September 29, 2009

Railroads rights vs. water rights

Pan Am Southern plowed forward with paving, despite Judge Fahey's warning at a Sept. 25 hearing : "The cost of restoration can be high." Work has continued at a brisk pace without storm water receptors installed. Mary Arata of the Lowell Sun wrote a story on it.

Pan Am Southern claims:
1. It is not beholden to the terms of probation because it is a new company. Probation was for
Pan Am Railways.
2. It is not beholden to the laws of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. It answers only to the federal Surface Transportation Board.

The Commonwealth of Massachusetts claims:
1. Pan Am may have violated terms of its probation as well as the order of conditions and consent decree.
2. Pan Am is in violation of the environmental protection laws of the Commonwealth as well as the Consent Decree and Order of Conditions.

The plot thickens. The state DEP, the EPA, our federal representatives -- Kerry and Tsongas (and Kennedy's office), and our state reps - Sen. Eldridge and Rep. Hargraves, are advocating to protect our water.

It is not over. We will continue to demand that our water be protected from management by a convicted polluter that believes it is above the law.

Here's an excerpt from the March 2009 memorandum on sentencing when Pan Am was found guilty of negligence in a spill of more than 800 gallons, failure to report and a cover-up:

"In August 2007, the Maine DEP inspected Main Central's Waterville Yard and discovered evidence of multiple prohibited discharges of oil at the property, including discharges to soil and storm drains posing a threat to groundwater and to the nearby Kennebec River. The DEP's staff documented '34 prohibited oil discharge incidents' at the proporty between 1985 & 2001. The DEP determined that 'MEC failed to report the discovery of the prohibited discharges of oil described above [and] failed to immediately undertake to remove those discharges.'"

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