August 13, 2009

Ford -- motivate us to buy your product

Here's a story from fellow water-warrior Bev Schultz whose neighbor was leaning toward buying a Ford hybrid Fusion -- and changed her mind because Ford is partnering with a known polluter to jeopardize the source of 60% of Ayer's water.

Her neighbor said:

"Last Wednesday my husband and I traded in our Ford Explorer for a non-Ford. We have been a 2-Ford-car-car-family for many years, and for 15 years, there's been a Ford in our garage with a license cover from our dealer on the Ayer Rotary. We love their service, and have been using the Ford dealer for all of the years we've been in Ayer, and we bought our last car from them. As of Tuesday, there's no Ford in the left side of our garage."

Ford doesn't like to hear this. We must let Ford know we will buy Fords when they do the right thing and motivate Pan Am Southern to USE THE OTHER LOT.

Please contact Ford Corporate Environmental directly and ask your friends and neighbors to do the same.

You can cut and paste this statement if desired: "Ford -- because you are partnering with a known polluter to unload Fords over an aquifer that serves 15,000 people, my next vehicle will not be a Ford. Please do the right thing and withdraw as a client from Pan Am Southern over the aquifer. Ask Pan Am to USE THE OTHER LOT."

Here's my daily quote from Mass. Attorney General Martha Coakley's Environmental Crime Strikeforce memorandum on sentencing when Pan Am Railways spilled 800-plus gallons in 2006, covered it up and is still trying to skirt the fine.

"The present case is a criminal case in which the Commonwealth introduced evidence that the defendants did not merely fail to report the release of diesel fuel, but took steps to deliberately cover up the spill.

"For example, the Commonwealth introduced evidence that, on the night of the spill, the defendants ordered workers to dig holes that would enable pooled oil to sink below the ground surface. The next day, the defendants directed their workers to remove the most heavily stained soil and ballast on the surface and put in fresh ballast, even though stained and fuel-soaked soil remained below (and their continued to be an overwhelming smell of diesel fuel).

"Moreover, as soon as the defendants learned that government authorities had been alerted to the spill, the first thing they did was to try to remove from the scene scene the locomotive that had spilled the fuel at a time when the locomotive still showed evidence of the size of the spill.

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