Sep 26, 2019

Digester gets needed permit on 3-0 vote of town board

Posted at 3:45 p.m. on September 26, 2019

Digester gets ‘yes’ with many conditions

The Brillion News

GREENLEAF – B.C. Organics (BCO) got the permit it wanted and
 
needed to build and operate a $60 million manure digester in the Town of Wrightstown, southwest of
 
Greenleaf.

On a 3-0 vote on Wednesday, September 25, the Wrightstown
 
Town Board approved the conditional use permit (CUP) that BCO applied for after
 
a similar request was voted down by the Holland Town Board 2-1 last spring.

The Town of Holland process
 
took a year, but the Town of Wrightstown moved
 
through the process more swiftly – in part because much of the research
 
developed by the Town of Holland was used by the
 
Town of Wrightstown Planning
 
Commission in its study of the project.

The conditions imposed by the Town of Wrightstown as a part of the granting of the
 
CUP include:

Of the manure being processed at the plant, between 55 and
 
70 percent will by pumped through pipelines running between two large nearby
 
farms – the Wiese Brothers Farm and Country Air Farms – and the digester plant.

The plant will be built on the north side of Mill Road, about
 
halfway between Old 57 Road and Elmro
 
Road, on land owned by the Wiese Brothers Farm.

Anaerobic digestion will be used to process the liquid manure
 
slurry, separating out methane gas and nutrients. The gas will go into a nearby
 
natural gas pipeline.

The manure going to the plant from other farms will be
 
trucked, with the routes of all trucks laid out in a trucking plan.

BCO will upgrade the town roads used for the heavy traffic
 
of the manure trucks prior to the opening of the plant.

Town officials will be able to access the plant with 24
 
hours notice to make inspections.

Before BCO drills any high-capacity water well, a cone of
 
influence study will be done to make sure the well would not damage the supply
 
of water for existing wells in the area.

Because the plant is tax exempt, BCO will pay the town money
 
in lieu of property taxes each year, equal to the amount of the property tax.
 
BCO will also cover the towns expenses, up to $40,000, for its costs associated
 
with the digester in the town’s action of the CUP. BCO will pay the town up to $24,000
 
each year to cover the town’s costs in administering the CUP.

The complete document is available on the town’s website, https://townofwrightstown.org/

Note: a more complete
 
story on the Town Board’s final approval of the CUP will be featured in the October
 
3 print edition of THE BRILLION NEWS.

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