While NextEra Energy Resources continues to construct a wind farm in eastern El Paso County, a coalition of concerned residents in the area has been fighting the project by filing a lawsuit against NextEra and the EPC Board of County Commissioners. The same coalition filed an injunction to halt construction on the wind farm until a decision on the lawsuit had been reached.Status of lawsuit against NextEra and EPCOn March 5, the coalition known as the El Paso County Property Rights Coalition and four individual plaintiffs filed a lawsuit against EPC and NextEra. The individual plaintiffs were Donna Bryant, Eric Henderson, Laura Wilson and Joan Wilson.Court documents indicate that the suit was filed because the BOCC ìexceeded its jurisdictionî when it approved the Golden West Wind Farm project at the February meeting.In June, the coalition was informed that all the individual plaintiffs in the original lawsuit were being dismissed, said coalition member Laura Wilson.ìThe judge decided that the only plaintiff he would allow on the lawsuit was the property rights coalition,î she said. Because she is the representative for the coalition, Wilson said she is the one NextEraís attorneys will be targeting for information such as the names and addresses of the other coalition members.ìIíll probably go to jail because the judge will likely compel me to give up the information, but I wonít,î Wilson said.As of the NFH deadline, no court date had been set for the property rights coalition to present their case to a judge.Injunction statusOn April 8, the coalition filed an injunction to halt construction on the project ñ- which began in early April ñ- until a ruling had been handed down on the original lawsuit.In late April, NextEra filed a response to the injunction, requesting that the coalition put up a $400-million bond to pay for potential monetary losses the company might suffer because of its current investment in constructing the project, according to the June issue of The New Falcon Herald.In mid-June, Wilson said the judge who was considering the injunction threw the entire case out. Wilson said she was told the injunction had been tossed out because of a mistake in the wording. The judge did not consider the content of the injunction at all; he looked it over and threw it out, Wilson said. ìIím devastated that the project can just keep going with nothing in its way now,î she said.ìWhat ever happened to every person having the right to have their day in court and get their case heard by a judge?î
Wind farm litigation flounders
You may also like
By Jon Huang This October, the El Paso County Citizen Outreach Group hosted its...
By Erin Malcolm On Nov. 21, El Paso County officials, construction team...
Porch pirates, that is By Deb Risden A porch pirate is a different kind of...
The New Falcon Herald
Current Weather
Topics
- Ava's A-musings
- Book Review by Robin Widmar
- Building and Real Estate by Lindsey Harrison
- Business Briefs
- Community Calendar
- Community Outreach
- Community Photos
- D 49 Sports
- El Paso County Colorado District 49
- Falcon Fire Protection District (FFPD
- Feature Articles
- Friends of Falcon
- From the Publisher
- General Articles
- Health and Wellness
- Historical Perspectives
- Land & Water by Terry Stokka
- Letters to the Editor
- Mark's Meanderings. by Mark Stoller
- Monkey Business
- News Briefs
- People on the Plains by Erin Malcolm
- Pet Adoption Corner
- Phun Photos
- Prairie Life by Bill Radford
- Quotes
- Recipes
- Rumors
- Senior Services
- Veterinary Talk by Dr. Jim Humphries
- Wildlife Matters by Aaron Bercheid
- Yesteryear