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'We've Been Failed Down Here': Somerset Residents Urge State To Shutter Scrap Metal Operation wgbh.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wgbh.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
'We've Been Failed Down Here': Somerset Residents Urge State to Shutter Scrap Metal Operation capeandislands.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from capeandislands.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The NBC 10 I-Team has learned Somerset officials are now investigating photos that were sent to a resident that appear to show metal and debris being buried on the site of the old Brayton Point coal-fired power station. “The pictures were pretty disturbing. He sent over 30 photos,” said Nancy Thomas, who received the pictures from a concerned worker inside the Brayton Point Commerce Center. “I am definitely horrified. ....
SWANSEA The controversy over the former Brayton Point power station site hasn’t been confined to Somerset. Letters sent out this month on behalf of the town of Swansea to Attorney General Maura Healey and the AG’s environmental protection division allege that noise and dust from ongoing demolition at the site have created a “public nuisance.” One of the letters was penned by board of selectmen chair Christopher Carreiro and the other by town counsel Anthony Savastano. Both letters identify the Gardner’s Neck Road, southern section of town as being most directly affected by the dust and noise pollution coming from what is now known as Brayton Point Commerce Center. ....
SOMERSET The Missouri redevelopment company that bought the former Brayton Point power station in December 2018 has had big plans since it paid nearly $9 million for the vacant 306-acre site. But more than two years later, what once had been the largest coal-fired power plant in New England and the single largest generator of tax revenue to the town hasn’t come close to realizing its full potential. Steven Collins, executive vice president of redevelopment for Brayton Point LLC, an affiliate of St. Louis-based Commercial Development Company Inc., says the goal from day one has been to utilize some portion of 140 acres of useable real estate as an offshore wind manufacturing, staging and maintenance facility. ....