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Power plant, neighbors continue working on compliance issues PDF Print E-mail
Written by Elizabeth Larson   
Friday, 21 November 2008
COBB – A Thursday evening meeting continued a discussion between Bottle Rock Power Plant operators and neighbors over issues associated with the plant's operation and adherence to its original use permit.


Supervisor Rob Brown led the meeting, which ran more than two hours, at Cobb's Little Red Schoolhouse. It followed a previous gathering on Oct. 30. About two dozen people attended, including plant representatives, neighbors and county officials.


The plant has been back in operation for a year and a half, and sump ponds, plant noise, speed of trucks moving in and out, grading and overall environmental management have been points of contention between local residents and the facility's operators.


On Thursday night Brown introduced Melissa Floyd, an independent planning consultant who has worked with the county for several years.


On Dec. 3 the Board of Supervisors will consider approving a contract with Floyd to act as the county's geothermal project coordinator, a proposal that was made at the last meeting by Hamilton Hess, chair of the Friends of Cobb Mountain.


Since that meeting, Brown said he believes a lot of progress has been made in resolving the issues. “Even though we have quite a ways to go I think we're headed in the right direction here.”


Brown said the county was trying to balance the importance of the jobs geothermal provides with environmental concerns.


“I'm just going to lay it out there right now, Lake County has one of the highest unemployment rates in the state,” said Brown.


He said the county doesn't want to add to unemployment but also also doesn't want to compromise environmental integrity. “It's essential that we all work together to make sure it's accomplished in a reasonable manner.”


During a presentation by Cobb residents, Hess said the plant's neighbors are approaching the situation with a spirit of cooperation – “because we are one community.”


Hess said the neighbors were most concerned with the steamfield's development, which he called “a heavily industrial operation.”


All of the problems have a solution, said Hess, which can be found in the plant's use permit issued two decades ago. It has neither been fully enforced nor completely followed.


Neighbor Kelly Fletcher, who lives on High Valley Road halfway up to the plant, spent about an hour going over a list of questions concerning a wide range of issues – from the speed of trucks on the road, and the number of vehicles allowed into the site, to specifics on site development and mitigating environmental damage.


Reid Morgan, asset manager for Bottle Rock Power, was on hand to address Fletcher's questions and those posted by others.


He said a speed sign has been put in at one area of High Valley Road, with a second one with image capture capability to be placed closer to Fletcher's home. That will allow the plant to enforce a policy that results in employee termination if they don't follow speed rules on the road.


Neighbor Gerri Finn asked Morgan if any monitoring has been going on, which is called for in the use permit. He said there had been no way of doing it. Finn disagreed, saying they could have had an employee monitor it. “I would like it in the record that there's been no monitoring,” she said.


One key item for Fletcher was mud from the drills and its placement on a meadow in the area. He and other neighbors questioned if the materials were toxic. Morgan said the soils in the area would be tested, but all of the mud had been removed.


Area residents also asked county officials to consider handing out citations to the plant to create a record of use permit violations.


Fletcher said since the last meeting sound barriers had been constructed around the drills, which are helping.


Morgan, who recently was assigned to the plant, said those sound barriers needed to be improved and properly designed. “Even though they work effectively we've got to do even better and we will.”


Returning to the issue of the sump mud, which is material taken from the drills, Fletcher asked if it was hazardous. Ron Yoder, an associate resource planner with the county's Community Development Department, said the materials tested below hazardous levels.


Morgan said the materials weren't hazardous but the plant's operators decided to be cautious and take them to a hazardous materials dump. “We are overconservative but I'm glad of that,” he said. “I have found nothing to show that we have not done what we were supposed to.”


Fletcher asked for a record of testing on the materials, which Yoder said he could provide as long as it's not information that's considered proprietary. Community Development Director Rick Coel said he could get a legal opinion from County Counsel Anita Grant in an effort to release the informatin.


Karon Thomas, the plant's compliance manager, said they knew of the neighbor's concerns about the materials and so decided to take them to a landfill in order to increase the neighbors' comfort level.


According to Fletcher, the neighbors also are concerned about water quality and possible contamination of their groundwater from the sump materials. Thomas said if they want their wells tested, they can e-mail her and she'll set up third-party testing.


Residents also questioned if the plant would move to sumpless operation. Morgan said that on Monday he'll meet with ThermaSource, a Santa Rosa company that does the plant's drilling, to begin the process of finding out what's involved with such a conversion. “It's called due diligence – I'm just starting the process.”


David Coleman, another plant neighbor who has been outspoken in his criticism of operations, said he's narrowed his concerns to the sumps, which he said have serious problems.


Brown asked Morgan what would happen if the sumps were filled up. Morgan said they have a permit to move liquids from one sump pond to another, which they're doing with hoses.


Coleman said they can only move the liquids with rigid piping; Thomas said they use heavy hoses.


Brown asked plant officials about what they do with the solid materials that come out of the sumps. Thomas said they dewater the solids and use the liquids for injection in the wells, while the solids are tested and disposed of properly at a landfill.


Coleman asked about the integrity of the sumps after excavators clean them out. Thomas said they can't take core samples because the samples could weaken the sumps' integrity. Instead, a testing company is taking samples around the outside of the ponds.


She said the sump ponds have a 2-foot clay liner, which Coleman said is too thin according to the use permit. He added that the sumps look completely different than they did a few years ago.


Yoder showed slides of the plant's grounds, pointing out erosion control measures which he said had been well done, and areas where berms from grading were removed and flattened to return the land to a natural state.


Morgan agreed that the sumps are a priority. “We're not going to do it wrong again.”


The neighbors asked for another meeting. Brown asked Floyd to set a time frame for preparing for it.


“The first thing I want to do is get on site and be able to do a very detailed site inspection and get up to speed on all of the issues,” said Floyd, which will then allow her to set up a meeting.


Brown suggested tentatively scheduling the next gathering for the middle of January.


Coel explained that Floyd will be responsible for a “whole list of things” as geothermal coordinator,

including monitoring projects, setting up community meetings, conducting permit reviews and assisting with watching mitigation measures.


She'll also help with selecting a consultant to conduct an environmental impact report on a steamfield expansion Bottle Rock Power is proposing.


E-mail Elizabeth Larson at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it .


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Jadicker
written by CobbMt, November 21, 2008
In retrospect if it were not for Mary Jadicker the rules of Geothermal would not be as people friendly as they are now.
And consider that the Geothermal related oil companies, and drilling corprations wrote the rules that are beiing enforced by all governments now.
An individual or County, in the financial depletion of source funding do not have the sophistication needed to challenge them legally - but to only vent their frustrations.
Look at the oil wells in LA, and see how far you can get.
By having one person to be a laison, it takes the heat off the County with those pesky emotitional enraged calls.
Send an E mail, then it is all in writing, and can be documented.
Brilliant tactic, and unless you have deep pcockets make sure their PI.s do
not bend the rules and come after you the compainant - and then you are silenced when you find out that any attorney will ask for 5K up front to do anything, and realize there is no expertise on this in Lake County.And be careful with your business, as that is now open.
You would need someone from another place, that will be over $500 and hour.
Then you will fil out a form that says you have to keep your mouth shut or face penalties. That is after you have spent 30K, when you lose the case, and maybe have to pay their part of the filing, as remember we have Conservative Law and Order Judges here in Lake County that maybe were appointed by similar minded Governors.
Naive bunch up on Cobb. Welcome to Busineess 101. We are in California not LA LA Land. Things move fast and furious in most other places.

And then note that the Lake County BS has a three vote Republican conservative pro business majority.

And when you move make sure you disclose the problems you have documented publicly as it will be another case of jeapordy down the line.

So but earplugs and bottled water fools.
...
written by leolion, November 21, 2008
I think this is disgusting. The power plant is a good thing. It creates jobs for Lake County residents...I have never had any bad experiences with the Power Plant.... My family has owned property up here since the early 1960's. The man behind this all, David Coleman needs to shut his trap and go back to Oakland, CA. He's not even a Lake County resident. He's a shit disturber. Open your eyes he causes problems everywhere he goes...Maybe someone should check out his background, before you let him speak...
Sincerely,
Someone who has a lot of information on David Coleman :twisted:
response to two posts!
written by JoeDoe, November 23, 2008
:shock:
To: Cobb Mt. Jadiker:
You message is confusing. First you applaud Mary Jadiker for her effort in making sure that the geothermal corporations are people and environmental friendly. Then you call the Cobb citizens naive in trying to make BRP comply with the very regulations that Mary helped to establish and say at the end that they should just buy earplugs and bottled water. You know yourself that if Mary were alive today, she would be standing right there in making the Plant comply with the use permit. You should be ashamed and remove the Jadiker name from your user name!

As for Leo Lion:
you are not so anonymous as you think! You state that your family has been in the Cobb area since the 1960’s as if that gives you some credentials for stating what you say. Are you yourself a Cobb resident and are you directly affected by BRP? The Coleman family residence has been here MUCH longer than your family and they are directly affected by BRP’s activities, so I don’t see where you get off trying to say that David Coleman is not a resident. Although you family has not lived here full time since the 1960’s, you try to use the ownership of property as your basis. So please at least be consistent in your interpretation of residency.
Secondly, I wonder sometimes at the excuse of supplying jobs for Lake County. Of course there are jobs created, but filled by whom? Many of BRP’s employees never lived here before the geothermal plant restarted. Many of the leatherneck’s working the rigs are from out of state, staying at motels around Cobb. So when the county uses the term, creates jobs for Lake County, remember that many of the personal filling the jobs are from out of County any ways. The main thing the county benefits from is MONEY, not the employment they try to sell.
And as for your statement, spreading the sh-t around, please watch your language. It shows your level of ignorance in the matter and your background. If you have anything to say, please go the meetings and say it in person. It’s the power plant that has been spreading their waste around the county in the manner of sump well drilling mud posing as top soil ready for your garden. Yeah, it will grow some nice BIG tomatoes. Don’e the citizens of Lake County have a right to know the soil that they have been sold as top soil might contain some levels of Chromium and arsenic and God knows what? Even though soil has been tested as safe according to some level of toxic grading does not mean that it is safe for human use for vegetables. Even the Environmental department admitted to that difference!
response!
written by DCOLEMAN, November 23, 2008
First I will address LEOLION. I do not live in Lake County full time I care take our Family property next to BRPC. This parcel and the parcel that BRPC sits on were homesteaded in the 1863 by my great grand father James Coleman. So much for Johnny come lately. What has happened is that BRPC failed to get county and state permits. This is some thing your family knows how to do also my be chuck gave them some pointers. More fine money for the county thank you. They also did not go over the county use permit. The amount silting and pollution caused by by this will never be fully be known.The fact is by becoming complaint they will have to hire more people. Also BRPC has no actual employees the people there are employed by IEM of of Reno NV. BRPC is owned by US Renewables Group and Carlile Riverstone. These large equity companys are not from Lake County. I glad cobbmt jadiker can afford bottled water I wound not want to drink the water from high valley creek or kelsey creek. I can understand that leolion does not what her name out there. Working for a county agency that is in place to uphold the laws of Califonia and Lake County I would be ashamed of my family to. Time to get over your selfs and work for making Lake County a better place for all of to live David Coleman.
...
written by leolion, November 24, 2008
Lets not get your panties all in a bunch. I was simply stating some facts. The truth...I have that right to voice my opinion. As for who you think I am, your wrong. Quit making accusations and making a federal case out of everything that is said. Your just a left wing extremist. I wonder how people like you support yourself, seems as if you have all this time to go out and stir up problems. What are you on State Disablity or SSI???...we know your not old enough to be retired...Ummm wonder do you even have a job????
In reference to you David Cole
written by leolion, November 24, 2008
Regarding all your lying accusations about the Power Plant. Are you calling my husband a leatherneck??? Your digging your own hole...now as for the tomato plants, don't know what you are talking about but your probably worried about your pot garden!!!! It will be investigated or maybe it already is in progress. As for speaking about the dead, if Mary was alive she certainly wouldn't be going along with what you are trying to pull with all your rebel rousing. As for my family they are deceased, but would be very unhappy with the way you are trying to divide this neihborhood, and going against our community, along with your illegal activities.
Show up at the meetings!
written by JoeDoe, November 24, 2008
LeoLion,

By the way, I am not David Coleman!

Instead of ranting on the internet, why don't you show up at the meetings and voice your concerns?

Lying accusactions? If you went to one of the meetings, you would see that they are true. Otherwise, why would the power plant have to redo the meadow, mitigate the stream beds that they plowed over, test the sumps for leaking, and now, bring their sump soil to Kettlemans instead of the dump?

Do you even live close to the power plant? so why is it even your concern? The neighbor hood is pretty much all behind getting the plant to comply.

After all, all they are trying to do is to make BRP follow the law. What's so illegal about that.
Instead of talking about someone personally, why don't you stick to the facts and the issues?


Did you even know Mary Jadiker personally? Who are you to say what or what she would not do?
Mary was key in many of the compliance issues currently being discussed. Why in earth would you say that she would not be addressing these same issues?
JoeBlow
written by leolion, November 25, 2008
For your information, my husband and I were at the at the last meeting. And we couldn't even get a word in edgewise. It was dominated by a select few of you. Thats why I am voicing my opinion on here. That way I get a word in edgewise.
Ps. Mary was a personal friend of mine, she confided a lot of her feelings to me.

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