Letters to the Editor June 30

CA rock crushing noisy and dirty

When I contacted The Lakeville Journal to do a story on Century Acquisitions’ (CA) proposed hot mix asphalt (HMA) plant, I assumed the assigned reporter would contact me for information. She would have learned that the HMA proposal from 2008, which most people thought had gone away, is a sleeping giant, awaiting permits from the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) and the Sheffield ZBA. If it awakens, it will overwhelm our Litchfield Hills, Berkshire County and the Hudson Valley.

CA purchased the Sheffield plant in 2001 from Connecticut Sand and Stone (CSS), which ran relatively small sand and gravel mining, rock crushing and concrete batch operations and coexisted harmoniously with the community for 40 years.

My property and those of my neighbors straddle the Connecticut-Massachusetts line, (North Canaan and Sheffield), 500 to 1,000 feet from CA’s rock crushing operation.

The neighborhood has become a living hell due to what I believe are excesses of fugitive dust and noise. Dust covers outdoor furniture and grills, invades our homes and accumulates on windowsills. Small children stay inside on windy days due to health hazards of dust blowing into their eyes, mouths and lungs. Noise can be so loud my husband and dog cannot hear me call across the yard. CA noise assessments thus far have been totally inadequate to address the problem.

Criteria pollutant emissions with proposed HMA production will increase up to 25 times according to CA data. The government defines criteria pollutants as those associated with known or suspected cancers or other serious health problems.

If an HMA permit is granted, CA will be allowed to produce 500,000 tons of asphalt yearly, increasing emissions of nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide and fine particulate levels. It would increase sulfur dioxide and lead emissions, as well as formaldehyde and benzene, known human carcinogens. It would allow emissions up to 18,000,000 pounds of carbon dioxide, contributing to climate change.

While the Sheffield ZBA on Jan. 26, 2009, found that CA had not substantially increased its hours of operation, rock crushing or batch concrete operations, they were wrong. Based on recent public documents, since CA purchased the plant, rock crushing has doubled and concrete batch operations have quadrupled.

The proposed HMA site is 800 feet from my home and neighborhood, one-third mile from Segalla ballfield and a little over a mile from North Canaan Elementary School, town pool, Little League field and the center of North Canaan.

Residents of Ashley Falls, Sheffield, North Canaan and beyond are committed to preserving not only the neighborhood around CA, but the Litchfield Hills and Berkshire County, all of which will be impacted by airborne emissions, truck traffic and noise. Accurate information is provided for all, including reporters, on our website, www.stopthehmaplant.com.

Kim Casey, President NADF (No Asphalt! Defense Fund)

North Canaan

 

Still had power

I read Jack Silliman’s letter in the June 23 issue of The Lakeville Journal about the poor response of CL&P to the power outage a couple of weeks ago.

 
I was lucky this time and had no interruption of power.  That’s not to say I wasn’t prepared.  I plan ahead with bottled water and food that can be eaten without cooking.  It’s annoying not to be able to use the computer, but I can clean, read or do other things.  At least this time it was warm, and no one had to worry about frozen pipes.

Power gets interrupted for a variety of reasons in this area, but mostly it’s because of trees falling across power lines. If only the wires could be buried, but they are not, so we take our chances.

If CL&P wasn’t prepared for this, I think they are now.  I think most of us don’t realize just what a dangerous job a lineman has.  I’m just glad there are enough men who want to do it.

Carolyn A. McDonough

North Canaan
 

Cancer survivor event a big success

Cancer is scary; learning you have it, to live with it, through it and after it takes courage, stamina and spirit. We celebrate all those who are cancer survivors once a year.  It takes a village to bring us all together — our committee this year represented Sharon Health Care Center, Hospice Volunteers, Sharon Hospital, Connecticut Oncology and Hematology, Sharon Pharmacy, Sweethaven Farms, Tri-State Health Care Auxiliary, We Can Row, and community members.  

We especially would like to thank the Salisbury School for their support of the event held at their boathouse. Tony Fraenkel and his staff made fabulous food enjoyed to the last morsel.  It was a beautiful evening in a serene setting with dragonflies dancing through the sky and herons above.   We would also like to say a big thank you to Joe Loverro who was a great MC, and Michael Brown who sang from his heart and inspired us all.  

To all cancer survivors we commend you and we join with you in celebrating each day.  

Donna C. DiMartino

Louisa Lafontan

Josie Heacox

Harriet Weiss

Jim Hutchison

Cancer Survivor Committee

Sharon

 

The Hotchkiss family has a real dedication to art

On behalf of my family, I want to thank the Hotchkiss Library Art Commission for the opportunity to exhibit the artwork of our family in the “Hotchkiss at Hotchkiss” Art Show currently showing at the Hotchkiss Library in Sharon through July 31. Featuring the paintings of DeWolfe Hotchkiss (1919-2005), a longtime resident of Sherman, Conn., and the art of three of his sons, the show represents a wide range of styles from a very creative family. Hopefully everyone in northwestern Connecticut and beyond gets the chance to take in the show and support the library.

DeWolfe Hotchkiss studied art and illustration at Pratt Institute (graduating in 1939) and served four years in the Navy during World War II. He worked for more than 15 years as a Madison Avenue art director in New York City with several large advertising agencies. He finally broke free from the advertising world in 1971 after raising four sons and dedicated his life to his passion of painting. He was a co-founder of the Housatonic Art League in New Milford.

He also restored a 1939 Hotchkiss Automobile during the last 15 years of his life. An artifact that is certainly germane to the Hotchkiss legacy in Sharon.

Ben Hotchkiss has been painting for over 30 years as an outsider artist “un-influenced by trends,” as observed by Leon Graham in his recent review of the show. Ben has a truly unique body of work ... some requiring hundreds of hours to complete.

J.D. Hotchkiss has a background in the comic art world and as an artists rep in New York. His “Horny Marilyn” is an iconic “attention grabber” in the show.

Like my father, I also studied art and design at Pratt Institute (graduating in 1971). I design and create mobiles at our gallery/studio in West Stockbridge, Mass., and for more than 25 years my designs have been represented in the Guggenheim Museum Store in New York City as well as at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Art Institute in Chicago, Detroit Institute, Philadelphia Museum of Fine Arts, Baltimore Museum of Fine Arts and soon the National Gallery of Art in Washington will be carrying my work.

Joel Hotchkiss

West Stockbridge, Mass.

 

Kent’s spring gala was great

The Kent Memorial Library held its annual fund raising spring gala party event this year, at the beautiful home and grounds of Joanne and Dexter Hawks at Willow Brook Farms on Saturday, June 18. More than 250 people attended on a beautiful June evening, enjoying the festivities and generously bidding on the silent auction items.

This is a community affair and the numbers of volunteers involved shows the generosity and giving spirit of the residents of Kent and for the time and efforts given by Joanne and Dexter Hawks.

Thank you for supporting the Kent Memorial Library. The proceeds from wonderful events like the spring gala and our outstanding book sale, help to support the sensational lecture series at the library and the daily programs for children and adults. The Kent Memorial Library has become a central point for so many in the town of Kent.

We wish to thank the restaurants and businesses who donated their time and services to this event. Many thanks to the spring gala party committee and all the many volunteers, too numerous to name here.

Thanks to the staff  and the library director, Laura McLaughlin and marketing and events director, Lucy Pierpont. Special thanks to Cathe Mazza, the bus driver from the Kent School. And finally, thanks to Bob Lenz and his Dixieland Band for keeping all attendees happily entertained.

Thank you to all who attended and supported us financially.

Margaret Shaw

Paulette Menniti-Pizzo

Liddy Baker

Janet Rivkin

Roz Molho

Co-chairs of Spring Gala

Kent
 

Disappointed in outcomes of recent P & Z meetings

When taxpayers in the town of Salisbury petition their elected officials for redress of grievances they do not expect by right to win, but they do expect to be given serious consideration. The conduct of the Planning and Zoning Commission on the evening of June 21, was certainly disappointing in that regard.Members of the Lake Wononscopomuc Association are concerned that under regulations implemented in March 2008, owners of nonconforming cottages, boat houses or garages on the lakes may be granted special permits to build large houses very close to the water or close to their neighbors.

Members of the association spent a great deal of time and effort over 10 months preparing submissions and arguments for four public hearings, sending letters to 805 residents of the three lakes, collecting 320 signatures on a petition and placing newspaper ads to be diligent and fair.

The issue was not without some opposition. Some people thought having to meet the original zoning regulations was a violation of their property rights. Some others thought a 75-foot setback was reasonable, but other regulations for the 300-foot Lake Protection Overlay Zone may be too restrictive.

With that background on an issue with widespread community interest we should expect serious consideration. When the chairman of the commission was assured that all five elected commissioners would be available for the vote on June 21 and when he ordered them not to discuss the issue with anyone outside the formal meeting we expected them to comply. Yet one commissioner failed to show up. Another admitted he had discussed the issue with several people. Two commissioners own property on Twin Lakes and probably should have excused themselves. One alternate who was seated to replace the absent commissioner had sent an email two weeks earlier asking that the proposal be rejected. Still he said he could be open-minded and fair. The other alternate abruptly got up, said “See yuh,” and left even though there was other business on the agenda.

The chairman who had written the proposed amendment said he would vote for it because he now thinks P&Z should not give special permits at all. They are really variances, he said, and variances should be given by the Zoning Board of Appeals. Commissioner Dan Dwyer said the issue was the beauty of the lakes and he voted for it. The other three rejected it with no explanation.

But there was a second vote on a motion to remove the special permit provision for buildings within 75 feet of the water. That proposal had the widest public support. But the chairman who said there should be no special permits then inexplicably voted to keep a special permit to expand houses within 75 feet of the water.

Is it any wonder so many people left that meeting shaking their heads in disbelief? Maybe it’s time to reread the Poland Report.

Bill Littauer, President

Lake Wononscopomuc Association

Lakeville

 

Affordable housing? Take it to the people

In response to Wendy Hamilton’s question with regard to her town resisted effort to privately develop affordable housing on her Salisbury property, “Where has Alfred Nemiroff been?”  The answer is this. Like the vast majority of taxpaying Salisbury residents entitled to vote on all town financial issues—whether or not they are registered voters in Salisbury—he was unaware of her issue.  In fact, many Salisbury Republican Town Committee members were unaware of this issue although affordable housing has been an important issue being studied and followed since the Affordable Housing Commission and Fund was approved by Jim Dresser’s “sizable majority” of 60 residents. Of the 19 who voted no, many were SRTC members.

Why are too many Salisbury residents unaware of Wendy’s affordable housing issue? Because outside of The Lakeville Journal reporting on it, which too many Salisbury taxpayers do not read, or look at mostly for the real estate ads to follow the depressed housing market, or at best skim for headlines that interest them, Wendy Hamilton’s effort to go beyond the local media’s reach with her fight for privately funded affordable housing, which is the way it should be done in Salisbury, was either nonexistent or clearly not effective.

Furthermore, when Wendy complains about the town and its officials not wanting affordable housing, despite the fact our town government is satisfied to likely spend hundreds of thousands of taxpayer funded dollars on this issue over the next several years, she is really commenting about her own Democratic Party.

I hope that in the not too distant future Wendy will share much greater detail with the vast majority of those who are unaware of her issue and affordable housing in Salisbury.  If I were Wendy, I would take my case directly to the people with a personal letter to every single taxpayer whether or not they live in Salisbury or are registered to vote here expounding on the fact that hundreds of thousands of their tax dollars are being wasted unnecessarily.

It might seem “Pollyannaish” to think that our beautiful, small town should just be filled with caring neighbors who would be delighted and find great pleasure in willingly helping out others in need who already live and work in Salisbury. Wendy is a philanthropist with a huge heart.  Is she the only one?

Hasn’t the Affordable Housing Commission put the cart before the horse with the plans they are contriving? It makes more sense to me to adopt more favorable Planning & Zoning regulations that would loosen restrictions on current and new construction which would be considered affordable housing.  Basic economics is that as businesses thrive they increase their workforce, which in turn attracts younger people and families such as the Affordable Housing Commission desires. Where is the plan to encourage business growth in Salisbury? Are we simply a weekend destination for those who don’t need or desire affordable housing anyway?

Vivian Rockwell Nasiatka

Lakeville

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