Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label environment. Show all posts

March 15, 2012

Esty touts progress on energy, environment

BRISTOL -- Speaking this morning to a business group in Bristol, state Commissioner for Energy and the Environment Dan Estay said, “We are working in Hartford to really transform how government does business."
He said it is a partnership, especially with municipal leaders. “We are trying to conduct a partnership with Washington, and that’s a lot harder,” he added.
Esty said government has to operate under restrained resources “and this is not going to go away.”
He said people are always upset when changes are required.
Domestic natural gas “is a huge opportunity,” he said, because shale gas extracted from rock is now possible through fracking. He said it will ultimately provide us with a huge quantity of natural gas and prices are consequently at an all-time low.
“For those who have natural gas, you are seeing a real” reduction in costs, Esty said. Those using oil, though, are seeing high costs.
“We are thinking hard about how to manage in those circumstances,” Esty said. He said Connecticut is “very serious” about thinking through these changing times to take advantage of the situation.
“We are making progress,” Esty said.
On the environment side, we are focused on environmental standards. We can lighten the burden and speed up the process, Esty said.
Esty said the department is trying to strip away unnecessary time, burden and other measures that delay permitting.
He said that permits were issued in one day during storm emergencies.
“It doesn’t mean we walk away” from environmental concerns, Esty said.
But “our focus on speed,” Esty said, is now a goal. “Speed, clarity, predictability” are things that matter, he said.
Permits used to sit for months or years, but now they are usually done in 60 days. Even a faster “no” helps, he said.
On the energy front, he said, state is focused on cleaner, cheaper and more reliable energy.
Esty is speaking before about 50 people at an Eggs & Issues breakfast sponsored by the Central Connecticut Chambers of Commerce at the Clarion Hotel.
Mostly, it’s the usual crowd of city business leaders, city officials and the sorts of folks who show up for most everything, such as former Mayor Bill Stortz. Among those here are Mayor Art Ward, city economic development chief Jonathan Rosenthal, city Councilor Henri Martin, state Rep. Whit Betts, former state Rep. Bill Hamzy, former Burlington First Selectman Ted Scheidel and Police Chief Eric Osanitsch, who can keep everyone else in line if the need arises.
The first order of ducks for the duck parade was just put in for 27 ducks “scattered throughout the region,” said Mike Nicastro, the president of the chamber. He’d like more people to buy a duck for the second round of orders. It’s all a fundraiser for a business incubator program pushed by the chamber.
You’ll be glad to know the chamber will have its duck done soon, with “all sorts of vignettes of the city” painted all over it, Nicastro said.
Ward said Esty promised accessibility and “getting rid of the red tape” before taking office. He said he’s actually followed through.
“The commissioner has delivered,” Ward said.
When the mayor saw Stately Floors hanging into the river the morning of the first flood last summer, he called Esty’s office and got through to him directly. “Never once did he shy away from the phone,” Ward said. He said the commissioner came out and walked “from one end of Bristol to the other” and hit all the worst-hit spots.
“For this community, that was so uplifting,” Ward said, because it showed he cared and would be looking out for the city.
Ward said Esty is also on top of the issues related to the Bristol Resources Recovery Facility Committee, which oversees the Covanta trash burning plant in town.

Copyright 2012. All rights reserved. Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

April 21, 2010

Anti-busway group to form

A new Alliance to promote commuter rail -- and oppose the proposed busway between Hartford and New Britain -- is slated to be unveiled Thursday morning.
Two state representatives, Republican Bill Hamzy and Democrat Frank Nicastro, are joining forces with the Central Connecticut Chambers of Commerce and the Connecticut Sierra Club to push for rail.
They're holding a press conference at 11:30 a.m. Thursday in Room 1A of the Legislative Office Building in Hartford to disclose details.
Clearly, the battle to stop the $573 million busway is not quite over.
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Copyright 2010. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

October 14, 2009

Oh, those muddy waters

A sediment pond west of Rockwell Park leaked a large amount of muddy water into the Pequabuck River this week, officials said.

A city probe of the spill determined there must have been “seepage” from one of the large filtration ponds on Jay Dee Realty’s property near the park, Mayor Art Ward said Wednesday.

A video filmed this week by Carl Swanson, an environmental activist in town, showed water gushing through a culvert that leads from the site to Cuss Gutter, a creek that flows through the park into the river.

Where the muddy flow entered the river, it turned the clear water flowing in the Pequabuck to an ugly haze.

Swanson, who could not be reached, described the situation as disgusting. He uploaded three videos detailing what he witnessed onto YouTube on Tuesday.

Ward said he watched a short snippet of the footage Wednesday and immediately called two public works officials to his office to find out what the city was doing about it. After talking to the mayor, an assistant city engineer prepared a written report.

According to the report by Ray Rogozinski, an assistant city engineer, the incident was reported to the city on Tuesday.

David Clout, an environmental technician for the city, investigated the complaint and found that “the discharge was from an earth removal operation north of Farrell Avenue operated by Jay Dee Realty,” the report said.

The city contacted Blake DellaBianca, Jay Dee’s representative, to let him know about the problem and to tell him to prevent any more discharge, which was “associated with dewatering an area of the site.”

By Wednesday, the flow had stopped, the report said.

At a meeting Wednesday, DellaBianca was told that any discharge of water with high sediment content “is unacceptable and any future discharges will result in enforcement action from the Inland Wetlands Commission.”

The city plans to monitor the situation daily. If sediment is found, the report said, “a cease and desist will be issued” to Jay Dee.

DellaBianca did not return calls Wednesday.

The report said the matter will be discussed at Monday’s Wetlands Commission session, slated for 7 p.m. at City Hall.

If you want to see the videos, please be aware that Carl Swanson's language may offend some. If you're sensitive about cursing, please either don't watch the videos or turn down your sound.

Video #1

Video #2

Video #3

As an aside, what Swanson did is a terrific example of citizen journalism, though he probably should have watched his words a little better and might not have wanted to advertise that he probably trespassed.

In any case, anybody who get some footage of something newsworthy -- let's put those Flip cameras to good use, everybody -- should let me know when you upload it. I'm happy to share your work with the community at large. That includes tapes of candidates talking, fires and anything else that's at least vaguely 'newsy' some people might want to see.

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Copyright 2009. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

September 23, 2009

No delay on box factory cleanup, city says

City leaders said Wednesday they’re not putting off the cleanup of a polluted parcel downtown.
The federal stimulus cash that City Hall plans to tap to help clean up a contaminated former box factory site downtown doesn’t require the work to be done for nearly three more years.
But city officials said Wednesday they expect to be finished long before the deadline.
By springtime, the city should be able to begin to do “the dig and haul” that would remove most of the polluted soil on the School Street parcel, according to Robyn Bugbee, the city’s grants administrator.
Bugbee said that neither the city nor the Environmental Protection Agency has any desire “to sit around” and wait to get the work done.
To meet the federal guidelines governing a $345,000 brownfields grant is that the remediation of the polluted site has to be completed by August 2012.
That doesn’t mean that a proposed municipal parking lot on the site will be finished, however. The lot requires additional funding. There is no set timetable to complete it, officials said.
The Board of Finance backed the project this week on a 7-2 vote – with only Roald Erling and Mark Peterson voting against it – despite some misgivings about the way the economy is heading.
The city aims next to solicit proposals from engineering firms that are capable of overseeing the entire remediation process so that a single licensed environmental professional can handle the entire job, Bugbee said.
By March, she said, the city will have used stimulus cash to hire a firm, conduct activities to involve the community, enroll in a voluntary state remediation program and secure EPA and state Department of Environmental Protection approvals to start the work itself.
The federal government rules require each of those steps be done by next August, she said, a year after the city formally received its grant money. It got official notice only on August 22, months after it heard informally at a press conference held by the EPA on the site.
City officials plan to spend the federal stimulus cash first, then dip into the $268,000 in municipal matching funds required to complete the job that fiscal overseers approved.
The 50 to 75-space parking lot will take extra money that’s not allocated yet.
The remediation effort, though, will involve at least some pavement.
Public Works Director Walter Veselka said that some areas of the site will need to be capped with asphalt to prevent water from reaching the ground beneath, where it could perhaps carry contaminants into the stream that runs through the property.
It’s possible that most of the site will wind up with a layer of pavement, officials said, even before a parking lot is built. It would serve only as a sub-layer for the eventual parking lot, however.
Bugbee said it’s important to get the cleanup underway as early as possible in case the city finds something unexpected when it starts digging out polluted soil.
An early start, she said, ensures there is plenty of time to cope with any unanticipated problems without worrying about the three-year deadline to use the stimulus cash.
The box factory site has been the subject of a number of environmental studies over the past decade that have generally laid out what’s in the ground that needs to be removed.
Bugbee said that “the dirty dirt” there will be scooped out and hauled away in keeping with environmental protocol.
Other sections of the lot will be paved, Veselka said.
The factory itself burned in a spectacular fire about 12 years ago. The city wound up taking the property for back taxes a year later and razing what was left of the buildings on it.
Ultimately, the area is expected to provide parking for the neighboring Board of Education, the Imagine Nation museum across the street and nearby businesses, including Mafale’s Plaza.
Bugbee said some bus parking will be included to help the museum

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Copyright 2009. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

August 20, 2009

Stimulus cash may pay for ex-gas station cleanup

A former gas station at the entrance to Rockwell Park may get a $150,000 environmental cleanup with money allocated by the federal government to stimulate the economy.
The 316 Park St. property needs the costly cleanup to remove wastes that have leaked from underground fuel tanks in years past.
The Valley Council of Governments’ regional brownfields partnership has already helped the city pay for studies to find out what needs to be done to clean up the privately owned site. It is now considering a final allocation to carry out the work, city officials said.
“That’s really good news,” said Edward Krawiecki, Jr, an assistant city attorney.
The city has long eyed the property for inclusion in neighboring Rockwell Park. It’s an eyesore that detracts badly from the newly overhauled entrance to the historic park, officials said.
But efforts to purchase the site have fallen short because the city has repeatedly said it won’t take ownership of the property until it is cleaned up.
The regional brownfields program recently got $1 million in stimulus funds to begin tackling projects on its 26-town list.
Krawiecki said Bristol has a good shot at the money because it has already invested $7 million or more to overhaul Rockwell Park and has been working on the gas station issue for years.
The city has a letter of intent from the property owners to sell the site with any costs absorbed by city taxpayers taken off the selling price.
The property is owned by Vincent Nemeragut of Easton. Its appraised value is $215,200, which doesn’t take into account the necessity of an environmental remediation.
He bought the 1960 gas station a decade ago for $110,000. It closed about five years ago.
The city is spending millions to spruce up Rockwell Park in a bid to pump life back into the West End park that used to serve thousands of working class families. It had fallen into disrepair and was little used until recently, when improvements to its playground and a new skatepark began drawing crowds again.
By purchasing the gas station and a house at 15 Dutton Ave., the city aims to open up the entrance to the park more, to make it more visible and attractive from Park Street.

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Copyright 2009. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

January 23, 2009

Repeal global warming, Piscopo urges

Thanks to Hartford Courant columnist Rick Green's blog, I see that the state representative whose district includes Burlington, Republican John Piscopo, has introduced a measure "to repeal global warming legislation that was passed based on the assumption that global warming is caused by human action."
I have a call in to Piscopo to find out why he's seeking the legislation.
But here is something from a 2006 transcript of the House proceedings that provides a revealing glimpse:

Mr. Speaker, I didn't want to make this into a big global warming debate, but I guess it's been introduced, and I just kind of want to summarize.
Yes, there is some warming on the planet in the last few years. A lot of it can be measured by the activity on the sun. The sun is just more active. We go through periods of warming. We'll go through periods of cooling.
Mark my words, in ten years, we're all going to be worried about late spring frosts, and early fall frosts, and crops dying and we're going to be in some huge climate cooling hysteria. That's just the way it is with this globe. It warms and it cools.
There is nothing the little State of Connecticut, in rolling back its economy to 1990 standards, or over-regulating its manufacturing industry or anything like that, is going to do to stop this huge planet from having fluctuations in its climate.
And I can introduce a lot of different science to this. A lot of it gets squashed by our mainstream media, but I hope that you will all keep an open mind on this debate, in the future, and I will keep trying.

And here is a press release he put out about it awhile back that I wish I'd seen before today.
Here's what state Rep. Bill Hamzy, the Plymouth Republican whose district includes northwestern Bristol had to say during the same 2006 floor debate where Piscopo spoke:

I also rise to speak on the issue of global warming, which was introduced by one of my fellow Representatives, and also state that I believe you can have, in this Chamber, a difference of opinion without resorting to code words like right-wing think tank, or left-wing think tank, or liberal or conservative.
And you can have an honest difference of opinion in a conversation about issues that we take up in this Chamber. And because of differences of opinion, I'm not sure that it's credible to be throwing out those types of words.
If you go back over the course of the history of this world, more than just 15 or 20 years, but go back 1,000 years, you'll see the pattern of global warming and global cooling and recognize that while, I also believe that it's incumbent upon us to reduce emissions.
But I do not believe that the emissions that are released in the State of Connecticut affect the global warming as an entire universe.

And last February, with this measure, Hamzy and Piscopo sought to use money allocated to combat global warming to reduce electrical rates instead.

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Copyright 2009. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com

June 18, 2008

Visconti calls on Larson to "take off the blindfolds"

I asked Republican congressional candidate Joe Visconti of West Hartford what he thought of U.S. Rep. John Larson's press release on oil drilling. Here's what Visconti sent back a few minutes ago:

I am on the run but just saw your email and Larson's press release. His quote of "For seven years he has allowed speculators to run rampant in the energy markets. It is time for that to end.” refering to the President is hysterical because if the President has done this than so has he and the Democrats who have controlled the House and Senate since 06. Larson continues to show up late with a note from Pelosi saying the dog ate my homework. Larson also says it will take ten years to get any oil from ANWAR, well John you have held office for 10 years now and just had a ten year celebration, just what were you celebrating, 10 years of Blocking Domestic Oil Exploration and Drilling?

Washington and Larson need to stop playing pin the tail on the donkey, take off the blindfolds and promote a comprehensive Energy plan which includes more Domestic Drilling NOW, more Clean and Safe Nuclear Planning NOW both of which will require vast amounts of private and public short and long term investment.


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Copyright 2008. All rights reserved.
Contact Steve Collins at scollins@bristolpress.com