Availability

  • Wendy is available to talk to your group! Contact her at her email, wesuwi@comcast.net

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  • "very engaging and entertaining....managed to hold the attention of a roomful of budding lawyers." Megan Higgins, Roger Williams Law School
  • "the highlight of the conference....Wendy addressed our annual meeting in September 2008. She held the 100-plus energy professionals in rapt attention throughout her 30 minute speech except for when the meeting attendees were falling out of their chairs laughing." - Robert Kahn, Executive Director, NW & Intermountain Power Producers Coalition
  • "Every time I hear Wendy speak, I learn something new -- not just about Cape Wind, but about politics in America. She embodies the best of this country's journalistic tradition, reminding us all why a free press is so critical to a free society." Massachusetts State Representative Frank Smizik, Chairman, Joint Committee on Environment, Natural Resources and Agriculture
  • "very inspiring" Rev. Bob Murphy, Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Falmouth
  • "I loved the way you framed the issue as being primarily about democracy rather then clean energy, I think that is a critical point that has been left out of this debate." Winston Vaughan, Environment Massachusetts

Coming Events

  • March 19th and 20th, 2009
    "Energy and the Environment: Empowering Consumers." Hofstra Law School, Hempstead, NY.
  • June 19th thru 21st 2009
    Keynote Speaker, Midwest Renewable Energy Fair, the nation's largest renewable energy event.
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Wendy Williams

  • Wendy Williams has written for many major publications, including Scientific American, The Christian Science Monitor, The Boston Globe, The Providence Journal and The Baltimore Sun. She has been journalist-in-residence at Duke University and at the Hasting Center; a fellow at the Center for environmental Journalism at the University of Colorado and at the Marine Biological Laboratory. The author of several books, she lives on Cape Cod.

Christian Science Monitor

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March 21, 2008

A Changing of the Guard

Democratic State Representative Eric Turkington of Falmouth was the first politicians to go on record opposing the Cape Wind project. Turkington told the Boston Globe in the summer of 2001 that he didn't want to sail around Nantucket Sound looking at sticks in the ocean.
Several weeks ago, Turkington announced he would not be running for re-election as a state representative.
Now comes a politician from the island of Martha's Vineyard, Roger Wey, to run for the vacated seat.
Wey is also a long-time Cape Wind opponent.

Read the story in the Martha's Vineyard Gazette

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Cape Wind

Praise for Cape Wind

  • St. Petersburg Times
    "enough political intrigue to keep a John Grisham fan happy...."
  • Boston Globe
    "yes, this book is lots of fun...."
  • Boston Magazine
    "a page turner...."
  • New York Times Sunday Book Review
    "Editors choice"
  • The Wall Street Journal
    "a ripe subject, populated with the sort of people who would be among the first to count themselves as friends of the Earth but the last to accept an environmentally friendly energy source if it meant the slightest cloud on their ocean views."
  • Robert Sullivan, New York Times Sunday Book Review
    “A great summer beach read about longtime summer beach communities, “Cape Wind” describes how the alliance managed to raise $4 million in one ballroom meeting at the Wianno Club, where the ‘grass-roots’ campaign against the ‘industrial complex’ of offshore ‘Cuisinarts’ was kicked off by Douglas Yearley, a copper mining executive whose company was fined for killing birds in an acid runoff mishap in 2000, among other infractions.”

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