September 15, 2009

Clean water warriors needed everywhere

Photo at right is from From the New York Times: Ryan Massey, 7, shows his caps. Dentists near Charleston, W.Va., say pollutants in drinking water have damaged residents’ teeth. Nationwide, polluters have violated the Clean Water Act more than 500,000 times.

A half-million violations of the Clean Water Act. That's horrendous. Click on the link to find troubled water spots in your community. Clean water is a problem all over the USA, and it will only become a bigger problem.

On the Ayer-Littleton line at Spectacle Pond, we have the 500,001st violation waiting to happen. Only fools would allow a repeat-polluter -- Pan Am Railways -- to pave a 12-acre, 750 space parking lot over an aquifer within a critical area for a Water Supply Protection District as defined by the Mass. Department of Environmental Protection. New Ford motor cars will be unloaded at the facility.

Ryan's teeth are pretty bad. He is a symptom of a system gone bad. A bad law allows a bad polluter to build a bad project that may make our water bad. It's very bad.

We have one option left in the fight to protect our water against big government and big business -- the power of the people, flexed in political willpower and consumer buying power.

Come to the Rally for Water on Thursday, Sept. 17, 6-7 pm at Fay Park in Littleton. Turn at the yellow brick historical building on Route 110/2A. Go past the police station and the park is on the immediate left. Rain or shine. Indoor location is church at 19 Foster St.

Featured speakers include State Sen. Jamie Eldridge, State Reps. James Arciero and Bob Hargraves -- two Democrats and one Republican. Clean water has no political affiliation. Clean water and a clean environment are basic human rights.

Ford Motor Company describes sustainability as "respecting the rights of people living in the communities around our facilities, and those of our suppliers, who may be affected by these operations." source

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