Pan Am Southern surrendered at the feet of the EPA and DEP on Sept. 29 and cried "Uncle!"
"What do you want us to do?" the company asked regulators, to ensure the 750-space, 20 acre parking lot (to unload Ford Motor Company vehicles) is built to the gold standard promised by the company at a public meeting July 29.
With the company's 180-degree turn-around, the attorney general's office cancelled the emergency hearing for Oct. 7 to determine if Pan Am Railways (Pan Am Railways partnered with Norfolk Southern to build the lot) violated terms of its parole handed down in March 2009.
The parole dictated that the company follow the environmental laws of the Commonwealth. This is new for Pan Am. It is accustomed to answering exclusively to the federal Surface Transportation Board in Washington, D.C. -- a passive agency structured to give railroads permission.
With lax regulation, all railroads -- including Pan Am -- are guided only by their consciences in the backwoods, backwater and the other side of the tracks where they do business.
This time, people took a stand to protect the blue gold contained in the water supply under the mammoth parking lot. More than 15,000 people in Littleton and Ayer depend on that water.
Ayer is particularly dependent on Pan Am because the railroad operates over both of the town's wells -- Spectacle Pond and Grove Pond, 2 miles down track.
We invite Pan Am Southern to become a good corporate citizen in Ayer and join a civic group, such as the Downtown Business Alliance, the Ayer-Harvard Rotary Club and the Ayer-Shirley Lions Club.
We want a face, a connection, a caring uncle to represent the institution of Pan Am Southern. We want insurance that our interests will be protected. We need Pan Am Southern to be a good corporate citizen by joining and participating in our business community.
October 06, 2009
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So how about a welcoming present for Uncle Pan Am? A large cardboard box filled with ecologically sound cleaning supplies and tied off with a large ribbon seems appropriate.
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