November 11, 2009

Gold standard stormceptors

This is the rule: the better the stormceptor, the better our water will be protected.

At right is a photo of construction at the lot owned and operated by Pan Am Railways and Norfolk Southern to unload new Ford motor vehicles.

On July 29, 2009, Pan Am Southern promised to protect our water to a GOLD STANDARD with nearly 200 concerned community members in attendance.

We are holding Pan Am Southern to this promise.

It's strange to say, but luckily Pan Am Railways has an abysmal environmental track record and was sued by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts' Environmental Crimes Strike Force for repeatedly spilling, not reporting the spills and either not cleaning up the spills or doing a poor cleanup job.

If Pan Am Railways had a better track record, we, the 15,000 people who count on the Spectacle Pond aquifer for clean drinking water, would have had little leverage to get them to do the right thing.

You see, Pan Am Railways is on probation for its abysmal environmental track record and must make quarterly visits to report to Judge Elizabeth Fahey in Suffolk County Superior Court. The next scheduled meeting is Dec. 1, 2009 at 2 pm.

Assistant District Attorney Andrew Rainer will be at the hearing to continue to advocate for clean water in the commonwealth, even if you're a railroad that claims it only answers to the lame and lifeless federal Surface Transportation Board in Washington, DC.

Without Pan Am Railways probation, the only recourse for the Town of Ayer would have been to sue the company, again. It's a costly measure that doesn't guarantee success. The last time Ayer sued the railroad, it lost the case and some $300,000 in legal fees.

Our government has failed us in that the only leverage to protect our water is through the courts -- either a probation hearing or an expensive lawsuit.

The system is broken.

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