August 07, 2009

Victory is inevitable

K.C. Golden reminds us complacency is our greatest enemy.

"We're sort of relieved to find out something is inevitable, even if it's not necessarily something we like. It clarifies things. It's more pragmatic to be resigned to the inevitable than to chart a new course through the chaos. So the myth of inevitability spreads and the prophecy fulfills itself. If the proponents of a particular course can get a critical mass of folks to believe that it's foregone conclusion, pretty soon it will be."
--From "The Inevitability Trap" by K.C. Golden in "The Impossible will Take A Little While" edited by Paul Rogat Loeb.

It is NOT inevitable that our aquifer will be paved over -- by early September. It is NOT a foregone conclusion that we will allow a know polluter to jeopardize our water supply.

We must maintain hope and take action towards our goal: to protect the water supply for 15,000 people.

A small sign "Protect our Water" held at a town meeting in Groton hosted by Gov. Deval Patrick on Aug. 4 captured the governor's attention. This is his kind of issue -- that requires political maneuvering between business-community-& government. It's high-profile and time sensitive -- an immediate solution is required to preserve our water for the next seven generations.

Ask Gov. Patrick to intervene immediately: call 888-870-7770 or by email contact form.

Contact Ford Motor Company to let them know we will not buy a Ford because Ford is allied with a known polluter in an environmentally irresponsible project. Click hereto tell Ford directly.

It is NOT inevitable that Pan Am Railways & Norfolk Southern build over our aquifer and threaten our livelihood for the sake of unloading Ford vehicles. There's another empty and unused lot 1/4 mile away. USE IT!

U.S. Rep. Nikki Tsongas, Sens. Kerry & Kennedy can negotiate with CSX and Pan Am Southern to USE THE OTHER LOT.

Here's the quote of the day from Martha Coakley's memorandum on sentencing Pan Am Railways in March 2009 for the largest civil criminal penalty ever imposed on a company.

"Perhaps the most relevant history is Pan Am's history of unreported oil spills in the State of Maine, which goes back over 20 years. ...The Maine Department of Environmental Protection ordered the defendants in 1986 to promptly report any "discharges of petroleum," but they have consistently and repeatedly failed to do so."

Why should we expect any different behavior when Pan Am Southern is doing business, unloading Ford cars and trucks with Norfolk Southern, over wells that supply 60 percent of Ayer's water?

0 comments:

Post a Comment