Leslie Latterman says her war against backyard wind turbines began the day she had to scream to be heard over a neighbor's towering new windmill.
"It sounds like having a B-17 on the runway warming up for takeoff," said Latterman, who lives in San Bernardino County's high desert community of Oak Hills.
Latterman and a group of neighbors crusading against residential turbines won a partial victory Tuesday when county supervisors adopted stricter regulations for the beacons of alternative energy.
The county will nearly double the permit fee for wind turbines to $495, to help fund the closer inspection such permits will now require, and give neighbors an opportunity to challenge the applications. The new rules, scheduled to be formally adopted Dec. 20, bring the county closer to requirements in Los Angeles, Riverside, Kern and San Diego counties.
Board Chairman Bill Postmus, whose district includes the High Desert, was the sole dissenter, saying the ordinance gave the county too much discretion in deciding which residents could benefit from wind energy.
"I think this will create a situation of pitting neighbor against neighbor even more," Postmus said.
Turbine salesman Joe Guasti, who has two of the devices in his Oak Hills yard, battled the proposed ordinance along with other advocates. They argued that the devices were quiet and environmentally friendly, and that the rules would discourage residents from using the renewable energy source.
"What we have is a problem of being shortsighted in our vision. When the energy crisis comes, we are going to be scrambling as fast as we can to mitigate it," said Guasti, who vowed to continue fighting the ordinance.
The High Desert wind war was inadvertently launched by state efforts to encourage use of renewable energy. In 1998, California launched a sliding-scale rebate program for residents who use wind, solar or fuel cell energy. The program attracted 8,500 applicants for wind turbines alone in fiscal year 2003-04, according to the California Energy Commission.
About 1% of the energy generated in the state comes from wind, although most of that comes from wind farms.
San Bernardino County updated its wind turbine rules in 2002, allowing residents to apply for a building permit -- which doesn't require neighbors to be notified and costs on average $200 -- to install a turbine.