September 22, 2009

Where's the Gold Standard?

State Senator Jamie Eldridge, above, addresses 100 at Sept. 17 Rally for water at Fay Park.

John Edwards, lawyer for Pan Am Southern promised 200 residents to build an auto-unloading facility to a "gold standard" to protect the aquifer beneath that supplies some of the purest water in the state to 15,000 people. Several major businesses in the area also rely on the water: Nasoya soy products, Aquafina - licensed PepsiCo bottled water, Sunny Delight - formerly VeryFine beverages, and Cains Products - mayonnaise, salad dressings and condiments.

We are counting on Pan Am Southern to build a storm water system to a gold standard to protect the livelihood of our community.

The EPA and DEP haven't yet seen the final storm water plans. Pan Am has already proposed using a lesser [cheaper] storm water system. Pan Am is planning to bring the first train in for a ceremony with Ford Motor Company on Oct. 6. The train will have a locomotive -- and the geo-thermal liner to capture any accidental spills hasn't yet been designed.

Pan Am started paving on Sept. 18. Facilities can't be built to a "gold standard" in a hurry. The company proceeded without securing a NPDES permit - National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System [NPDES]. Those pages are blank - empty -nada - on their storm water plan. That is not a gold standard.

Not surprisingly, the EPA found the plan's "Best Management Practices" lacking. Many key details and a notice of intent are also missing.

Where's the Gold Standard?

Here's my blog post quote from the 2009 memorandum on sentencing by Attorney General Martha Coakley when Pan Am Railways spilled 850+ gallons in Ayer in 2006, didn't report it, covered it up and is appealing the $500,000 fine.

"In Nov. 2007, the Maine DEP received an anonymous report of a prohibited discharge of oil along the railroad tracks in Orono, Maine that stretched for approximately 8 miles, and the department issued a Notice of Violation to defendants Pan Am Railways, Inc. and Maine Central Railroad (affiliates) for failing to report the spill."

By the way, the "anonymous reporters" are typically railroad employees who have been silenced by management.

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