Charlestown Tapas
By
Will Collette
Public Radio
takes on Copar-Armetta
I’m hoping the recent two-part radio series on our local NPR station was a boost to the morale of the Bradford and Charlestown victims of the infamous Copar-Armetta granite quarry on the Charlestown line in Bradford.
Rhode Island Public Radio did a detailed report on the saga of that quarry going back to its early history as an abandoned quarry and taking you all the way through its emergence of one of the area’s most obnoxious environmental problems. Then they took a look at the broader issues involving “extractive industries” that include quarries, sand pits and gravel banks.
While
the first segment does a very good job at capturing the injustices done to the
neighbors of Copar-Armetta, the second segment was a frustrating read for its
ambivalent treatment of other area operations who have also drawn major safety
violations and neighbor complaints. The second segment is also pretty one-sided
on the ineffective actions of Charlestown’s Town Council which has, to date,
come up with more excuses for doing nothing than anything useful. Click here
and here for more detail.
No drones
Checking
on a reader inquiry about a new post on the Charlestown Police Department’s
Facebook page, I e-mailed CPD Chief Jeffrey Allen to find out if
Charlestown had acquired a drone.
There’s a YouTube video on the CPD Facebook page titled “Cool video of the Charlestown Breachway & camping
area” with the caption reading “Saturday afternoon at Charlestown RI Breachway.
Having fun with the drone.”
So I asked Chief Allen if CPD had acquired a drone. I got a quick reply from Chief Allen – “Absolutely
not. Facebook needs to be revisited if that is on it. I will take a
look.”
Here’s
the video (one of several like it you can find on YouTube).
The FAA is supposed
to come out with broad, new rules very soon on the non-military use of drones
in the US. Drones have actually been in use in the US for a long time.
Generations of kids (and adults) have flown low-level model aircraft, though none were equipped with Hellfire missiles.
Beloved RI cartoonist Don Bosquet and his son run a drone photography business that has taken some spectacular drone footage along the coast.
Beloved RI cartoonist Don Bosquet and his son run a drone photography business that has taken some spectacular drone footage along the coast.
An early drone. Seriously. They really ARE NOT a new technology. |
In
earlier
articles, I’ve noted my ambivalence about use of drones by local
government. I think they’d be great for finding lost kids, scoping out fires in
the woods, watching for sharks off the beach and even helping police deal with
the rare barricade situation. I’d love to see drones used for environmental
enforcement (take that, Copar). But of course there needs to be a clear set of
rules that protect civil liberties. Rep. Teresa Tanzi introduced the first legislation to do that last year, but it didn't get out of committee.
New problems at
Millstone Nuclear
You can see the discharge plume near the center of this Google Earth screenshot. 2.2 BILLION gallons every day is drawn in then discharged. |
The
latest flap is over Millstone’s
“thermal plume.”
Each and every day, Millstone draws over 2 billion gallons of ocean water to
cool its two operating reactors and its radioactive waste cooling pits. Each
and every day, it discharges 2.2 billion gallons of sea water that is heated to
20-30 degrees warmer than normal back into the ocean.
While
this artificial warm current in Long Island Sound attracts flounder and striped
bass, it disrupts the ecology of Niantic Bay which feeds into Long Island Sound
in ways that are little understood.
Even though Millstone first powered up 44 years ago in 1970, regulators don’t have the data to know how much impact that enormous amount of heated water is having on local waters.
Even though Millstone first powered up 44 years ago in 1970, regulators don’t have the data to know how much impact that enormous amount of heated water is having on local waters.
Perhaps
one reason why Millstone and the regulators don’t collect the data is that bad
numbers could mean big bucks – if Millstone’s “thermal plume” is harming the
environment, Millstone may have to construct cooling towers of the type you see
at lots of power plants (e.g. Brayton Point). Retrofitting Millstone with
cooling towers would cost an estimated $2.6 billion. That’s a little more than
$1 per gallon for the heated water it discharges every day.
Some
months ago, I reported on Millstone’s decision to build its emergency response
center up in Norwich, CT, located where it would be protected by distance and
wind direction from radiation is a major accident were to occur at the plant.
Unfortunately, Charlestown is downwind and well within the 50-mile major
accident danger zone.
Anyway,
Millstone’s Virginia-based owner, Dominion
Resources, now wants permission from Norwich to use the parking lot for
city-owned Dodd Stadium for overflow parking when it conducts drills, or in
the awful event that a major accident causes the emergency response center to
go into emergency mode. They have 75 spaces at the emergency center site, but
would need 200 more spaces if the balloon goes up.
Dodd Stadium. The team is called the Tigers. I checked their website (where I got this photo) to find out what the hell that grotesque green thing is. Couldn't find out. Any guesses, anyone? |
Jobs
Wood
River Health Services wants to hire a dental
assistant. Click here for more
details.
South
County Community Action is looking for a heating
assistance clerk. Click here for more
details. They also want to hire an assistant
teacher. Click here for more
details.
I’m
cherry-picking the recent South County listings from the much more voluminous
list of non-profit jobs you can find on Rhode Island Community Jobs, a service
of Brown University’s Swearer Center. To get their daily e-mail that lists all
the most recent job openings, click here.
No
mosquito-borne diseases
The
pattern continues that DEM and the Health Department are finding very little in
the way of mosquito-borne diseases that threaten humans. No West Nile Virus or Eastern Equine Encephalitis
(EEE) in the latest samples.
Unlike
last year’s terrible summer season, only two instances of infected mosquitos
were found this year – both for West Nile and both just north of Charlestown in
Great Swamp. No EEE-tainted samples were found anywhere in Rhode Island this
year and the season is just about over.
Just in
time for flu season (get your damned
shots!), with enterovirus and maybe even some Ebola for spice.
“Agenda 21”
still on the march
The
RI Department of Administration’s Statewide Planning unit is beginning to wrap
up the public input phase of its development of “RhodeMap RI,” a long-term
comprehensive plan for the state’s economy over the next 20 years.
The
CCA Party, and in particular lead paranoid Town Council member George Tremblay,
have been sounding the alarm about RhodeMap RI for months using descriptions remarkably
like those used by the tinfoil hat right-wingers for the United Nation’s
“Agenda 21” guidelines for sustainable development.
To
see for yourself what horrific ideas have come up so far, click here. There will be
two hearings on the draft plan: Oct. 27 at 6 p.m. in conference room A, second
floor, in the Department of Administration’s building, One Capitol Hill, and
Oct. 28 at 6 p.m. at North Kingstown Senior Center, 44 Beach St., North
Kingstown.