The most frustrating aspect of this movement to protect our water from forces outside of our community with money and power (Pan Am, Ford and US Gov't), is typical residents do not realize the power we have.
We'd be arrested in China for having UnHappy Hour at the Aquifer Bar Friday June 26 5-7 pm, and serving Gin and Toxics. You wouldn't be reading this blog because of Internet censorship. Our aquifer would be subjected to known polluters, controlled by the state and corporations, who ignore local objections.
HEY WAIT - what's different between China and Ayer?
There's only one: we have the right to speak out.
Like China, outside forces -- the state and corporations -- control our aquifer. Their response to outraged citizens is to "pipe down, we're building over your aquifer anyways, get used to the idea."
May I whine some more?
The Surface Transportation Board, EPA and Mass DEP and our congressional reps (Tsongas, Kennedy and Kerry) are all literally, all on board with the known-polluter-builds-over-an-aquifer plan while our community gets railroaded. Welcome to Chinatown-Ayer.
Our message is simple and clear: we will not allow our aquifer to be jeopardized by a known polluter when an identical, unused lot is one-quarter mile away. It's common sense to use the other lot.
We cannot trust Pan Am with our water. Here's my daily quote from Martha Coakley about Pan Am's dirty track record -- business as usual. There are 22 incidents over 25 years.
"Between 1978 and 2003, Maine DEP staff “documented approximately 22 prohibited oil discharge incidents” at the Rigby Rail Yard in South Portland, Maine operated by defendant Pan Am Railways, Inc. and owned by its subsidiary Portland Terminal Company, resulting in the discharge of "approximately 11,760 gallons of oil” at the property. The Maine DEP issued a Notice of Violation on August 15, 2007 after its staff found evidence of multiple prohibited discharges of oil, posing a threat to “coastal waters, groundwater, Long Creek, Calvary Pond, Barberry Creek and the Fore River” and that the discharges had never been reported. (Ex. D)"
Residents -- join our movement. It's the only way we will protect our drinking water. See you Friday, June 26 at UnHappy Hour 5-7 pm at the Aquifer Bar, serving Gin and Toxics, Diesel Daiquiris, and Runoff Rickey at the Ayer Rotary, Routes 110/2A.
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