere for those two coops other places that they've been buying energy from are decreasing the NBA says that it's possible without this plant. Not only will there be power outages actually in the to co-ops and the area that they serve but it would have set the whole system in Minnesota because those two Co-op sheer power through the Mid-Continental area power pool Cura says, it's a question of the rural Farmers subsidizing Suburban users. They claim that it's the Suburban users whose needs are going up the Minnesota Energy agency doesn't agree they say that the coop serve two thirds of rural Minnesota. They say even if you exclude the Suburban Co-op areas, the rural needs are still going up. All right now, it seems to me you're saying among other things that the farmers are concerned with having to Bear an unfair burden of the cost of this lawn. What are some of these cost? AMC keeps going off. But the latest one is between 800 million to a billion. That's for the plant and the line know those are the actual cost. The other thing the farmers are concerned about it. Not just their electric bills going up to Bear The increased cost of construction for the plant in the lawn. They're all so worried about what is known as the hidden cost. This is something that Mike Murphy the energy consultant for the Upper Midwest council is very concerned about I talked with him yesterday morning and he gave me a whole list of these so-called hidden costs. There are studies that show that local government in and around the UPA plant in North Dakota will experience a 16 million dollar deficits before the operation because there are no tax revenues being provided to help fund new schools and sewer and water and police Center in addition to taking a look at how much land is worth dollar-wise on a market. How much is the land worth did the people who owned it in terms of Lifestyle in terms of of of desired manner of living and physical existence utility operates with some advantage in the sense that is as the cost of train. Nicole goes up the passes it on to the consumer as the cost of taxes goes up. It concludes them in the in the rates Hannah and these things I'll come after the fact to it. But he has no incentive to take a look at these things are really on in the game. Those are some of the things that were mentioned to me by Mike Murphy the energy consultant for the Upper Midwest Council. There were a lot of other hidden costs at the farmers themselves brought up at the eqc hearings and these included the possible dangers and certainly the inconvenience involved with irrigation where they worrying about the water hitting the power lines the difficulties of spraying having pilots fly underneath the power lines is much more difficult than the way it works. Now, would it be fair to say then that the energy agency is not adequately considered these hidden cost said they're supposed to consider them a lot of observers feel that there isn't enough consideration of hidden cost in government analysis, and they feel that it's because the industry is basically still taking the initiative utility decides. What it wants a power plant and then it has to comply with some governmental rules of that environment about energy needs and so on but basically the industry is still taking the initiative and it doesn't have to consider these other kinds of hidden costs. John gostovich of mford says that since the government has a responsibility of considering them. It's done it in a rather piecemeal fashion John milhoan the director of the NBA vehement Lee disagrees, he feels that we do have a coherent energy policy. There is an open Democratic process. There is plenty of room in the process for considering all of these cost but as I said, John Gossett, it's been proved feels that the process really is not as wide as it should be yet. We have nothing at all that smacks of a state energy policy although in various bits and pieces of legislation. We are Admonish to be Thrifty with their energy use and to conserve precious resources. We really don't have any broad base agreeable way to do that. The public just hasn't figured out what kind of future at 1 and what sorts of steps it will take to ensure that that future comes true. So again, it it all gets back is it always seems to with these energy questions to the interpretation of the fact, it's certainly helpful to have the fact that it's important to be as familiar with him as possible. But I think in the end it gets down to not really a technical choice, but a political Choice. Thank you Rachel reporter Rachel Kranz what's supposed to happen? When a company wants a new power plant or power line is at first it goes to the Minnesota Energy agency to get a certificate of need in a fact the government agreeing that more energy is needed in the state then general area of corridors chosen for the Powerline by the Environmental Quality Council and finally the eqc chooses the actual route for the line supposedly taking into consideration both times the physical and social environment. But Dorothy hose up education director of the Minnesota Energy agency explains that the present Powerline controversy began under a different set of rules. Was some work done on the routing of the line before this tificate of need application was processed when they stupid and he was granted there already was a pretty good idea of where the quarter was going to be and even part of the routing was underway. There was no law on need when cpau PA decided to build a line know when whenever there's going to be a power plant or transmission line or any kind of large in the energy facility. The Builder has to come to Sammy 8 to get certificate of need and during that process the kinds of questions that the farmers have raised in the CPA UK controversy are brought up and discussed and there's we try to decide whether there is a real need for this extra power whether the kind of facility is needed in the case of for a transmission line. We say what should should we build a power plant step close to where we need electricity, so we don't have to have a large transmission line. There was a power plant in North Dakota. being built and they really didn't seem to be a alternative of building a power plant. But if the process had started earlier as a can now for future transmission lines, we could have brought up but the need hearings the question of whether we shouldn't build a power plant close to where the power is going to be used and forget the transmission line completely. And in the case of the CPU payline that might have been a viable alternative. I think there is room to question whether this is the best process one of the problems with dividing the need presses from the siding process is that not all the questions are asked at once and they all do affect each other in one way or another important thing. Is that in the future. That citizen groups be aware that the certificate-of-need process exists that it comes before the siding that they don't wait to intervene in a case or even to testify at public hearings in case of a power plant or transmission line until after the need has been granted. The need stage even though it doesn't have a specific site in mine bears. A lot on the type of facility that that will be billed in. This has a lot of effect on on these on the different groups the basic message messages that the knee dresses is very important and it involves forecasting of how much power is needed and involves the effects of conservation on how much power is needed in a vowels. The type of facility involves alternatives to the facility, even the alternative is not building it all. I will not point a gun at either the farmer or a surveyor. We must stop we will stop disturbing would make up their mind and the health of the people be damned. We could not find him a search literature significant scientific studies validating health effects. I am going to make the decision. I don't think this is the matter anymore when you got six counties involved and I think it's about time they get involved in this here and Because it's more than what we can handle it. This comes up again. Play we just can't handle it. That's all there is to it. This special report has been produced by John merli production assistants by Greg Barron and Rachel Kranz technical supervision was by David Carlton felland and Michael Moore. This is been a news presentation of Minnesota Public Radio.

Transcripts

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SPEAKER: The following Special Report is a news presentation of Minnesota Public Radio.

[ELECTRONIC WHISTLING]

JIM ELLERING: I will not point a gun at either the farmer or a surveyor.

JOHN TRIPP: We must stop, and we will stop their surveying.

DON JACOBSON: I wish CURE and some of those people out there would make up their minds.

PETER GOVE: It's beyond our control.

JIM DUNLOP: Build now, and study later. And the health of the people be damned.

WARREN LAWSON: We could not find, from the searched literature, significant scientific studies validating health effects.

JOHN ROGERS: I am going to the governor and let him make the decision. I don't think this is at a--

GREG BARRON: A high-voltage electric power line-- it'll be more than 400 miles in length stretching across most of North Dakota and Minnesota. The 400,000-volt line will wind its way eastward to the Twin Cities. Along its path live hundreds of Minnesota farmers, and they've fought the line's construction for more than eight months.

It's a fight that has led to court challenges, angry protests, scuffles with law officers, and just recently, arrests. Good evening. I'm Greg Baron. In this special report, we'll examine the major developments in this ongoing controversy and attempt to better clarify some of the many questions raised by this unsettling story.

In recent weeks, the disturbances among farmers and law officers have spread from central Stearns County, where it all began, to other areas of the state. And last week, for the first time, farmers were arrested and cited for contempt of court at a survey site in Pope County. Minnesota Public Radio reporter John Murley covered many of the major events in this controversy since its beginning and provides this chronological history of those events through tonight.

JOHN MURLEY: The all-important certificate of need for CPA and UPA to build the 400,000-volt line was granted by the Minnesota Energy Agency in early April, 1976. And that's when angry farmers along the proposed route corridor began stepped-up efforts to organize themselves and when they began their vocal, highly-visible battle against the line.

Several farmers, later to swell to several hundred farmers from central Stearns County and surrounding areas, formed Counties United for Rural Environment, referred to as simply CURE. The farmers, none of them experts in either scientific or environmental matters, protested the high-powered line for three basic reasons.

One, they objected to the line itself crossing their farmland. Two, no specific cost of the line to rural electric co-ops was assessed. And three, the ozone factor, or more accurately, the unknown ozone factor. These early concerns were expressed to MPR in this conversation of May 7 with Belgrade farmer Bruce Paulson and CURE consultant Jim Dunlop. First, Paulson--

BRUCE PAULSON: I'm not no specialist on it, but supposedly, when dust gets on the line, sparks fly off. And the spark creates ozone, which on any broadleaf plant like soybeans, navy beans, tomatoes, this ozone does damage to the cells and the leaves, where, when the damage is done to the cells, they die or don't produce as much as if they hadn't been damaged.

JIM DUNLOP: Ozone is a very serious air pollutant. And as far as crops, plants, and vegetation, and so forth go, it is the most serious of the pollutants, the air pollutants. And it has been shown-- the utilities and their consultants admit, acknowledge that there will be ozone pollution coming off of this line from corona loss and so forth.

BRUCE PAULSON: What we would like to see it done is put underground, where it doesn't affect us.

JOHN MURLEY: Belgrade former Bruce Paulson and CURE consultant Jim Dunlop speaking in Saint Cloud in early May, about the same time that Dunlop sent a letter to PCA Director Peter Gove, suggesting that the PCA's draft environmental impact statement did not contain all available environmental information on the proposed line, especially some general data recently assembled in New York State on the alleged health dangers from AC power lines.

The Minnesota line will be only the second major DC line built in the United States. Dunlop was referring to research conducted by Drs. Andrew Marino and Robert Becker of Syracuse University. With the New York data in hand, Dunlop went before the EQC on June 3 to seek to reopen the just-completed EQC public hearings.

JIM DUNLOP: Because of the lack of information in there and the lack of a definitive and complete record on the potential ozone damage and also the health information that came to light very late-- and I might add, there was no reason for that, in my mind-- the health information from Drs. Marino and Becker in New York.

I don't know how many of you people were aware of it or how many of you on your staffs were aware of it and Dr. Lawson's staff or just what, but you all seemed to express some surprise when CURE brought this information forward. A member of the health department came over to my house to pick up the testimony from the New York State case. It's this approach of build now and study later, and the health of the people be damned.

JOHN MURLEY: EQC Head Vanderpool told Dunlop that some published literature on the matter was not included in the impact statement because it was released just recently. Again, Dunlop--

JIM DUNLOP: Why in the hell didn't anybody on the staff of the state organizations in Minnesota know about that information? It's been around for 15 years, Peter.

SPEAKER: Their work has not been around for 15 years.

JIM DUNLOP: Well, yes, it has. They've been doing it for 15 years.

SPEAKER: [INAUDIBLE] problem.

SPEAKER: Let's stop and take a look-- common sense.

WARREN LAWSON: That information was entirely negative. We could not find from a search of literature significant, scientific studies validating health effects. We have reviewed and have only had access to Dr. Marino's testimony recently.

And even in that testimony, they state that they're dealing with-- their studies have dealt with AC currents and that they admit in their-- they stated in their own testimony that they have not analyzed the direct current case, and they cannot comment it. Their information, their suggested effects on the biological system simply cannot be translated, by their own testimony, from AC situations to DC situations.

JOHN MURLEY: June 3, State Health Commissioner, Warren Lawson. That same week, Dr. Marino told MPR that, although his data concerned possible harmful emission effects of AC lines, it was his belief that possibly similar alleged effects might exist on DC lines. The EQC, at this stage of the power line proceeding, was confronted not only with regular audiences of irate farmers, but several proposed routes for the 402-mile line from North Dakota.

Under the State Power Plant Siting Act of 1973 and EQC's interpretation of that act, EQC had 180 days from certificate of need approval in which to grant a line corridor to the power co-ops. The EQC could not reject the line's construction or postpone it. In effect, their hands were tied.

It was at this June 3 EQC meeting that the council approved both the line-building permit and the designated line route corridor. Frustrated and somewhat perplexed at the narrow guidelines, which greatly limited the EQC's options in dealing with the line, CURE members, most of whom, at this point, were Stearns County farmers, sought other methods of stopping moves to build the line.

Soon after the EQC's June meeting, power co-op surveyors began appearing at sites near where the line would be built. And farmers began gathering at those same locations to stop the survey work. These early confrontations in Stearns County were generally peaceful. But on June 8, CURE member Virgil Fuchs was arrested and charged with two felonies-- the general charge, allegedly trying to run surveyors off land adjacent to his farm with his tractor.

By the end of June, the friction between farmers and surveyors showed signs of igniting into serious physical confrontation, and all eyes turned to Stearns County Sheriff Jim Ellering who, on June 29, finally said what he would not do.

JIM ELLERING: --power line across western Stearns County. The people whose land is affected have vehemently objected. As sheriff of this county, I became involved when the landowners and other concerned citizens objected to trespass of their property.

In the meantime, the power companies expect my department to use unlimited force, if necessary, to accomplish their survey, and ultimately, the routing of the power line. In my opinion, this is a situation that began with the Environmental Quality Council at the request of the power companies. And that's where the problem should be remanded for resolution.

I will not point a gun at either the farmer or a surveyor. To point a gun is to be prepared to shoot, and this situation certainly does not justify either. It does justify a review of the conditions that bring about such citizen resistance.

JOHN MURLEY: June 29, Stearns County Sheriff Jim Ellering. At this point, conflicting rumors were everywhere of just what confrontations between farmers and surveyors had taken place and whether firearms were used to shoo off electric co-op personnel from private farmland. CURE member John Tripp, following Sheriff Ellering's announcement--

JOHN TRIPP: Well, we're going to continually place all our roads and fields under surveillance. And we must stop, and we will stop the surveying, which we think is illegal to start with.

SPEAKER: Do the farmers have firearms with them?

JOHN TRIPP: Oh, absolutely not, absolutely not. There's no truth to any rumor of that nature.

JOHN MURLEY: Through much of July, survey crew confrontations continued. Meetings aimed at lessening tensions were held and proved generally ineffective. By this time, CURE officials had discovered that the official testimony from two previous public hearings were missing from the EQC transcripts.

It turned out that one Virgil Fuchs, the same CURE member arrested for the alleged assault on surveyors with his tractor, had recorded both those hearings on his own cassette recorder. At the EQC's August 4 meeting, CURE attorney Norton Hadley presented the council with the missing testimony from the Painesville hearing.

NORTON HADLEY: I might say in passing that I have listened to a part of the Litchfield tape which occurred on April 14. We're not finished with that review yet ourselves. I think there are holes in it of a magnitude equal to or worse than what we see in the April 13--

JOHN MURLEY: The EQC agreed to review the missing testimony but not to reopen hearings due to the incomplete transcript record. It would be more than 3 and 1/2 months before a ruling was made.

SPEAKER: They tried to buy public opinion through this massive advertising campaign, and now, apparently, they're trying to buy off the farmers. And it isn't going to work. I mean, the farmers are way--

JOHN MURLEY: By early August, the power co-ops, faced with what appeared to be growing public sympathy for the farmers, began a media advertising campaign. United Power and Cooperative Power Associations also offered farmers more money for land needed for the power line corridor. CURE protested both moves. UPA spokesman Don Jacobson.

DON JACOBSON: For a long time, many of the farmers out there, and CURE in particular, have been saying that we have not been offering nearly enough for an easement across their land, and we should review our schedule and offer them more what they consider to be a true value for what they're giving up. And we have reevaluated, and we have increased the payment. And now, when we do that, they turn right around and say, well, we're trying to buy them off. I wish CURE and some of those people out there would make up their minds.

JOHN MURLEY: Nevertheless, the confrontations in Stearns County persisted. And on August 11, a temporary restraining order halting surveying was issued in Saint Cloud. The EQC met again on September 14, and again, CURE was pushing for reopening of the hearings, now not on the pending missing transcripts, but on what Attorney Hadley called the possible cumulative effect of the unknown ozone factor on the environment near the power line.

NORTON HADLEY: Nobody can sit in this hearing room this morning and say that the testimony in this case doesn't point to some danger. Not one of the witnesses for CU ever said that the ozone off this line was not dangerous. The question is, is the ozone from this line, when taken together with all of the other polluting effects from every other polluting entity traveling all over the state of Minnesota-- the question for you to resolve.

JOHN MURLEY: The director of the Pollution Control Agency, Peter Gove, responded to Hadley's comments, in part, this way.

PETER GOVE: It's true that these air quality parameters do interrelate. It's true that they perhaps have cumulative effects. I guess where we differ is this. If we had an excursion over the ozone standard today, and we nearly had one yesterday in southeastern Minnesota, there's nothing that I could do, nor the governor of this state, nor John Graff at the National Weather Service, nor advise anyone in the state to do to change that.

It's beyond our control. The ozone that has caused problems in this state the last several years-- and I'm thinking particularly of the incident two weeks ago, where we had a three-day period of elevated ozone levels-- that was materials that, in all probability, were transported from St. Louis and Chicago.

JOHN MURLEY: It was at this September 14 meeting that Health Commissioner Lawson agreed to hold general public hearings on the possible health hazards of DC power lines that would follow a literature search and conclusion of similar hearings in New York State. Those hearings could begin in Minnesota sometime this spring.

JOHN ROGERS: He tried to take the sign away from them, the farmer-- or the gentleman. I shouldn't say farmer because I don't know if he was. And when he attempted to do that, and the stick, or the handle, or whatever broke, and then he jabbed it into the stomach of the--

JOHN MURLEY: October 1, farmer-surveyor confrontations, which had stopped in Stearns County reappeared in Meeker. And Meeker County Sheriff John Rogers voiced the same complaint that had been expressed by other law officers.

JOHN ROGERS: I am going to the governor and let him make the decision. I don't think this is an-- it isn't a county matter anymore when you got six counties involved. And I think it's about time the governor gets involved in this here because it's more than what we can handle. If this comes up again, why, we just can't handle it. That's all there is to it.

JOHN MURLEY: During the entire power line dispute, Governor Wendell Anderson maintained a low profile, refusing to take emergency measures in hopes that the law would be upheld peacefully. He did meet with a small group of Pope County farmers in St. Paul, but his low profile was, at times, severely criticized by farmers who suggested that Anderson was politically motivated in an election year.

In recent weeks, farmer-survey crew confrontations have taken place in Pope County, where, last week, in the most serious confrontation to date, several farmers were cited for contempt of court for survey interference. On Tuesday, November 23, CURE officials filed an appeal to the Minnesota Supreme Court of a judge's ruling in Pope County. That court order issued on a motion from United Power Association instructed the County Sheriff to carry out arrests if survey interference persisted.

And on Tuesday, November 30, today, the EQC held a special meeting of the missing transcripts aspect of its public hearings. As expected, the council approved Hearing Officer Ted Melby's recommendation, made public earlier this month.

SPEAKER: As you know, we've spent considerable time, energy, and, I must say, a good number of taxpayers' dollars reviewing these tapes. And we now come to the conclusion that is encompassed in the resolution. There was nothing in the tapes to change Mr. Melby's mind, and I don't think there's anything in the tapes that would have changed the decision I voted on last June, and I trust that most others on the council will. And I think we should move on. All those in favor, signify by saying, aye.

SPEAKER: Aye.

SPEAKER: Opposed? So ordered.

JOHN MURLEY: In recent days, the Commissioner of the Minnesota Supreme Court, acting on CURE's appeal, filed last week, as requested, all pertinent records in the power line story for possible consideration by the high court. Virgil Fuchs' trial for his alleged assault on co-op surveyors has been postponed until these legal matters are concluded.

Following today's EQC meeting, CURE Attorney Hadley said his group's chances of favorable court action in the future may have been increased by the apparent admission by the EQC that its official transcripts were not a complete record. EQC member and DNR Commissioner Robert Herbst said at one point, no transcript is totally complete in every respect.

In this special report, we are focusing on just one power line dispute, one that has generated unusually widespread controversy. There are, of course, other power lines and plants being proposed around Minnesota. And in at least one development, farmers are getting into the process early. Northern States Power Company is now seeking an MEA certificate of need for power plant facilities in southern Minnesota.

And although a site for the plant has yet to be announced, local communities are beginning to keep a watchful eye on current proceedings. And this is, indeed, a head start. The NSP plant is not expected to be built until 1985. Greg.

GREG BARRON: The EQC's role in the power line controversy probably ended today. But the larger questions of Minnesota's energy consumption and environmental protection have not yet been resolved. Farmers consistently attack the high voltage lines as unhealthy. Environmental and health agencies disagreed. Farmers claim that they didn't really need any more energy, that the line was going to supply metropolitan users, a position the energy agency and the power cooperatives vehemently deny.

Finally, farmers expressed repeated dissatisfaction with the whole process of regulation. They said it shut them out, while some government officials praised the procedure as democratic. Rachel Krantz has investigated various energy questions in Minnesota, and she's been investigating this one. Rachel, first, what about the proposal that came up a few times during the hearings-- the suggestion that the power lines be put underground? Wouldn't that have solved the whole problem, or wasn't that feasible?

RACHEL KRANTZ: Well, Greg, I don't think it really would have solved anything. First of all, CURE wasn't particularly committed to that. That was just a suggestion it made to express its dissatisfaction that the government wasn't looking at more alternatives.

But even if they had really been pushing that particular alternative, most other people seem to agree that, first of all, the line underground would have been 5 to 16 times more expensive. And secondly, the environmental damage from an underground line is far greater, according to most people.

You have to put an oil sheath around the line, which means there's a danger of oil spills. The line heats up the ground, which means you can't use it for farmland. There's a lot of digging, a lot more construction-- heavy equipment and so on-- disturbing the land, mixing up the soils than you'd ever get with an overhead line.

GREG BARRON: What about the energy that the line is supposed to provide? Is everybody agreed that Minnesota does need more energy?

RACHEL KRANTZ: Well, everyone thinks that Minnesota needs more energy, but nobody is sure who in Minnesota is using up all that energy. Now, the power plant is supposed to provide 1,000 megawatts. That's to make up the difference between the projected capability of the two co-ops of about 600 megawatts, as opposed to their projected demand obligation of about 1,500 megawatts. That's by 1980.

So not only are needs rising, but sources elsewhere for those two co-ops, other places that they'd been buying energy from, are decreasing. The MEA says that it's possible, without this plant, not only would there be power outages actually in the two co-ops and the area that they serve, but it would affect the whole system in Minnesota because those two co-ops share power through the Mid-Continental Area Power Pool.

CURE says it's a question of the rural farmers subsidizing suburban users. They claim that it's the suburban users whose needs are going up. The Minnesota Energy Agency doesn't agree. They say that the co-ops serve 2/3 of rural Minnesota. They say even if you exclude the suburban co-op areas, the rural needs are still going up.

GREG BARRON: All right. Now, it seems to me you're saying, among other things, that the farmers are concerned with having to bear an unfair burden of the cost of this line. Now, what are some of these costs?

RACHEL KRANTZ: Well, the total figure for the plant-- and there have been a lot of numbers thrown around. The figure keeps going up. But the latest one is between $800 million to $1 billion. That's for the plant and the line. Now, those are the actual costs.

The other thing the farmers are concerned about-- not just their electric bills going up to bear the increased costs of construction for the plant and the line. They're also worried about what is known as the hidden costs. This is something that Mike Murphy, the energy consultant for the Upper Midwest Council, is very concerned about. I talked with him yesterday morning, and he gave me a whole list of these so-called hidden costs.

MIKE MURPHY: There are recent studies that show that local government in and around the UPA plant in North Dakota will experience a $16 million deficit before the plant goes into operation because there are no tax revenues being provided to help fund new schools, and sewer, and water, and police, et cetera. In addition to taking a look at how much land is worth dollar-wise on a market, how much is the land worth to the people who own it in terms of lifestyle, in terms of desired manner of living and physical existence?

The utility operates with some advantage in the sense that, as the cost of transporting coal goes up, it passes it on to the consumer. As the cost of taxes goes up, it includes them in the rate. And these things all come after the fact. So it really has no incentive to take a look at these things early on in the game.

RACHEL KRANTZ: Those are some of the things that were mentioned to me by Mike Murphy, the energy consultant for the Upper Midwest Council. There were a lot of other hidden costs that the farmers themselves brought up at the EQC hearings, and these included the possible dangers and certainly the inconvenience involved with irrigation, where they're worrying about the water hitting the power lines, the difficulties of spraying. Having pilots fly underneath the power lines is much more difficult than the way it works now.

GREG BARRON: Would it be fair to say, then, that the energy agency has not adequately considered these hidden costs?

RACHEL KRANTZ: Well, it's difficult to say whether or not they've considered them because it isn't clear to what extent they're supposed to consider them. A lot of observers feel that there isn't enough consideration of hidden costs in government analysis. And they feel that it's because the industry is basically still taking the initiative.

A utility decides when it wants a power plant, and then it has to comply with some governmental rules about environment, about energy needs, and so on. But basically, the industry is still taking the initiative, and it doesn't have to consider these other kinds of hidden costs. John [? Gustovich ?] of [INAUDIBLE] says that since the government has the responsibility of considering them, it's done it in a rather piecemeal fashion.

John Millhone, the Director of the MEA, vehemently disagrees. He feels that we do have a coherent energy policy, there is an open, democratic process, there is plenty of room in the process for considering all of these costs. But as I said, John [? Gustovich ?] of [INAUDIBLE] feels that the process really is not as wide as it should be yet.

[? JOHN GUSTOVICH: ?] We have nothing at all that smacks of a state energy policy, although, in various bits and pieces of legislation, we are admonished to be thrifty with our energy use and to conserve precious resources. We really don't have any broad-based, agreeable way to do that. The public just hasn't figured out what kind of future it wants and what sorts of steps it will take to ensure that future comes true.

RACHEL KRANTZ: That's just the opinion of John [? Gustovich ?] of [INAUDIBLE]. As I said, a lot of government officials don't agree. They feel the process is open enough. So again, it all gets back, as it always seems to with these energy questions, to the interpretation of the facts.

It's certainly helpful to have the facts, and it's important to be as familiar with them as possible. But I think, in the end, it gets down to not really a technical choice, but a political choice.

GREG BARRON: Thank you, Rachel. Reporter Rachel Krantz. What's supposed to happen when a company wants a new power plant or power line is that, first, it goes to the Minnesota Energy Agency to get a certificate of need-- in effect, the government agreeing that more energy is needed in the state. Then a general area, a corridor, is chosen for the power line by the Environmental Quality Council.

And finally, the EQC chooses the actual route for the line, supposedly taking into consideration, both times, the physical and social environment. But Dorothy [? Hossa, ?] Education Director of the Minnesota Energy Agency, explains that the present power line controversy began under a different set of rules.

[? DOROTHY HOSSA: ?] The Power Plant Siting Act was passed before the Certificate of Need Act, so that there was some work done on the routing of the line before the Certificate of Need application was processed. When the Certificate of Need was granted, there already was a pretty good idea of where the corridor was going to be, and even part of the routing was underway.

There was no law on need when CPA, UPA decided to build a line. Now whenever there's going to be a power plant, or a transmission line, or any kind of large energy facility, the builder has to come to the MEA to get a Certificate of Need.

And during that process, the kinds of questions that the farmers have raised in this CPA, UPA controversy are brought up and discussed. And we try to decide whether there is a real need for this extra power, whether the kind of facility is needed. In the case of a transmission line, we say, well, should we build a power plant instead close to where we need the electricity so we don't have to have a large transmission line?

There was a power plant in North Dakota being built. And they really didn't seem to be an alternative of building a power plant. But if the process had started earlier, as it can now for future transmission lines, we could have brought up at the need hearings the question of whether we shouldn't build a power plant close to where the power is going to be used and forget the transmission line completely.

And in the case of the CPA, UPA line, that might have been a viable alternative. I think there is room to question whether this is the best process. One of the problems with dividing the need process from the siting process is that not all the questions are asked at once. And they all do affect each other in one way or another.

I think the important thing is that, in the future, that citizen groups be aware that the Certificate of Need process exists, that it comes before the siting, that they don't wait to intervene in a case or even to testify at public hearings in a case of a power plant or a transmission line until after the need has been granted.

The need stage, even though it doesn't have a specific site in mind, bears a lot on the type of facility that will be built. And this has a lot of effect on the different groups. The basic message is that the need process is very important. It involves forecasting of how much power is needed.

It involves the effects of conservation on how much power is needed. It involves the type of facility. It involves alternatives to the facility, even the alternative of not building it at all.

[ELECTRONIC WHISTLING]

JIM ELLERING: I will not point a gun at either the farmer or a surveyor.

JOHN TRIPP: We must stop, and we will stop the surveying.

DON JACOBSON: I wish CURE and some of those people out there would make up their minds.

PETER GOVE: It's beyond our control.

JIM DUNLOP: Build now, and study later, and the health of the people be damned.

WARREN LAWSON: We could not find, from the searched literature, significant scientific studies validating health effects.

JOHN ROGERS: I am going to the governor and let him make the decision. I don't think this is a-- it isn't a county matter anymore when you got six counties involved. And I think it's about time the governor gets involved in this here because it's more than what we can handle. If this comes up again, why, we just can't handle it. That's all let's do it.

[ELECTRONIC WHISTLING]

SPEAKER: This special report has been produced by John Murley with production assistance by Greg Barron and Rachel Krantz. Technical supervision was by David Carlton Felland and Michael Moriarty. This has been a news presentation of Minnesota Public Radio.

Funders

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