(a) A local government may adopt, by action of its local legislative body, local legislation that regulates and establishes the conditions and criteria for the construction, operation, or redevelopment of wind energy facilities and for wind energy facility expansions within the jurisdiction of the local government. No such local legislation shall take effect unless it is adopted by a two-thirds (2/3) vote of the local legislative body; except, that if an industrial development board for the local government proposes such local legislation or considers a request for a permit or permit procedures prior to any local legislation being considered by the local legislative body, then the local legislation shall only be subject to a majority vote of the local legislative body. The local legislation adopted pursuant to this subsection (a) shall establish the minimum setback as provided in subdivision (e)(2)(A) for the wind energy facility or wind energy facility expansion; and shall require that environmental impact and wildlife impact assessments be conducted, if applicable, as provided in subdivisions (e)(2)(B) and (C), respectively, that the facility comply with maximum noise levels as provided in subdivision (e)(2)(D), that an applicant submit financial security as provided in subdivision (e)(2)(E), and that a permit holder decommission or remove a wind energy facility upon the occurrence of certain events as provided in subdivisions (e)(2)(F) and (G).

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Terms Used In Tennessee Code 65-17-105

  • Agriculture: means :
    (i) The land, buildings and machinery used in the commercial production of farm products and nursery stock. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • Baseline: Projection of the receipts, outlays, and other budget amounts that would ensue in the future without any change in existing policy. Baseline projections are used to gauge the extent to which proposed legislation, if enacted into law, would alter current spending and revenue levels.
  • Department: means the department of environment and conservation. See Tennessee Code 65-17-101
  • Jurisdiction: (1) The legal authority of a court to hear and decide a case. Concurrent jurisdiction exists when two courts have simultaneous responsibility for the same case. (2) The geographic area over which the court has authority to decide cases.
  • Lands: includes lands, tenements and hereditaments, and all rights thereto and interests therein, equitable as well as legal. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • Local government: means any county, municipality, city, or other political subdivision of this state. See Tennessee Code 65-17-101
  • Local legislation: means any ordinance, resolution, motion, amendment, regulation, or rule adopted by a local government. See Tennessee Code 65-17-101
  • Local legislative body: means the governing body of a local government. See Tennessee Code 65-17-101
  • Property: includes both personal and real property. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • redevelopment: means the process of replanning, reconstructing, or redesigning a wind energy facility, including the acquisition, clearance, development, or disposal, or any combination of these activities, of a wind energy facility. See Tennessee Code 65-17-101
  • State: when applied to the different parts of the United States, includes the District of Columbia and the several territories of the United States. See Tennessee Code 1-3-105
  • Wind energy facility expansion: means any activity that:
    (A) Adds or substantially modifies a wind energy facility, including increasing the height or the number of the turbines, transmission facilities, or other equipment. See Tennessee Code 65-17-101
(b) Any local legislation adopted by a municipal legislative body pursuant to subsection (a) shall apply only in the corporate limits of the municipality. A municipal legislative body shall not be authorized to adopt such local legislation unless the county legislative body of the county in which the municipality is located has previously adopted such local legislation within the county.
(c) A local government that regulates the construction, operation, or redevelopment of wind energy facilities and wind energy facility expansions adopted by a local legislative body pursuant to subsection (a) shall furnish a certified copy of the adopted local legislation to the department.
(d)

(1) The local legislation adopted pursuant to subsection (a) may provide for the issuance of permits for the construction, operation, or redevelopment of wind energy facilities and wind energy facility expansions within the jurisdiction of the local government. The local legislation shall specify procedures governing the application for and issuance, renewal, modification, suspension, revocation, or denial of the permits.
(2) A local legislative body may deny the issuance or renewal of a permit, or revoke, suspend, or modify any existing permit for cause, including the violation of any conditions of the permit or of local legislation adopted pursuant to this chapter, obtaining the permit by misrepresentation, or failing to fully disclose all relevant facts. The local legislation or permit conditions shall include a six-month cure period during which time the local legislative body may establish financial penalties for noncompliance.
(3)

(A) The local legislative body shall review the permit application for compliance with the local legislation adopted pursuant to this chapter, and shall conduct a public hearing after public notice has been given in accordance with subdivision (d)(3)(B) prior to making a determination on the permit application. The local legislative body shall conduct the public hearing within sixty (60) days after receiving a complete permit application.
(B) Public notice of the permit application and the time and location of the public hearing shall be published for at least two (2) consecutive weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the local government in which the construction, operation, or redevelopment of the wind energy facility or wind energy facility expansion is to be located. The notice shall be published beginning at least thirty (30) days prior to the scheduled date of the hearing.
(C) The notice shall provide that any comments on the construction, operation, or redevelopment of the wind energy facility, or wind energy facility expansion, must be submitted to the local legislative body by a specified date, not less than thirty (30) days from the date of the newspaper publication of the notice.
(4) The local legislative body may appoint itself as the agency to process permit applications or conduct the public hearing, or may create or designate another agency to take such action.
(5) The local legislative body may provide, by local legislation, that a reasonable fee be charged to cover the costs of:

(A) Processing and reviewing permit applications;
(B) Conducting public hearings; and
(C) The performance of the local legislative body’s duties under this chapter.
(e)

(1) The local legislative body may adopt local legislation with any condition, criteria, or other provision it deems necessary for establishing regulations or granting a permit for the construction, operation, or redevelopment of a wind energy facility or wind energy facility expansion under this chapter. The local legislative body may issue a permit for a general boundary, and the wind energy facility may elect to move the planned locations of a wind turbine or other wind energy facility component after permit approval; provided, that the locations shall not be moved outside of the permitted boundary and shall comply with all other requirements pursuant to this chapter. The local legislative body may also institute wind energy facility design conditions for granting a permit in order to comply with any conditional approval from the wildlife resources agency and to mitigate potential impacts, as identified by the local legislative body or local agency.
(2) Any local legislation adopted pursuant to this chapter shall require that:

(A) The minimum setback for any wind turbine of a wind energy facility from any non-participating landowner’s property line be equal to three and one-half (3.5) times the total height of the turbine structure as measured from the ground at its base to the maximum height of the blade tip; except, that a non-participating landowner may elect to sign a waiver to allow any wind turbine or group of turbines of a wind energy facility to be placed up to one and one-tenth (1.1) times the total height of the turbine structure as measured from the ground at its base to the maximum height of the blade tip from the landowner’s property line;
(B) An environmental impact assessment be conducted by qualified, third party experts, paid for by the applicant, of the potential adverse impacts within a maximum of four (4) miles of the perimeter of the facility or expansion; except, that no such assessment shall be conducted if an environmental review of the wind energy facility or any portion of the facility is required pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C. §§ 4321 et seq.), which includes public input, a public hearing, an environmental impact statement, and a viewshed analysis. Any environmental impact assessment conducted pursuant to this subdivision (e)(2)(B) shall include, but not be limited to, a study of the following:

(i) Economic impacts to individuals, property values, tourism, and agriculture;
(ii) Potential adverse impacts on ecosystems, including domestic animals, and habitat and migratory patterns for wildlife;
(iii) Viewshed analysis for national or state parks or forests, historic or cultural sites, public parks or recreation areas, or private conservation lands;
(iv) Hydrogeological assessment, including water bodies, flowing water sources, stormwater runoff, wetlands, groundwater, aquifers, and private wells within a minimum of two (2) miles of the perimeter of the facility or expansion;
(v) Risk assessment and mitigation recommendations for shadow flicker and incidents, such as wind turbine fires, structural damage or failure, ice and blade throw, and hazardous material spills; and
(vi) Risk assessment for civil air navigation, military or law enforcement routes or training exercises, emergency medical flights, radar operations, and cell phone services;
(C) A wildlife impact assessment be conducted through a comprehensive social, economic, and environmental study; except, that no such assessment shall be conducted if an environmental review of the wind energy facility or any portion of the facility is required pursuant to the National Environmental Policy Act (42 U.S.C. §§ 4321 et seq.), which includes public input, a public hearing, an environmental impact statement, and a viewshed analysis. Such local legislation shall also include as a condition of a permit a requirement that the wildlife resources agency review any such wildlife impact assessment and approve, grant conditional approval of, or deny the permit. Any such wildlife impact assessment shall include, but not be limited to, a study of the potential adverse impacts to wildlife refuges, preserves and management areas, areas that provide habitat for threatened or endangered species, primary nursery areas designated by the fish and wildlife commission and the wildlife resources agency, and critical fisheries habitats identified pursuant to applicable state or federal law. No permit shall become effective until the local government has received notification of approval or conditional approval within one hundred twenty (120) days of the permit from the wildlife resources agency;
(D)

(i) Except during the event of inclement weather that prevents the operator of a wind energy facility from controlling the noise level of one (1) or more wind turbines that are part of the wind energy facility, any wind turbine or group of wind turbines of a wind energy facility does not exceed an immission limit at a non-participating landowner’s dwelling of thirty-five A-weighted decibels (35 dBA) and forty-five A-weighted decibels (45 dBA) at a non-participating landowner’s property line as determined by a qualified, third-party acoustics expert according to American National Standard Institute (ANSI) Standard 12.9 and other applicable ANSI standards; and
(ii) Prior to construction of a facility or expansion, a qualified, third-party acoustics expert, selected and paid for by the applicant, makes a baseline determination of preconstruction noise levels, including modeling and enforcement;
(E)

(i) Prior to the start of construction of a wind energy facility, the applicant for a permit for the construction, operation, or expansion of the wind energy facility, or wind energy facility expansion, establish financial security in the amount of one hundred percent (100%) of the estimate of the total cost to decommission and remove the wind energy facility, as determined by an independent consultant selected and paid for by the applicant; and
(ii) To establish financial security pursuant to subdivision (e)(2)(E)(i), the applicant file with the local legislative body a surety bond, collateral bond, irrevocable letter of credit, parent guaranty, cash, cashier’s check, certificate of deposit, bank joint custody receipt, or other approved negotiated instrument, or any combination of the foregoing, in the amount required by subdivision (e)(2)(E)(i). The local legislative body shall take custody and hold the bond or other form of financial security;
(F) The facility is decommissioned or removed if:

(i) Any wind turbine of a wind energy facility ceases to generate electricity for one hundred eighty (180) continuous days, unless the termination of electricity was mandated by state or federal law; provided, that one (1) or more extensions may be allowed for one-hundred-eighty-day periods at a time; or
(ii) Any wind turbine or group of wind turbines of a wind energy facility violates the noise level restrictions provided in subdivision (e)(2)(D), unless the turbine or group of turbines is brought into compliance within one hundred eighty (180) days of the violation; provided, that a single one-hundred-eighty-day extension may be allowed; and
(G) Within twelve (12) months following the decommissioning of a facility or expansion, the property is restored to its original condition prior to commencement of activities on the site.