Residents on town borderline abandoned by town governments
By Susan Clayton
This is what Copar neighbor Tina Shea's well water looks like after Copar blasts |
This is my fourth piece for Progressive Charlestown about life
under the shadow of the Copar Quarries. I decided to write this article after
seeing the testimony of Christina Holden Shea in the Westerly Sun and Progressive Charlestown about the
poisoning of her well.
I live about a third of a mile from Copar Quarry and want to say
that everything Tina wrote is not only true, it is what I and my neighbors on
Niantic Highway experience as well.
Every detail is exactly how it is for us, every single day. There
have been damages to homes all over the area, but we in Charlestown have the added
burden of no town water.
These blasts take place in ancient granite formed millions of
years ago. It is layered, and running between the layers are rifts where the
water flows. This is where we drill to get our water.
Enormous blasts, such as those we are experiencing on a more and more frequent basis from Copar’s Bradford quarry, shift the plates. Sand, rubble, rocks and debris fill up the rifts and dam the water.
Mark Stankiewicz - go complain to your insurance company |
Besides, no matter how many wells you drill, every new blast from Copar would simply dam the water again at some point.
The damage we suffer is palpable. The damage to our way of
life perhaps unfixable.
Imagine being told everything you have worked so hard for has
become valueless.
The way Copar Inc. entered Westerly has yet to be fully understood. More facts seem to come out with every passing week. Perhaps it may come to pass that those responsible at the very start had no idea what (or who) they were getting into bed with. The advice my Dad gave me about relationships, terse and cherce, was "Lie down with dogs and get up with fleas".
The way Copar Inc. entered Westerly has yet to be fully understood. More facts seem to come out with every passing week. Perhaps it may come to pass that those responsible at the very start had no idea what (or who) they were getting into bed with. The advice my Dad gave me about relationships, terse and cherce, was "Lie down with dogs and get up with fleas".
In Charlestown and Westerly, leadership seems to be about finding someone else to blame or someone else to pass the buck to |
When my daughter Krista discussed becoming an educator with me, I
pointed out to her that she would find, in public education, everyone from the
lowest to the highest common denominator, poorest to richest.
Teaching, like politics, should be considered a vocation, not a job. That her devotion needs be to one and all. She's lived up to that admirably, and how I wish I could same about our local politicians, but I cannot.
Teaching, like politics, should be considered a vocation, not a job. That her devotion needs be to one and all. She's lived up to that admirably, and how I wish I could same about our local politicians, but I cannot.
After the last cancelled Westerly Copar session, I managed to
get a few words in with Charlestown Town Council President Tom Gentz. The
meeting was to be about blocking Copar access to Quarry Rd. I pointed out
to him that if this was achieved, the next place they would look would be
Niantic Highway, which is a rough dirt road.
I said that if he could help us get Niantic Highway back on the
roster as a town road, he would show his commitment to helping us and save us
terrible trouble .That it would make up for the rudeness and broken promises.
Gentz passed his Copar resolution and now washes his hands of it |
Since Niantic Highway is in Charlestown, he couldn’t use “that’s
Westerly” as an excuse. Instead, he said Niantic Highway isn't in his realm, but that
he would be glad to pass it on to the proper department. He said that in front
of several of my neighbors.
As of today, I have heard nothing.
Town leaders in both Westerly AND Charlestown have let us down.
Maybe Copar is just too tough for them or too clever. Or maybe they just lack
the courage.