No tangs to Copar
By
Christina Holden Shea
A version of this article ran as a
letter to the editor in the Westerly Sun
Water from Tina's tap after the Oct 25 Copar blast |
“…I love that dirty water…”. While the lyrics from The Standells’ 1966
hit was almost played on a loop after the Boston Red Sox’ third World Series
win, this song is a depressing yet infuriating reminder of what living too
close to Copar Quarry in Bradford is all about.
I
am a founding member of The Concerned Citizens of Bradford
& Charlestown, but for a living, I work as a costumer for theater and
film. Most of the time I am working a ten to twelve hour day in Providence when
a major national Broadway tour comes through or an ice show. We also just finished with the highest of
holidays for costumers, Halloween.
I
would like you all to picture coming home from a ten hour day and still having
to sew for private clients and arrive home to find that your water is dark
brown! That’s what I found when I came
home on October 25th.
This
was also the day Copar
refused to let Westerly Zoning Officer Jason Parker onto the site. For
those of us who live on a higher elevation than the quarry, we usually feel a
double shock when a blast occurs. This
must have been one heck of a blast.
At
eleven thirty PM my water was dark orange/brown (see photo). I ran the water for fifteen minutes an hour
to try to clear the mess but this proved useless.
If I wanted Tang, I would have bought Tang |
You can forget taking a shower. You can forget filling an iron in order to continue sewing. The following morning I had to take a shower and wash my hair in water that was the color of a weak glass of Tang in order to head back to work in Providence for a two show day and evening.
My
husband had to connect a hose to the tank and almost drain it. He also took a water sample and showed it to
a neighbor who said it looked as though sediment/mineral build up was jarred
loose down in the well and sent into the tank in my basement. Had we had a filtration system on our water, (as
most people have in the area) it would have clogged up and shut down the water
flow.
This
leads me to wonder, how big was that blast?
We have had to deal with minerals in the water to a lesser extent before
the arrival of Copar. Since Copar’s
arrival, we have to change shower curtain liners every four to six weeks for
they become so orange from manganese and iron deposits making them very
unattractive. Bleaching or washing them
is futile since the orange stain is permanent and I would rather not put heavy
cleaner runoff in my septic system while rinsing.
As
for owning white clothing, we have to regard it as temporary as a color change
will occur. I remember a time when we
did not need a filtration system on our water and there was a time it was so
quiet in my backyard that friends from the city marveled at how lucky I was to
have found this secret Eden.
Now
I have to wait for the next blast and hopefully I am home to turn off the
toilets and flush the system before I have to clean more mineral deposits. I am angry about how much water was
wasted.
I
complained to the quarry and was asked to fill out a damage claim. How do I put a price tag on inconvenience and
extra labor on a busy weekend?
I
have also complained to Westerly
Town Manager Michelle Buck and the office of the State Fire Marshal. Hopefully something will be done about
this. I am doubtful since we a dealing
with a company that can tell zoning officials what they can and cannot do as
far as inspections go.