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The Great Gadfly

Taking life too seriously is a huge mistake and very unhealthy
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Whatever Happened to Local Control of the Local Public Domain?

Desecration in the name of renewable profits

By Peter Kenney

The surprise that one week before Thanksgiving Massachusetts Speaker of the House Sal DiMasi had thrown a last-minute Mickey into a state energy bill was no surprise at all…just business as usual. Well… maybe not so usual. The obvious beneficiary of this maneuver to allow development of “alternative energy” projects within previously protected state ocean sanctuaries is one Jay Cashman, multi-millionaire construction tycoon and close personal friend of the speaker. Cashman has announced his plans to desecrate Buzzards Bay in the name of renewable profits.

From surprise to dismay


Jay Cashman, shown here receiving the Alumni Award for Distinguished Service from the B.U. School of Management last summer, has a long history in New England: his great-grandfather's firm erected Ptown's Pilgrim Monument

Mark Forrest, chief of staff for Congressman William Delahunt, said during a conversation on the day before Thanksgiving: “We think this kind of thing should be decided locally...that Falmouth, for example, should be allowed to vote on something like this either at their town meeting or by referendum.” Forrest also said: “Wait until people realize that this means the North Shore, Cohasset, Plymouth...everywhere is open for development under this bill.”

A cursory search for political fingerprints finds something interesting: the governor had said through various lackeys (spokespersons) that he was not personally involved in the crafting of the amendment or in the method used to gain its passage in the House. But his lackeys (spokespersons) also say that the “governor’s office” was aware of the legislation and supported it. Both State Senator Rob O'Leary and Senate President Therese Murray expressed surprise (dismay in O’Leary’s case) that the amendment was included in the energy bill. Apparently, neither the governor nor the speaker informed the Senate of their plans. And we are supposed to believe all this.

The wolf is at the door

When Jim Gordon unveiled his plans for a wind farm covering twenty-five miles of Nantucket Sound it was clear that he intentionally laid out his project to avoid falling under Massachusetts’ regulations, which he perceived as hostile to his plans. He excluded not only local authority but also state authority. The voice of the people was not to be heard or, if heard, it was not to be effective. Now Cashman and the Speaker of the House have found a way to destroy the very state protections Gordon so rightly feared and so expensively avoided. Now the wolf is at the door. In this case (because Massachusetts has been doing this for two centuries and more) the wolf is yet another wealthy individual who wants to use the public domain to grab even greater wealth; the sheepskin used to cover this wolf is the mantle of clean, renewable energy. Of course, Jay Cashman also owned the land in Fall River that was the proposed site for a new LNG terminal. Curious? Not really...business as usual.
_________

Wind farm developer to seek help in Legislature;
Cashman to pursue bill to clarify law to make sure turbine project is allowed

4 comments
Blog posts and comments are entirely the thoughts and ideas of the people who write them and in no way represent the views of CapeCodToday.com, eCape, Inc., or its employees or owners.

11/25/07 @ 5:12 pm
Ted from Hyannis Port [Member] writes:
Someone should inform poor Peter about the public meetings held by the USACE when its DEIS was released two years ago, to say nada of the ones about to be offered when the MMS finally releases its DEIS.

I don't recall Alliance chair Mihos having public comment forums before he began putting three wind turbines on most his gas stations, visual pollution which we must all see every day we drive along Rt. 28 in the Mid Cape whereas most Cape Codders will never see the turbines Cape Wind will build 6 miles offshore.
11/25/07 @ 7:10 pm
maverick [Member] writes:
Ted from Hyannis Port...visual pollution on the Cape? It begins when you cross the bridge. It ends when you head offshore to unpolluted waters.

Are you suggesting we bring your onshore eyesores to virgin territory?

Who cares what Christy does on his own property. Have you or anyone else let public opinion stop you from despoiling the Cape?

I get it now. You can't see 6 miles offshore.
11/26/07 @ 7:27 am
Jack Coleman [Member] writes:
"virgin territory," maverick? Perhaps you're unclear on the concept of virginity.
11/26/07 @ 8:20 am
wavemaker [Member] writes:
I have trouble believing that this amendment was intended seriously, just as I have trouble believing that even Cashman takes his proposal seriously.

It is either a distraction tactic or someone is a careless draftsman -- or a combination of the two. But it obvious that the amendment ties up the energy bill indefinitely, for it is certain now that nothing will be enacted by the end of this session that includes that preposterous language.
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About This Blog

peter140_178The Great Gadfly is the public persona of Peter Kenney. Born in Boston Kenney has lived in Yarmouth for decades, a town he describes as the best run town on Cape Cod. He is the son of Boston public school teachers and the product of a varied educational path. A long-time commentor on local television and radio he is adding his voice to the blogoshere. You may email Peter here.
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