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Eco Village residents disperse, town and landlord discuss next steps
Residents were still moving out as town and state officials gathered at 4 p.m. on Wednesday, Peterborough’s deadline for residents to be out of the Walden Eco Village. Abbe Hamilton / Monadnock Ledger-Transcript
Walden Eco Village residents were still moving out as town and state officials gathered at 4 p.m. on Wednesday. Staff photo by Abbe Hamilton
Quinn Kelley and his dog Banjo outside his casita. Tenants have been renting casitas, or tiny houses, at the Walden Eco Village in Peterborough. Dec. 15, 2020. Staff photo by Abbe Hamilton
Tenants have been renting casitas, or tiny houses, at the Walden Eco Village in Peterborough. Dec. 15, 2020. Staff photo by Abbe Hamilton
Monadnock Ledger-Transcript
Published: 12/21/2020 6:54:23 PM
The 25 former tenants of the Walden Eco Village are readjusting in various living arrangements just over a week after being given five days to vacate their rentals on Garland Way in Peterborough.
Casita resident Quinn Kelley said he spent a couple days in a rental in Greenfield before returning to Strafford, his home town, to rent a space in a family friend’s house.
“Don’t know if it’s the grief, or what, but being isolated in Greenfield after all this was really hard,” he said, and that he realized he needed to be around family and friends. “Frankly, the loss of this community as a support system has been devastating. It kind of snuck up on me,” he said. “I was so focused on the next step and everyone’s feet were being held so close to the fire that nobody really had a chance to process the situation together, let alone say good bye,” he said. Kelley, a ConVal School District employee, said he would
what i am hearing is, is while claiming to arrest more criminal aliens, internal ice documents show that dhs leadership ordered field officers not to arrest fugitives in reentry and leadership efforts to conceal this from the public has led to confusion in the field. officers are afraid to arrest and suspected illegals have been aggressively pushing back, even showing agents the memo that you have when they stopped them, they showed the memo and says president obama says you can t arrest me. if they say that, they are not reading it correctly because that is exactly not the case. they can be arrested. but at some point and the process there need to be decisions made about who is to be removed at some point in the process. we talked about how much it cost to detain somebody. it costs in the neighborhood of $23,000 to $30,000 to actually remove somebody. that is our cost. it does not include the justice department costs. congress gives us the ability to finance removal of
there around 70 degrees. and it s in the upper 70s around the lower bay. but this is the key factor, the deup thes in the low 70s in many locations. that is just oppressive humidity. and it s going to be in place here throughout the day today. out of the mountains now, the mid southwest, it s humid there, too. mid-70s on the eastern shore. over the last 12 hour, we ve had thundershowers dissipating. in this yellow zone, we do have a slight risk of severe weather with damaging wind and and i will. a very of an isolated tornado. highs in the mid-90s and lower humidity and cooler weather moving into friday and saturday. then getting steamy again saturday night if to sunday. could get storms sunday afternoon. jerry, good morning. good morning. we ll start coming in from the west, interstate 66, headed all the way to the capital beltway, lanes are open. a lot of overnight construction on the beltway near 66,s as well as getting to and through the springfield interchange. let s s