Playing “bait and switch” with our lives
By Christina Holden Shea
Imagine living in an area that gets very little media
attention when there are some questionable activities going on in local
government. Can anyone understand the
frustration felt by citizens affected and forced to endure back door politics
going on and a door slamming in the face of citizens looking for justice?
Lets mix this with a Zoning Committee Chairman who
abruptly recused himself from the long awaited hearing with a less than
detailed conflict of interest excuse and then another Zoning official (responsible
for issuing the Cease and Desist Order) who up and disappears when the long
awaited hearing has finally begun (seven months later), thus, resulting in a
subpoena being filed for her return to testify at the zoning hearing. All eyes need to shift to the south west
corner of the state to the town of Westerly.
Our story is that of a group of Westerly and Charlestown residents who are trying to preserve their property and health while legally battling a quarry operation that opened a few years ago in a now residential area adjacent to an area. The unused quarry prior to recent operation sits on land zoned light industrial due to the prior construction of a cell phone tower.
Copar truck loaded with rocks and dust. Note the lack of a cover. |
If that were not bad enough, there is the silica dust
all over homes and cars and windowsills.
But wait, there is more. The total upheaval of our lives is the explosives
detonated every five to eight weeks, shaking homes and causing damage.
Westerly quarrying operation in 1923 |
In 1969 the Sullivan quarry stopped operating in
Bradford. Left behind were old cables,
derricks, a burned out shed like building and two crystal clear quarries filled
with water. These were all remnants of an industry from
the past. The surrounding plots were all zoned rural residential. With the zoning being “RR”, houses and entire
Neighborhoods were built all abutting the land the quarry was situated on. It was quiet and a great place to sit outside
and enjoy the beautiful Charlestown /Westerly woods.
This was our lives until 2010. A permit was taken out in 2007 to reopen the
quarry by owners Westerly Granite. Did
I mention the President of Westerly Granite was also President of the Westerly
Town Council at one time? Westerly Granite then leased the quarry to
Copar Quarry LLC. Mind you, the site the
old quarry sits on is “light industrial”.
Since when is rock crushing, numerous dump trucks and
the use of explosives light industrial?
One might ask how a zoning board would let this happen when you need a
meeting just to change a driveway or add a sundeck. On the permit is a question about the state
of property where the use was circled “Existing Use”. Many of the residents including myself will
assure you this was not the case.
A group of Bradford residents decided enough was
enough and sought to have the quarry shut down based on the permit being
incorrect and that rock crushing is very different from traditional quarrying
of cutting and pulling large chunks of granite to be carved. There is also the issue of this operation
being a health hazard and silica dust in the air causing silicosis. The
Bradford residents decided to litigate.
In the late fall of 2012 some residents in neighboring
Charlestown residents decided to lend their support to the litigants. Despite
Copar having a sixteen year lease with Westerly Granite Inc., Copar
quarry decided expansion was necessary and decided to apply for expansion much
to the resident’s disapproval.
The neighbor’s disapproval is one thing. DEM and EPA and MSHA (Mine Safety Health
Administration) violations are quite another thing. While the DEM has to visually see “fugitive
dust” leaving the area the quarry was not in violation. Residents, like me will tell you
otherwise.
Storm water carries mine drainage into Charlestown wetlands |
Copar quarry is currently operating under an appeal
filed with the town of Westerly.
So, Let us cut to the chase. The hearing is finally under way after the
recusal of the Zoning Chairman offers a very vague excuse citing that he has a
conflict of interest because of his working relationship with an attorney who
is a relation of Westerly Granite. This very
same attorney is a solicitor for the Westerly Housing Authority which is the
very same agency the recused Zoning Board Chairman is a candidate for the job
of Executive Director of the Westerly Housing Authority. Residents wonder why this zoning board
official did not recuse himself in August when the Cease and Desist order was
issued.
If this were not enough new lawyers hired by Copar
Quarry owners spent over seven hours grilling zoning board replacement (Liz Burdick’s)
as to whether he had enough time to look over all of the leases, contract, and
affidavits given to him by Liz Burdick. Most recently, the Westerly Sun has revealed that Ms. Burdick was apparently offered a job to work for Copar.
Residents of both Bradford and Charlestown sat through the sessions that covered whether land not really owned by a woman who was married to the man that owned it was under conforming use even though it was taxed as open space by the Town of Westerly for over a decade but had given rights to Westerly Granite to take piles of rocks…
Residents of both Bradford and Charlestown sat through the sessions that covered whether land not really owned by a woman who was married to the man that owned it was under conforming use even though it was taxed as open space by the Town of Westerly for over a decade but had given rights to Westerly Granite to take piles of rocks…
Enter an expert on urban planning who compares removing
a kitchen from a triple decker tenement to whether a quarry not used for years
is conforming use, abandoned use or subject to willful and overt changes. What
the surrounding residents are left with is the fact that if you have built a
house in a zoned rural residential area and someone wants to open up a quarry
and detonate explosives.
In doing this, shaking the bedrock within close
proximity to the town’s well head and possibly cracking the aquifer that also
feeds Charlestown resident’s wells, then Westerly and neighboring Charlestown
is the place to live. No one will bring
up whether it is safe to live near detonations or what “rural residential” or
“light industrial” actually is. Only town
officials with questionable relationships know what is going on, because the
rest of the state is none the wiser.