By DIANE VALDEN
COPAKE—It’s back to the drawing board for Hecate Energy as its latest permit application for a smaller, yet still controversial industrial-scale solar project was found deficient in many areas last week.
In a February 21 letter to Hecate Energy’s Shepherd’s Run Solar Project Director Matt Levine, the state Office of Renewable Energy Siting and Electric Transmission (ORES) said based on its review Hecate’s application, submitted December 23, 2024, to develop, design, construct, operate, maintain and decommission a 42-megawatt (MW) major renewable energy facility called Shepherd’s Run in Craryville is incomplete. A long list of the areas of incompleteness and a description of the specific deficiencies is identified in an attachment to the letter, both of which may be found at dps.ny.gov/ores-permit-applications.
The permit application shall remain incomplete until all requested information is received. Hecate has three months (90 days) to respond to the ORES determination.
The 15 deficient exhibits submitted in the application by Hecate, which ORES says require revision, mitigation or additional information, discussion or description are: Design Drawings; Public Health, Safety and Security; Visual Impacts; Cultural Resources; Terrestrial Ecology; Water Resources and Aquatic Ecology; Wetlands; Agricultural Resources; Effect on Transportation; Socioeconomic Effects; Environmental Justice; Electric System Effects and Interconnection; Electric and Magnetic Fields; Site Restoration and Decommissioning; and Other Permits and Approvals.
Hecate Energy is a Chicago-based developer of solar and wind facilities seeking permission for new 42-megawatt photovoltaic (PV) solar facility proposed to be built on several non-contiguous areas along State Route 23 and County Route 7 on seven parcels of private land totaling about 700 acres. Once constructed, the project will occupy approximately 215 acres, according to www.shepherdsrunsolar.com, Hecate’s Shepherd’s Run project website.
The project area is just east of the Taconic Hills School District and north of Copake Lake, in and around the Copake hamlet of Craryville. Much of the acreage is agricultural land. A school district campus and residential areas border the property.
A previous version of the project dating back several years was for a 60-megawatt facility on 267 acres.
Even though scaled down now, the project is not permitted under Copake Zoning Law, which Hecate has bypassed to seek site approval from ORES under the state’s streamlined siting process for renewable energy projects, known as 94-c.
ORES deemed Hecate’s previous application for the larger facility incomplete three times before it was finally found to be complete in August 2023 and a draft permit was issued in October 2023.
Then in January 2024 it came to light that 60 acres of farmland that was supposed to be an integral piece of the Hecate project area was sold to Craryville Farms LLC, a buyer who wanted nothing to do with Hecate or its solar project. The crucial property was to host about 20% of the entire project’s solar panels, a laydown area, and the sole access road for adjacent facility parcels, among other components.
Following a legal motion by Copake’s attorney to dismiss the Shepherd’s Run application because the loss of the acreage required major project revision, then ORES Executive Director Houtan Moaveni stepped in, granted Copake’s motion and denied Hecate Energy’s application for the Shepherd’s Run Solar Project, February 6, 2024.
After months of waiting for a new application that was expected in June 2024, the new revised application was filed December 23, 2024.
Asked for comment on the latest incomplete application determination:
*Hecate’s Shepherd’s Run Solar Project Manager Matt Levine said by email, “Hecate is committed to working with state and local stakeholders to build a project that helps New York meet its clean energy goals while preserving and protecting the natural beauty of Columbia County. This is a routine and anticipated step that happens with many, if not most permit applications. We are reviewing the notice from ORES and will work to update the application to address any outstanding issues. We expect to submit our response shortly.”
*Sara Traberman from Sensible Solar for Rural New York said by email, “ORES’ decision that Hecate’s application for Shepherd’s Run is Incomplete is more than justified. The sixty deficiencies ORES identifies definitely must be rectified. There are other deficiencies that should be addressed as well, including the potential risk to the City of Hudson’s drinking water and the capacity of our local volunteer fire departments to protect our students at the bordering Taconic Hills Central School.”
*Dan Haas from Friends of Columbia Solar said by email, “While FOCS is disappointed by the ORES decision to deem Hecate’s application incomplete, we also feel that the decision underscores the rigorous standards that state law applies to such projects. For example, the list of information ORES is requiring includes the width of trenches to be dug during construction, the precise slope of hills on the site, and an assurance that fencing will be at least 75 feet from any wetlands. This level of detail should serve as an assurance that the final project will meet the exacting standards of NY state law.”
To contact Diane Valden email dvalden@columbiapaper.com