Chemicals buried at WT Farms (WT ruining the earth)

by doinmypart 79 Replies latest jw friends

  • rebel8
    rebel8

    This was from the Awake 1980 11/22

    "Just the Tip of the Iceburg"

    Thank you. Those are the articles I was thinking of re Love Canal.

    Questions for sympathizers

    • Why couldn't jah tell his superfine people how to produce their literature w/o toxins?
    • If jah was so verbose in his advance warnings about blood transfusions causing AIDS, why didn't he give his superfine people advance knowledge about toxins so they could avoid ruining the Earth (requiring him to execute them) and avoid bringing reproach TM ?
    • According to their own doctrine, jah will definitely be executing those who worked at Bethel due to them ruining the Earth. How can you retain your affiliation with them?

    Oh, by the way, this property (WT Farms) is in a major watershed area, Hudson Valley Watershed, where millions of people get their drinking, etc., water from.

    It's a farming and wine producing area too. :(

    looks like they submitted the application.

    Thanks for that. So the application was made 1 yr ago and it just hit the press now b/c of a whistleblower, it appears.

  • Momma-Tossed-Me
    Momma-Tossed-Me

    Correct me if I am wrong, but if this is a "brown field site" then the state's fund for cleaning up such sites will pay for it.

    Another aspect is the state will be in charge of cleaning it up and will use the lowest bidder to do so. It could be possible for this contractor to find more contamination.

    Why would they need to submit an application? Why are they not under investigation? Then once the investigation is complete, why would they not solely be responsible for all clean-up under the supervision of the state?

    MTM

  • doinmypart
    doinmypart

    Does anyone know how to find out if the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is investigating this as well? The EPA is a federal agency in the U.S. involved in environmental matters/regulation.

  • wannabefree
    wannabefree
    Correct me if I am wrong, but if this is a "brown field site" then the state's fund for cleaning up such sites will pay for it.

    http://www.dec.ny.gov/chemical/8648.html

    According to the information above, it depends on the type of "Applicant", as the Watchtower would be a "Participant", it appears they would be responsibe to cover the cost, as opposed to being a "Volunteer".

  • Mary
    Mary

    Here's a few more quotes from days gone by that might be coming back to bite them in the ass. What a bunch of hypocrites:

    --------------------------------
    g71 4/22 pp. 11-12What Is Happening to the Land That Grows Your Food? One way in which the land is being fouled is by the avalanche of garbage being dumped on it, particularly around cities. The refuse pile for 1969 in the United States totaled about 250,000,000 tons, more than a ton for each person. Of this, about 60 million tons were not even collected. It was added to the nation's highways, streets, recreational areas and fields as filth.

    Consider this partial list of what was thrown away in just one recent year in this one country:

    • 7,000,000 automobiles
    • 20,000,000 tons of paper
    • 26,000,000,000 bottles and jars
    • 48,000,000,000 cans

    The problem is complicated by the fact that so much of the trash is not the kind that decays easily. Of the containers of glass, tin, aluminum, plastic and paper, only the paper and tin disintegrate fairly readily. The rest, especially the plastics, are largely "nonbiodegradable." That is, they are not easily assimilated into the earth's natural cycles that restore materials to their basic elements by decay or corrosion. So, they remain, making man's environment look like a garbage dump........man has devastated the land by deforestation, strip-mining and overcultivation. Scientists calculate that it takes some five hundred years of vegetable and animal decay to produce just one inch of fertile topsoil. Yet man's carelessness has caused millions of tons of topsoil to be stripped off and blown away or washed into rivers and seas. Should we not instead show appreciation for this priceless heritage-and respect for the One who provided it?

    --------------------------------------------------
    g76 11/22 pp. 20-22 What Has Happened to the Rhine? By "Awake!" correspondent in West Germany

    And what about the daily disposal of tens of thousands of tons of chemical wastes that cannot be biologically decomposed? Certain detergents are especially troublesome. They cause mountains of foam that sit atop the waters for long periods of time. And though the foam eventually disappears, the detergents remain as poisonous pollutants. Oil, too, is an offender. Once it gets into a body of water, oil is difficult to remove. Sometimes it seeps into drinking water, making it unusable.

    Because of high costs and other problems, many feel that the best approach to reducing the Rhine's pollution is to cut down on the amount of pollutants dumped into it. But there is little hope of significant progress from this direction. Why? Because it would require many to lower their standard of living. Unfortunately, most individuals would rather endure polluted water than give up the modern conveniences that industry provides. Moreover, merchants who view commercial profit as the all-important goal in life are sure to oppose efforts to cut back on industrial output.

    Pollution of the Rhine is just another evidence of human selfishness and greed.The solution to this and other world woes can come only by the hand of Almighty God, when he ‘brings to ruin those ruining the earth.'-Rev. 11:18.

    ---------------------------------------------------
    g83 9/22 p. 11 Toxic Wastes and Organized Crime For much of 1980, residents of Pittston, a town in Pennsylvania, U.S.A., watched trucks pull up behind a filling station along Highway 81, pause there briefly and then move on.

    About the same time, there began appearing in the waters of the nearby Susquehanna River a powerful mixture of "carcinogenics, mutagenics and teratogens" (that is, chemicals causing cancer, mutations and gross developmental deformities). Once discovered, according to a report in the California newspaper Star-News, the deadly contamination was halted with difficulty just 25 miles (40 km) from the fishing grounds in Chesapeake Bay.

    Where did the poisons come from? They were traced to a stream near an abandoned mine. In the mine was a pipe that came out of the ground behind the garage where all those trucks had been stopping. Seemingly, the trucking firm had been collecting dangerous chemicals from reputable firms, charging up to $1,000 a load to cover such things as fees for approved toxic-waste dumps, then illegally dumping the lethal chemicals into the pipe, where they drained into the mine, then into the stream, then into the Susquehanna River and almost into the Chesapeake Bay fishing area.

    Who would do such a thing? Reports linked the operation to an organized crime group. According to reports submitted to Senate subcommittees, this is but one of "dozens of examples in which criminals have stepped in to earn large fees by illegally disposing of modern industrial wastes," said the Star-News.

    ------------------------------------------
    g90 9/22 p. 5 The Garbage Glut-Will It Bury Us?
    In recent years, developing countries have become the dumping ground for thousands of tons of unwanted waste. Some of it had simply been dumped in open fields by unscrupulous men. "Europeans and Americans are discovering that protecting their environment can mean polluting other people's lands," wrote the magazine World Press Review.

    The German Tribune of October 1988 reported that Zurich, Switzerland, was exporting its surplus garbage to France and that Canada, the United States, Japan, and Australia had found dumping grounds in the "backyard" of Eastern Europe.

    And so it goes. "The garbage crisis is unlike any other we've faced," said one U.S. official. "If there's a drought, people cut back on water. But in this crisis, we simply produce more garbage."

    ---------------------------------------------------
    g95 11/22 pp. 4-5 Poor Nations Become Garbage Dumps for Rich Ones
    Little wonder these companies find dumping the waste tempting! The cost can be cut tremendously if the right location is used. An example of this is the cruise ship United States, at one time the proud flagship of the American passenger fleet. It was purchased in 1992 to be refurbished for luxury cruising. It probably contained more asbestos than any other ship afloat. Asbestos removal would have cost $100 million in the United States. The ship was towed to Turkey, where it could be done for $2 million. But the Turkish government declined-too dangerous to allow the more than 500,000 square feet [46,000 sq m] of carcinogenic asbestos fiber to be stripped in their country. The ship was finally hauled to another country's port, where environmental standards are less strict.

  • wannabefree
    wannabefree

    from

    http://www.bdlaw.com/assets/attachments/51.pdf

    Participants and Volunteers

    The Brownfield Cleanup Program creates two categories of applicants: "participants" and "volunteers."

    Participants are applicants who either owned a site at the time of the disposal of hazardous waste or discharge of petroleum, or who are otherwise responsible for the site's contamination under applicable principles of statutory and common-law liability.

    Volunteers are applicants who are not responsible for such contamination and whose involvement with a site arose subsequent to the site's contamination.

    The distinction between participants and volunteers is important because participants are subject to requirements and liabilities that are not applicable to volunteers. For example, all applicants must prepare a work plan for investigating and characterizing the nature and extent of contamination within a site's boundaries. However, participants must also investigate and characterize the nature and extent of off-site contamination and conduct any necessary off-site remediation, while volunteers need only perform a "qualitative exposure assessment" for off-site contamination. Participants in the current VCP will notice that this off-site exposure assessment is a new requirement for volunteers, and could entail off-site sampling and investigation. Further, all applicants must pay "all state costs incurred in negotiating and overseeing the implementation" of a brownfield site cleanup agreement, whereas participants must also pay "all costs incurred by the state up to the effective date" of an agreement.

    Several categories of sites are not eligible for participation in the Brownfield Cleanup Program, including sites listed in the State registry of inactive hazardous waste sites (unless the property is owned by a Volunteer), sites listed on the federal National Priorities List, and sites subject to an enforcement action or order relating to the contamination. In addition, DEC is authorized to reject an application on numerous grounds, including a violation by the applicant of any state or federal environmental law. This is another provision subject to potential abuse or inconsistent application by DEC.

    Once an applicant's request for participation is approved by DEC, the applicant enters into a cleanup agreement with DEC, similar to the voluntary remediation agreements currently used in the VCP. The agreement covers preparation and submission of investigation and remediation work plans, conducting interim remedial measures (IRMs) where warranted, complying with citizen participation requirements, and payment of State oversight costs. With the exception of the new requirement for off-site exposure assessments, the site investigation process is similar to current VCP practice.

    Covenant Not To Sue

    The remediation of a brownfield site culminates with DEC's issuance of a certification of completion, as well as a release and covenant not to sue. The release and covenant not to sue shields applicants, as well as applicants' successors or assigns and future developers and occupants of the site, from liability to the State for any statutory or common-law cause of action arising from contamination at the site. However, the protections do not extend to any person responsible for the contamination unless that person was a party to the DEC cleanup agreement.

    The release and covenant under the Brownfield Cleanup Program is broader than the protection currently provided by DEC under the VCP, which is quite limited because it binds only DEC and not any other agency of the State. The release and covenant provided under the Brownfield Cleanup Program does not affect any applicant's liability with respect to third party claims, except claims for contribution regarding matters addressed in the DEC agreement, which are likely barred by the federal Superfund law. Nor does the release and covenant protect a participant from liability for natural resource damages that may be available under federal law. The release and covenant is subject to several reopeners, such as a change in use of the site or the discovery of new information, but they are identical to reopeners currently included in agreements under the VCP.

  • donuthole
    donuthole

    " The site is currently enrolled in the state Brownfield Cleanup Program."

    I'm interested in this statement. I know the EPA Brownfield program offers grant money for cleanup of sites for redevelop. It would be rubbish if the taxpayer had to pay to cleanup the Watchtower's polution.

    From the EPA website:

    " EPA's Brownfields Program provides direct funding for brownfields assessment, cleanup, revolving loans, and environmental job training. To facilitate the leveraging of public resources, EPA's Brownfields Program collaborates with other EPA programs, other federal partners, and state agencies to identify and make available resources that can be used for brownfields activities. In addition to direct brownfields funding, EPA also provides technical information on brownfields financing matters."

  • dropoffyourkeylee
    dropoffyourkeylee

    I am wondering if this is simply a money grab on the part of the Society, to get free funds to help clean up a site, thereby making it re-saleable. If I understood more about the Brownfield Cleanup Program and what it entails I could be more sure of what they are up to.

  • designs
    designs

    Getting Federal Grant money to clean up their own toxic mess. rrrrrr

  • wannabefree
    wannabefree
    I am wondering if this is simply a money grab on the part of the Society, to get free funds to help clean up a site
    Getting Federal Grant money to clean up their own toxic mess.

    It will be interesting to see how this unfolds and who is responsible for the cost.

    Even if the Organization has to pay for 100% of the clean up, the fact is they are hypocrites ... most JW's will just praise the Org for doing the right thing with the clean up.

    If applicable, info below is from http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/brownfields/brnfld_qna.html

    3: Who pays for assessment and clean-up of a brownfields site? Is there a potentially responsible party?

    In some cases, the current owner pays for the brownfield site assessment and clean-up. In other cases, the purchaser may pay clean-up costs. Funding for assessment and clean-up is also available through Federal programs such as the Federal Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA's) Brownfields Initiative or the Department of Housing and Urban Development's (HUD's) Brownfields Urban Development Initiative, and through State and municipal government programs.

    None of the Federal government brownfield site redevelopment programs are designed to undermine the goal of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (CERCLA), which is to ensure that the party who created the environmental contamination pays for the clean-up.

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