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Health, Science & Environment

Public hearing for Frasier Solar project in Knox County set for Thursday

A composite photo shows two signs in Knox County.
Allie Vugrincic
/
星空无限传媒 News
A composite photo shows two signs in Knox County.

Supporters and opponents of the proposed Frasier Solar project will formally testify before the Ohio Power Siting Board at a public hearing Thursday night in Mount Vernon.

The proposed 120-megawatt solar project has divided neighbors and amassed supporters and opponents, including one seemingly well-funded opposition group that won鈥檛 disclose who is backing it.

鈥淭here have been so many things that have happened here that I thought would never happen in our little community,鈥 said Kathy Gamble, founder of the group Knox County for Responsible Solar.

For example, Gamble and other county residents received an apparently anti-solar newspaper in their mailboxes. It had large headlines asking questions such as, "Could the Texas Power Crisis happen in Ohio?"

鈥淚t was called Ohio Energy Reporter, and I've never figured out really where it came from, you know,鈥 Gamble said.

The Chicago address listed on the newspaper goes to a company that provides mail services to groups without addresses.

Running an election on solar

The day before the March primary election, voters received mailers supporting Republican County Commissioner candidates Barry Lester and Bill Phillips. The fliers said they were paid for by the Buckeye Conservatives PAC, a political action committee formed .

Is it unclear who is behind the PAC, and for the election does not have to be reported until April 26, according to Ohio law.

Lester, one of the candidates backed by the PAC, won his primary.

Another outspokenly anti-solar candidate, Drenda Keesee, won a primary for a second county commissioner鈥檚 seat.

A page from an apparently anti-solar newspaper received by some Knox County residents.
Kathy Gamble
A page from an apparently anti-solar newspaper received by some Knox County residents.

Frasier Solar

Solar power has been a hot topic in Knox County since the announcement of the roughly 800-acre Frasier Solar project. It would bring about 250,000 solar panels to a spattering of disconnected farm fields in Clinton and Miller townships, just south of Mount Vernon.

The project awaits approval from the Ohio Power Siting Board.

Gamble said she will speak at the Siting Board鈥檚 upcoming public hearing.

鈥淭here's a lot of fear in Knox County about the change coming, and I'm trying to ease that fear,鈥 Gamble said.

She plans to talk about farmers鈥 rights to lease their land, tax benefits for the schools and county, a plan to graze sheep under the solar panels, and of course, clean energy.

鈥淭here's lots of reasons why solar would benefit not only the landowners with the money they get from leases, but everyone's interests,鈥 Gamble said.

Opposition to the project

But 鈥渢he opposition,鈥 as Gamble and other pro-solar neighbors call it, will also speak.

Two organized groups, Preserve Knox County and Knox Smart Development, oppose the Frasier project. Both have in Frasier鈥檚 Ohio Power Siting Board case.

Gamble describes Preserve Knox County as a grassroots group that started with Miller Township residents. It鈥檚 the entity behind the yellow signs reading 鈥渘o industrial solar鈥 that dot the township and Mount Vernon roads 鈥 often just one or two houses away from Gamble鈥檚 green 鈥測es solar鈥 signs.

Knox Smart Development, on the other hand, seems to be very-well funded, according to Gamble and Kathiann Kowalski, a journalist reporting for Energy News Network.

Knox Smart Development has held large town halls with refreshments and placed ads in newspapers and online. by Mount Vernon resident Jared Yost, who could not be reached for comment.

The group鈥檚 website boasts that 18 resolutions signed opposing solar, including by Mount Vernon City Council and raises a variety of concerns.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important for the public to know who is who as they speak. It's important for the public to know what the substance of different arguments is."
- Journalist Kathiann Kowalski

Anonymous funding

Kathiann Kowalski

鈥淭he meeting was packed. I was surprised to see it that full on a weekday night, especially on a cold weekday night,鈥 Kowalski said. 鈥淎nd the speakers were very well organized.鈥

Gamble was outside the same town hall meeting and said a representative of Frasier鈥檚 development company, Open Road Renewables, was denied entrance even though he had a ticket.

At the event, Kowalski said she asked Yost who funded the event. 鈥淎nd he said, you know, that they were funded by a group of people who wish to remain anonymous. And he never has directly answered who is funding them,鈥 Kowalski said.

Because Knox Smart Development is a limited liability corporation, it does not have to disclose information about its funders.

Kowalski found that the event鈥檚 emcee, Tom Whatman, works for a group called Majority Strategies, which is a high-paid contractor for the pro-natural gas Empowerment Alliance. 鈥淚t's a group that could be called a dark money group, because it's not required to disclose its funders,鈥 Kowalski said of The Empowerment Alliance.

Kowalski connected The Empowerment Alliance to Ariel Corporation, a corporation which makes compressors for the natural gas industry. Ariel Corporation is headquartered in Mount Vernon.

Kowalski said she believes it鈥檚 important to think about why people are either supporting or opposing a project.

鈥淚t鈥檚 important for the public to know who is who as they speak. It's important for the public to know what the substance of different arguments is,鈥 she said.

As for Gamble, she is cautiously optimistic that Frasier will earn Siting Board approval. 鈥淚f they hear the facts, as well as all the emotion, they will be able to sort through it,鈥 Gamble said.

Thursday鈥檚 meeting is at 5 p.m. at Knox Memorial Theatre in Mount Vernon. A legal judge from the Ohio Power Siting Board will hear testimony from the public in the order in which people sign in.

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Health, Science & Environment solar farmsKnox Countysolar energy
Allie Vugrincic has been a radio reporter at 星空无限传媒 89.7 NPR News since March 2023 and has been the station's mid-day radio host since January 2025.