Pumas? This, and many more threats to
Charlestown’s peace and serenity in this week’s news briefs
By Will Collette
Even though the obstructing tree limbs have been clipped and the warning signs have been posted, Charlestown's red-light enforcement camera operator, Sensys, has still not activated the system. There are two sets of cameras covering the northbound and southbound approaches on Route One to East Beach and West Beach Roads. CPD Chief Jeff Allen says the problem is "Something about the modem."
UPDATE: Red light cameras STILL not working
Even though the obstructing tree limbs have been clipped and the warning signs have been posted, Charlestown's red-light enforcement camera operator, Sensys, has still not activated the system. There are two sets of cameras covering the northbound and southbound approaches on Route One to East Beach and West Beach Roads. CPD Chief Jeff Allen says the problem is "Something about the modem."
It’s not just
Charlestown’s Town Council that’s crazy
Sparks fly over Abel Collins selection as SK Town Council Prez |
Not for the first time, we have reason
to wonder if there’s something in South County’s water that makes our area Town
Councils act crazy. First we have Charlestown’s
fake swearing in ceremony. Now, in South
Kingstown, the nominally Democratic-controlled Town Council has erupted with some
ugly in-fighting.
During their opening session, the SK
Council tended to the first order of business, namely picking Council
leadership. Margaret Healey (D), the top vote-getter was duly nominated as
Council President, but proceeded to lose on a 2-3 vote.
Then independent Abel Collins, who works
as a lobbyist for the RI Sierra Club, was nominated and then won by 3-2. Ms.
Healey was then voted in as Council Vice-President.
At first, Healey was magnanimous in
defeat, but later wrote on Facebook, "Thank you Abel for
disrespecting me. I never saw you as a liar. I was wrong." Healey told the
Narragansett Times that she thought she had Collins’ pledge of support.
Rhode Island’s first off-shore wind farm, Deepwater Wind’s pilot five turbine project to be built three miles off the eastern coast of Block Island, received its final federal approval. Plus, the Rhode Island Coastal Resources Management Council has also given the project its go-ahead.
Construction is expected to begin in 2015.
The project will bring some much needed relief to rate-payers on
Block Island who currently pay one of the highest rates for electricity in the
US. Later, Deepwater plans to build a much larger wind farm on ocean waters it
is leasing from the federal government.
The newly elected state Representative, Flake Bilippi, who now
represents Block Island, in addition to Charlestown, was largely silent about
this project throughout the campaign even though it is a gross violation of his
libertarian principles on many levels.
More installments in the Copar saga
Steve Dubois photo submitted to DEM. Shows dust cloud over Copar |
With a new Representative-elect Fake
Bilippi and new Charlestown Town Council members expressly pledged to make the
Copar-Armetta granite quarry on the Charlestown-Westerly line stop tormenting
its neighbors, we should see a resolution to this long-standing problem by, oh,
around the end of January, right?
That’s what local residents are counting
on (click here).
They also want the Department of Environmental Management and the state Fire
Marshall’s Office to open up a new
investigation about the dust and effects of blasting.
The federal EPA
recently settled its own charges that included
the dust problem against Copar and stated the quarry operators had resolved the
issues.
Copar paid
$80,000 to settle the federal charges.
One of the central figures in the Copar
scandal, Westerly Zoning Board chair Bob Ritacco, was
in the news again. After being caught advertising
himself as a CPA, the state Board of Accountancy (sounds like part of a Monty
Python skit) found Ritacco is now in compliance, having removed the false
claims from his website and his business signs.
Erstwhile Charlestown state senate candidate
lands new job
Cameron Ennis,
a self-described Swamp Yankee who ran a short-lived campaign for state Senate,
was recently hired as the new Executive Director for the Education Exchange in Wakefield. The program was started in 1978 as the
Washington County Adult Education Center and teaches GED preparation and
English as a second language.
Ennis filed his candidacy as an
independent last July only to have his candidacy self-destruct through a series
of errors – he filed his signatures wrong, was uncharacteristically given a
do-over by the Board of Elections, but still failed to make the ballot, falling
just shy of the required 100 signatures.
He officially folded his campaign on November 17 after racking up some fines with the Board of Elections for
failing to file required campaign finance reports. I wish him well in his new
job and hope he is more careful as the Education Exchange’s director than he
was as a candidate.
Share
of $2 million in new affordable housing funds goes to local groups
Rhode Island Housing announced a new round of grants to assist construction of affordable housing and two of the
six recipients are local. South County Habitat for Humanity will get partial
funding to build one of their classic single-family properties for a low-income
family. The Washington County Community Development Corporation will get
funding to rehab and convert a vacant house in North Kingstown into two rental
units for low-income families.
Charlestown has already gotten the final funding it needed for the ChurchWoods low-income elderly housing on Old Post Road. This will
probably be the last affordable housing built in Charlestown until the
Charlestown Citizens Alliance either drops its vehement objections or is
removed from power.
These grants were announced at the
same time that a new report
came out showing Rhode Island ranked the worst in New England for dealing with
the problem of homeless children. The report puts the number of homeless
children in Rhode Island at roughly 1,850. Of course, the CCA Party’s position
is that this is not Charlestown’s problem, as Charlestown has no interest in attracting families with
school age children. I’m not making this up.
Millstone’s “Dome” almost ready for Doomsday
The Millstone Nuclear Power plant’s emergency center called “The
Dome,” located on the highest ground on
the 520-acre campus, is nearing completion. The project is designed to
withstand a worst-case scenario storm surge by at least 33 feet so the crew of
the power plant will have a safe place to retreat to and launch emergency
measures to prevent catastrophe at the plant. Millstone is only 20 miles to the
west of Charlestown.
It will contain equipment and pumps
that will hopefully enable the Millstone staff to handle five major “perils” –
hurricanes, tornados, earthquakes, tsunamis and severe snow and ice storms.
Millstone is also building a more remote emergency site in
Norwich, CT, approximately 15 miles due north
of the plant in Waterford.
Tick foe dies
Medical entomologist Wilhelm “Willy” Burgdorfer, the discoverer of the microbes
that cause Lyme Disease, recently
died at age 89. In 1982, he and another researcher were studying deer ticks,
looking at them as the source of a New York spotted fever outbreak. Instead,
they found the spirochetes that are the cause of Lyme disease which led to more
research on how to prevent and treat this potentially deadly disease.
Let’s
remember that ticks are hardy buggers and they are still active now, despite the
cold.
Farm
Bureau shakes up its leadership
Two years ago, Stamp had plans for a wind turbine on Route Two. |
Farmer and Republican activist Bill Stamp of Exeter
is stepping down as president of the Rhode Island Farm Bureau after leading the
organization since 1974. Stamp
told the Providence Journal “I think 40 years
is long enough. Hopefully agriculture will keep on going.”
Henry Wright, a West
Greenwich farmer, was unanimously elected as Stamp’s replacement.
Scituate farmer Wayne
Salisbury will replace Tyler Young as vice-president. Tyler was the
longest-service farm bureau vice-president in the country having served the
RIFB for 20 years.
Mountain Lion in Matunuck?
Move over fisher cats
and coyotes…there may be an even bigger badass in our local woods. The
Independent recently ran an interesting piece that
noted evidence that the woods around Matunuck may be home to one or more
mountain lions.
Who you looking at? |
Several sightings have been reported to DEM since
2011. Recently, new South Kingstown Town Council President Abel Collins, who
also works for the RI Sierra Club, found three deer that had been killed on his
property and photographed what appears to be the track of a mountain lion.
Bill Betty, a national expert on big cats who also
lives in Matunuck, believes there is at least one cougar in this area, but says
that it will take more evidence to confirm these sightings.
He speculates that DEM is reluctant to confirm the
sightings out of concern for public hysteria that could lead to demands that
the animals be hunted down. He said that cougars are rarely aggressive with
humans unless cornered.