The hardest part about this fight to protect our water from careless spills by Pan Am Railways and Norfolk Southern Railroads is that it hasn't happened yet -- over our aquifer.
All evidence points to the likelihood that locomotives will eventually spill diesel oil and contaminate our aquifer. Once an aquifer is polluted, it rarely recovers. That's 60 percent of Ayer's water supply. Spectacle Pond supplies water for 15,000 people in Ayer and Littleton.
Big and little spills have happened often in the past 30 years on Pan Am Railways' tracks. Many have gone unreported. Until the spill of 800-plus gallons in Ayer in 2006, spilling oil haphazardly, not reporting it, not cleaning it up and starting over somewhere else -- was business as usual for Pan Am Railways.
Until Attorney General Martha Coakley's Environmental Crime Strike Force caught up with Pan Am Railways and documented 30 years of envrionmentally reprehensible behavior.
Federal law protects the railroads from lack of oversight BY ANY GOVERNMENT BODY, and has done since the 1800s. They behave irresponsibly because they can and always have. That's their business model, with the endorsement of federal government.
This will not happen over my town's water supply, not on my watch, not with Attorney General Martha Coakley's Environmental Crime Strike Force watching.
Perhaps Ford Motor Company approves of Pan Am Railways' reprehensible behavior. Ford is Pan Am Southern's main client for the 12-acre parking lot being built to unload new cars, when a similar empty lot sits a quarter-mile away, leased to competitor CSX. WHY? This makes no sense.
Here's my daily excerpt from Martha Coakley's memorandum on sentencing for Pan Am Railways for the 2006 spill.
"In April 2005, the defendant [Pan Am Railways] was also fined $9,250 for failing to properly dispose of oil and hazardous materials from its Rail Yard in East Deerfield, Mass."
August 10, 2009
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