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On January 31, 2003 an
article entitled "State to require impact report on waste
transfer station plan" appeared in The Berkshire Eagle. For
most of the people living around the proposed site, this was the
first time they had heard that "Valley Mill Corp. of Lee planned
to construct a 12,600-square-foot processing building, a two-story
office building, a truck scale, an access road and a rail spur for
the facility, which would handle up to 250 tons a day of construction
and demolition debris, including asphalt, brick, concrete, wood
and scrap metal."A neighborhood representative called BEAT.
We agreed to visit the site, and suggested that the neighborhood
residents also call Toxics
Action Center, an environmental organization that helps citizen
groups organize to fight ill-concieved projects in their back yards.
(If you are in western Massachusetts and need help fighting a toxic
threat, you can call them at 413-253-4458.)
Our visit to the site was an eye-opener!
The proposed project was to be sited right at the top of the bank
of the only non-polluted branch of the Housatonic River in Pittsfield.
The area is open space surrounded by woodland and the river and
is used by residents of all the surrounding neighborhoods as a path
to walk, walk dogs, cross-country ski, etc. As BEAT members walked
the area, we met several groups of walkers. One group said that
their family had been using the area to walk from their home to
Morewood Lake since their parents had been children. Today they
had brought visiting relatives to the riverside site for a pleasant
walk. We saw many trails leading to the site from surrounding woods
and two trails leading to nearby Clapp Park.
Proponents are calling this a redevelopment
site which gives them a little more leeway in the permitting process.
We did see some railroad ties and large cement blocks at the top
of the river bank, but this was not what BEAT would consider a developed
site in need of redevelopment. BEAT decided we couldn't let this
project go forward.
By the time BEAT got involved in this
project, the Pittsfield Conservation Commission had already issued
Valley Mill a permit to begin work (an Order Of Conditions).The
neighbothoods began to organize. A representative of BEAT and a
representative of Toxics Action Center have attended the neighborhood
meetings from the beginning. For a brief history of the project
before BEAT became involved, see "How It All Began." |