At the July 29 pow-wow, the bureaucrats and politicians said they couldn’t stop the 12-acre parking lot from being built and operated by a known and reckless polluter – Pan Am Railways -- over our aquifer, where Ford Motor Company is the main client.
The hired henchman from Norfolk Southern Railroad [Pan Am’s partner] told the 200-plus residents that his company wouldn’t stop construction, but he would take messages back to the company – Pan Am Southern.
The people unanimously wanted the lot to be STOPPED. That we want our water protected for next seven generations – and beyond – which doesn’t include jeopardizing it by having locomotives with a propensity for spilling diesel fuel operating with their 33,000 gallon tanks within feet of our water supply.
The lot isn’t built yet. There’s still time for our congressional delegation – Rep. Tsongas and Sens. Kerry and Kennedy – to get CSX to the table to protect our community’s water supply NOW. CSX holds the lease to the other lot. The simplest solution would be for that lease to be re-negotiated so Pan Am Southern could take it over.
The next best solution would be for a land swap so the lot could be built elsewhere, and protect our aquifer. The July 29 meeting at Ayer Town Hall brought many, but not all, of the players to the table to come to a common-sense solution to a decade-long fight to prevent a disaster from happening over our water supply.
Pan Am Southern made the lame offer that the town could hire a monitor to babysit them. The trouble is that a babysitter can’t prevent the drunk from stealing liquor from the closet. By the time a monitor realizes there’s a spill, it’s already a disaster for our water supply – and our community.
It’s absurd that the railroad has the legal right and might to move forward with a project opposed by our community because it puts our towns' futures at risk. Without water, we're worthless. It’s like we live in a third-world country where outsiders control and exploit our resources for their profit. Making money off our resources comes before protecting the future of our community.
Bill Daniels referenced “water buffaloes,” huge tanks of water that delivered water to Acton residents at K-Mart in the 1980s because of polluted water. Women in African countries walk miles to collect water. Is that what we would be reduced to when and if our aquifer gets polluted?
Here’s a quote from Martha Coakley’s memorandum on sentencing Pan Am Railways on March 30, 2009, that demonstrates the kind of company that the legal watchdog of our water supply. In March, Pan Am was fined $500k, the largest criminal environmental fine in the history of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
“The defendants’ long history of failure to report releases of oil and hazardous substances and failure to adopt responsible environmental compliance practices strongly supports the imposition of the sentence recommended by the Commonwealth.”
Pan Am Railways now reports to a probation officer – an independent monitor to ensure it abides by its obligation to operate in with environmental responsibility
August 03, 2009
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