Saturday, June 6, 2009
Dominion Virginia Power has agreed to pay Leesburg $2 million in exchange for easements that the utility needs to build a transmission line.
The settlement follows a year of negotiations between town and Dominion officials. The Leesburg Town Council has long opposed the planned 12-mile, 230,000-volt line from Leesburg to Hamilton, saying that the steel poles carrying the line will be an eyesore and will lower property values.
The State Corporation Commission approved the project in February 2008.
Dominion spokeswoman Le-Ha Anderson said the company conducted its negotiations with Leesburg in the same way that it deals with private landowners when easements are at stake.
"We're buying the right to have access to the land to build and maintain the transmission line," she said.
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The easements involve land in the 1300 block of East Main Street, in Olde Izaak Walton Park and near the Route 7/15 Bypass and Sycolin Road.
The Town Council approved the settlement agreement during its regular meeting May 29. Mayor Kristen C. Umstattd said that for the past year, town officials had pressed Dominion to increase its original offer of $8,000.
"There was a great deal of negotiation between the town and Dominion over that amount," she said. "It's the best we could do in a really bad situation."
Anderson said she could not confirm the amount of Dominion's original offer.
Under the settlement, Dominion also agreed to bury about a one-mile stretch of smaller distribution lines between Battlefield Parkway and Crosstrail Boulevard.
Some of the settlement money will pay to plant trees along Route 7. One of those buffers will be at the Village at Leesburg, but it will be smaller than originally planned, Umstattd said. She said the landscaping, which would have been funded by developers, had to be scaled back because of the power line.
"They were willing to put it in," Umstattd said, referring to Kettler, the company building the development. "The trouble was, Dominion was going to come in and rip it all out. Now that's been obliterated by this project, so we're going to be left with a few smaller trees and a few smaller shrubs."
The council has not decided what to do with the settlement money. Council member Thomas S. Dunn II said taxpayers should reap the benefit and suggested that some of the money could be used to lower Leesburg's vehicle decal fee from $25 per year to a one-time fee of $1.
He said the $2 million from Dominion will never offset the view of 100-foot-tall steel towers in parts of the town.
"It's really hard to put a dollar amount on the blight that these towers are going to have on our community," he said.
Dominion has said that it needs to build the transmission line to keep up with population growth in western Loudoun and that it expects the line to be in service by next spring.
Anderson said that Dominion's preferred route for the line was south of Leesburg but that an SCC hearing examiner recommended the path that cuts through the town.
Tagged: construction, courts, development, Dominion Power, growth, Leesburg, utilities
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Comments:
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I've lived in this town for 17 years. In that time, I've seen incredible growth, and massive change. But despite that, I've always thought Leesburg had managed to maintain a sense of charm and beauty that is unique.
With a swath of steel towers and power lines cutting through the town, that distinction appears to be gone forever. Our town is going to look like every other trashy, overgrown section of Northern Virginia. $2 million will never make up for that...
Posted by drgardner (anonymous) on June 6, 2009 at 8:55 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Just wait until those high power lines come down in the first ice storm, leaving the area with no power. I can't wait to see lines go down over the 15 Bypass. Of course, if all this was buried, we wouldn't have to spend millions cleaning up the future mess, but Dominion only thinks in the hear and now, not in the future.
Posted by GenuineRisk (anonymous) on June 6, 2009 at 12:27 p.m. (Suggest removal)
This is only going to get worse.
More datacenters, and in 10 years people will be sucking up more energy to recharge their electric cars.
We need secure nuclear power
Posted by bradmoser (anonymous) on June 7, 2009 at 11:46 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Once again, the leaders are REacting to the CURRENT state of affairs. They don't ACT, and they will not / cannot think 10 yrs into the future. They can't / won't think into NEXT year, for that matter. This place is ridiculous with its lack of foresight & proper planning.
GenuineRisk is correct - these lines should be buried along the Route 7 or Route 9 corridor - as in under the road, not digging up all the trees along the side.
Posted by ms1234 (anonymous) on June 9, 2009 at 9:40 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Um...good for Leesburg citizens but what about the impact to everybody WEST of Leesburg. Where is their $2M to help with plumetting property values? What about renumerating Hamilton and Purcellville for their impact? Who is going to pay to replace the 100 foot oak trees that Dominion will rip out along the entire bike path (to be replaced with < 10ft shrubs)? Why should these lines be buried on part of the line and NOT the whole thing? Which ANIMAL is more equal than others here and why?
Posted by Eric101 (anonymous) on June 9, 2009 at 11:57 a.m. (Suggest removal)
GenuineRisk you are a smart person.
Posted by Funnyguyva (anonymous) on June 9, 2009 at 3:05 p.m. (Suggest removal)
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