July 13, 2009

Water worries & whistle blowers

Pan Am Railways' reputation frightens me.

Not only am I afraid Pan Am will pollute the source of drinking water for 15,000 people by offloading Fords at a 12-acre parking lot over underground wells, I am afraid of getting bullied for being a whistle-blower.

"Pan Am likes 'slap-suits,'" warned a regional planner and ombudsman. "They file personal injury lawsuits against residents who speak up against them in public hearings."

"They're not a nice company to deal with," warned a selectman of a nearby town.

"They play dirty. Watch your step," said an activist.

"Pan Am told the Littleton Planning Board, 'We can build a nuclear power plant on that site and you can't stop us!'" according to a friend who has been following this debacle for a decade.

It's not enough that railroads are basically un-regulated by the Surface Transportation Board ("Our role is to give permission," according to the STB.) Ironically, the STB was created as the Interstate Commerce Commission in 1897 to protect citizens against the power of the railroad. We need the STB to step up and follow its mission.

I wouldn't put it past Pan Am to build a nuclear power plan in my backyard. They can, so why shouldn't they?

Thanks to a regulatory gap -- the same kind of gap that collapsed the banking industry in 2008 -- railroads can jeopardize our underground wells by haphazardly leaking diesel , not reporting it, lying after whistle-blowers report it, not cleaning up the humongous spills, and starting all over again somewhere else.

That's how Pan Am does business. Somehow, it doesn't surprise me that Pan Am also intimidates small towns and individuals who exercise our right to free speech and democracy.

It does plant fear in my heart that they've been getting away with it.

The only thing that stops them is whistle-blowers. I'd like to hear from other whistle-blowers who have been bullied by Pan Am Railways.

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