The stories coming out about Ted Kennedy's caring are absolutely incredible. He was so humble. He was asked in an interview, "How do you want to be remembered?"
"That I made a difference," Ted said.
Ted - we still need you to make a difference. You had the influence to make a single phone call to slice through bureaucracy with the magic of Harry Potter.
Our federal representatives -- who have the most potential to negotiate a common sense solution to use the other lot -- could still take action.
Tsongas, Kerry and Kennedy's staff could dig up a few thousand dollars help fund a position to monitor the construction of the lot over our aquifer.
The Spectacle Pond Aquifer is in my backyard. This place matters to me. My drinking water matters to me. The future of my town matters to me.
We have the best possibility of influencing events that are close to home, among people we know.
I stand by the legions of ordinary people who have taken on big business, big government and impossible odds -- and won. Think American patriots in the 1700s and Viet Cong in the 1960s who both went up against the most powerful military in the world at the time.
They protected the resources in their own backyard. Their lives depended on it in the same way the livelihood of Ayer depends on clean drinking water.
Here's my daily quote from Attorney General Martha Coakley's environmental crimes strikeforce in sentencing Pan Am Railways for spilling 800+ gallons, not reporting it and attempting to cover it up in 2006. {full text at bottom of blog}
"In 2007, the defendants Boston and Maine Corporation and Pan Am Railways were fined $59,747 for failing to properly dispose of railroad ties that were leaching hazardous materials into the environment in Deerfield, Carlbmont and near the Wachusetts Reservoir. The defendants then appealed the fine.
August 28, 2009
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