Damage to trees, plants by spraying for rail line

CORNWALL — The most recent spraying of herbicide along the Housatonic Railroad Co. tracks is being investigated after reports of a more aggressive attack on weeds and brush than usual.

The matter was discussed at the July 7 meeting of the Board of Selectmen, who expressed their dismay over areas, particularly along River Road near the center of West Cornwall and north into Falls Village, where the spray was sent high into trees and well outside the railroad right-of-way.

At Housatonic Railroad, Project Engineer Matt Boardman said he was not aware of any issues with the latest application. The company hires a licensed contractor, he said, who is aware of any needed permits and the corridor that needs to be kept clear for the freight trains.

First Selectman Gordon Ridgway said this week he had contacted the railroad company and the Department of Energy and Environmental Protection (DEEP). He learned that no notification of spraying is required to be made to town or residents, and that the DEEP will investigate complaints of spraying beyond the railroad right-of-way.

The rail line is owned by the state Department of Transportation, which leases it to Housatonic.

There is also concern about the spray’s proximity to the Housatonic River, which the tracks parallel for most of the route, as well as Robbins Swamp and private wells.

“It raises a lot of questions for people living along the tracks,” Ridgway said at the meeting.

Selectman Heidi Kearns said the lack of notification makes no sense, especially when towns are notified of smaller projects involving herbicides.

It is clear to anyone who views the landscape on a regular basis that the dead, brown branches high up in trees along the tracks is something new.

In West Cornwall, where homes and businesses are very close to the tracks, residents are very aware of property lines and the railroad right-of-way.

There are numerous reports that the right-of-way was breached. Trees on the opposite side of stone walls were sprayed. A well-established bed of day lilies is dead.

“I talked to arborists, and the pine trees that were sprayed are going to die and will have to be removed,” Ridgway said, “so it would have been better if they just cut them down to begin with.”

In Falls Village, First Selectman Patricia Mechare said she had received no complaints, but had noticed the unusual damage.

North Canaan First Selectman Douglas Humes said it is not much of an issue in the center of town, where there is little vegetation, but he was concerned for potential impacts

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