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Coffee Shop
Neighbor looking at Solar Farm
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<blockquote data-quote="Dusty Britches" data-source="post: 1799904" data-attributes="member: 1900"><p>I think the neighbor is starting to sour on the idea. The county is definitely starting to sour on it. When a landowner decides to allow a solar lease, the property becomes commercial and the landowner has to seek county commissioners' approval to move from ag to commercial. In Texas that can be an expensive start up cost. The landowner has thousands of acres and will be putting about 1500-2000 acres in solar already in various locations. I'm glad he's able to do it and as I said in my first post, I certainly don't want to prevent him from making money. I never had any intentions of stopping him through aggressive means, I was just hoping something could come up to prevent it. Fortunately we are on the north side of his property so the panels would be facing away and not creating glare back to our house. It will be what it will be and we will make adjustments as needed.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Dusty Britches, post: 1799904, member: 1900"] I think the neighbor is starting to sour on the idea. The county is definitely starting to sour on it. When a landowner decides to allow a solar lease, the property becomes commercial and the landowner has to seek county commissioners' approval to move from ag to commercial. In Texas that can be an expensive start up cost. The landowner has thousands of acres and will be putting about 1500-2000 acres in solar already in various locations. I'm glad he's able to do it and as I said in my first post, I certainly don't want to prevent him from making money. I never had any intentions of stopping him through aggressive means, I was just hoping something could come up to prevent it. Fortunately we are on the north side of his property so the panels would be facing away and not creating glare back to our house. It will be what it will be and we will make adjustments as needed. [/QUOTE]
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