6 protesters arrested as onshore testing work for New Jersey wind farm begins

Several protestors arrested for disrupting offshore wind project in Ocean City

OCEAN CITY, N.J. (CBS/AP) -- Police arrested six protesters Tuesday who tried to disrupt the start of land-based testing for New Jersey's first offshore wind farm, but the work progressed anyway.

Police in Ocean City, which has become the hub of resistance to offshore wind projects in New Jersey and elsewhere along the U.S. East Coast, arrested demonstrators after the city said they failed to heed four warnings to get out of the roadway.

ALSO SEE: 4 new offshore wind power projects proposed for New Jersey Shore; 2 would be far out to sea

"There were three people lying in the street," said Robin Shaffer, a spokesman for Protect Our Coast NJ, a residents' group opposed to the local project and to offshore wind in general.

Denise Philipp, 53, Karen Corsi, 66, Shani Kovacevic, 44, Bonna Neang-Weinstein, 58, Robert Weinstein, 73, and Lee Darby Rinaldi, 59 were the six people arrested Tuesday afternoon. 

Police said they gave the protesters four warnings to vacate the road starting at 8:30 a.m. The last warning was just after noon. They also showed them an area approximately 10 feet away from the work zone where the protestors could have protested legally. 

However, they chose not to move over which forced officers to arrest them to provide a safe area for the workers, according to police. 

Each of the protesters, none of whom lived in Ocean City, was charged with failure to disperse and obstruction of public pathways, city spokesman Doug Bergen said.

Mayor Jay Gillian, himself an opponent of the wind farm project, said he wishes police did not have to arrest anyone, but added, "This is how democracy works. I understand their passion."

RELATED: Orsted delays 1st New Jersey wind farm until 2026; not ready to 'walk away' from project

Orsted, the Danish wind energy developer, began onshore testing work Tuesday morning to investigate the proposed route for its power cable connecting the offshore wind turbines with the electrical grid several miles away at the site of a former coal-fired power plant in Upper Township.

The work involved cutting holes into roadways, checking on the location of existing utilities and doing soil and groundwater sampling for the project, called Ocean Wind I, the company said.

A worker uses an industrial cutting machine to open a section of the street in Ocean City, N.J. on Sept. 12, 2023, at the start of land-based probing along the right-of-way where a power cable for New Jersey's first offshore wind farm is proposed to run. Several protestors were arrested trying to block the work for the project being done by Danish wind energy company Orsted. Wayne Parry / AP

"Ocean Wind I continues to progress with today's commencement of in-road site investigation in Ocean City," spokesman Tom Suthard said. "We respect the public's right to peacefully protest. However, the health and safety of the workers and members of the local community is our top priority. We appreciate the support of local law enforcement who work every day to keep our communities safe."

Orsted has approval from the federal government to build Ocean Wind I, which would put 98 wind turbines off the coast of Ocean City and Atlantic City, generating enough electricity to power 500,000 homes. It also has state approval for a second project, Ocean Wind II, although that project needs numerous additional approvals before it can begin construction.

ALSO SEE: GOP congressmen: Halt offshore wind, probe whale deaths

The company said it still has not made the final decision on whether to proceed with the projects, which it said are costing more and taking longer than anticipated. But protesters promised to keep up the pressure on the company.

"This testing today only proves that Orsted is continuing with the project, and we are going to continue to fight in court and in the streets if we have to," said Shaffer, a spokesman for opponents and a member of Ocean City's Board of Education.

The group, along with other similar organizations, oppose offshore wind, claiming it will harm the environment, cost vastly more than anticipated, and ruin views of an unobstructed ocean horizon, potentially damaging tourism.

RELATED: N.J. uses new law to bypass locals, approve offshore wind project

The wind industry says the turbines won't always be visible from shore, depending on weather conditions. It says its companies take extensive measures to comply with environmental regulations.

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