One Corridor. No Full Review. Wyoming Deserves Better

Recent signers:
Annie KELLY and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

This is not one project. It is a corridor.

Wyoming’s “Wind Wall” isn’t a proposal; it’s already happening.

Across the Laramie Range, industrial wind projects are being approved across hundreds of thousands of acres, including critical wildlife corridors—without a clear, consistent evaluation of their combined impact.

The Laramie Range runs more than 130 miles from Casper to Cheyenne and spans 20–25 miles wide, creating a continuous southeast Wyoming corridor spanning Interstate 25 to Interstate 80 communities.

What is taking shape is not a series of individual projects.

It is a corridor.

The Problem

  • Hundreds of turbines nearing 700 feet
  • Hundreds of thousands of acres of development
  • Located across working lands and wildlife movement corridors

Projects are reviewed one at a time— but built as a corridor.

Many of these projects are being evaluated under processes that were never designed to assess corridor-scale development.

During the industrial wind permitting process, there is currently no clear requirement for the Wyoming Industrial Siting Council or local county commissioners to evaluate the combined, cumulative impacts across this landscape.

This creates a growing gap between what is approved and what is actually being built.

Why This Matters

Wildlife does not move one project at a time.

  • Migratory birds like golden eagles cross entire regions 
  • Big game depend on uninterrupted corridors
  • Habitat fragmentation compounds with each additional project

Communities do not experience development one permit at a time.

They experience the full build-out.

Once this landscape is industrialized at this scale, it cannot be undone.

What’s Missing

Wyoming currently lacks:

  • A clear requirement for cumulative, landscape-level impact analysis
  • A framework to evaluate multi-project corridor effects
  • A process aligned with the true scale of development underway

Our Request

This is not about stopping progress—it’s about responsible planning.

We call on Wyoming’s leaders to:

  • Pause approval of new large-scale wind projects until cumulative impact review is required
  • Establish a clear requirement for corridor-wide, landscape-level analysis
  • Ensure full evaluation of:
    • Wildlife migration corridors
    • Habitat fragmentation
    • Water, soil, and infrastructure impacts 
    • Long-term land use outcomes

Call to Action

Protect our land.

Protect our wildlife.

Protect Wyoming’s future.

Sign this petition and share it with others. 

Then take the next step:

  • Contact your county commissioners
  • Reach out to your Wyoming state legislators
  • Ask Wyoming leadership to ensure decisions are made based on the full picture—not isolated pieces

Closing

Wyoming has always valued stewardship. 

But what is happening now is different. 

This is not one project. 

This is one corridor. 

And it should be evaluated as one. 

 

avatar of the starter
Wendy VolkPetition StarterWendy Volk is a 5th-generation Wyoming resident and Cheyenne real estate professional with 30+ years of experience, focused on responsible land use, community leadership, and stewardship of Wyoming's landscapes.

212

Recent signers:
Annie KELLY and 19 others have signed recently.

The Issue

This is not one project. It is a corridor.

Wyoming’s “Wind Wall” isn’t a proposal; it’s already happening.

Across the Laramie Range, industrial wind projects are being approved across hundreds of thousands of acres, including critical wildlife corridors—without a clear, consistent evaluation of their combined impact.

The Laramie Range runs more than 130 miles from Casper to Cheyenne and spans 20–25 miles wide, creating a continuous southeast Wyoming corridor spanning Interstate 25 to Interstate 80 communities.

What is taking shape is not a series of individual projects.

It is a corridor.

The Problem

  • Hundreds of turbines nearing 700 feet
  • Hundreds of thousands of acres of development
  • Located across working lands and wildlife movement corridors

Projects are reviewed one at a time— but built as a corridor.

Many of these projects are being evaluated under processes that were never designed to assess corridor-scale development.

During the industrial wind permitting process, there is currently no clear requirement for the Wyoming Industrial Siting Council or local county commissioners to evaluate the combined, cumulative impacts across this landscape.

This creates a growing gap between what is approved and what is actually being built.

Why This Matters

Wildlife does not move one project at a time.

  • Migratory birds like golden eagles cross entire regions 
  • Big game depend on uninterrupted corridors
  • Habitat fragmentation compounds with each additional project

Communities do not experience development one permit at a time.

They experience the full build-out.

Once this landscape is industrialized at this scale, it cannot be undone.

What’s Missing

Wyoming currently lacks:

  • A clear requirement for cumulative, landscape-level impact analysis
  • A framework to evaluate multi-project corridor effects
  • A process aligned with the true scale of development underway

Our Request

This is not about stopping progress—it’s about responsible planning.

We call on Wyoming’s leaders to:

  • Pause approval of new large-scale wind projects until cumulative impact review is required
  • Establish a clear requirement for corridor-wide, landscape-level analysis
  • Ensure full evaluation of:
    • Wildlife migration corridors
    • Habitat fragmentation
    • Water, soil, and infrastructure impacts 
    • Long-term land use outcomes

Call to Action

Protect our land.

Protect our wildlife.

Protect Wyoming’s future.

Sign this petition and share it with others. 

Then take the next step:

  • Contact your county commissioners
  • Reach out to your Wyoming state legislators
  • Ask Wyoming leadership to ensure decisions are made based on the full picture—not isolated pieces

Closing

Wyoming has always valued stewardship. 

But what is happening now is different. 

This is not one project. 

This is one corridor. 

And it should be evaluated as one. 

 

avatar of the starter
Wendy VolkPetition StarterWendy Volk is a 5th-generation Wyoming resident and Cheyenne real estate professional with 30+ years of experience, focused on responsible land use, community leadership, and stewardship of Wyoming's landscapes.

The Decision Makers

Laramie County Commission
5 Members
Troy Thompson
Laramie County Commission
Linda Heath
Laramie County Commission
Ty Zwonitzer
Laramie County Commission
Mark Gordon
Wyoming Governor
Wyoming House of Representatives
33 Members
Ann Lucas
Wyoming House of Representatives - District 43
Ivan Posey
Wyoming House of Representatives - District 33
Marlene Brady
Wyoming House of Representatives - District 60
Wyoming State Senate
30 Members
Laura Pearson
Wyoming State Senate - District 14
Tim French
Wyoming State Senate - District 18
Jared Olsen
Wyoming State Senate - District 8
U.S. Senate
2 Members
Cynthia Lummis
U.S. Senate - Wyoming
John Barrasso
U.S. Senate - Wyoming

Supporter Voices

Petition Updates