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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Saturday, October 12, 2013

The End of Dirty Coal!

From Mountaintop Removal to Air Pollution to Coal Ash Spills, COAL IS DIRTY!

Brayton Point has polluted air, deposited soot with nasty chemicals on surrounding communities.......

Finally, it's going away and the air will be clean to breath!

It's time for CLEAN ENERGY!


Friends,

Just passing along this email from our friends at the Better Future Project about an important win for New England and Massachusetts. The Brayton Point power station was the target protests from the climate movement for many months, including a big Summer Heat action this August -- and now it's slated to be shut down.



Dear Friends:

I write with some exciting news: Brayton Point, the largest coal-fired power plant in New England, announced that it will close by June 2017.

All summer long, our network has been rising up against this coal-and-gas-fired power station.

In May, it was described as a David vs. Goliath struggle when our courageous friends Ken Ward and Jay O’Hara took to the water and used a lobster boat to block a coal shipment to the plant. In July, they were joined by hundreds of us who rallied against the plant and 45 who were arrested for trespassing on its grounds. And in August, 300 of us marched from Brayton Point to the future site of Cape Wind on the Energy Exodus, building political momentum for a clean energy future.

Brayton Point’s owners have cited economic factors as their motivation for closing the plant. And it's true: economic factors, chiefly the low price of natural gas, was a necessary ingredient to provide the opportunity for our activism to make a difference. Coal was being out-competed by natural gas, but through our steady drumbeat of actions this summer, we gave the owners of Brayton Point something else to consider; that there were hundreds of dedicated people across the state and the region who would make personal sacrifices and work tirelessly to close this plant. As we look out to expected increases in natural gas prices, it is hard to imagine how our efforts were not a factor in their decision to give up the fight.

As important as your contributions were, credit is shared widely. Our actions built on the efforts of local activists - several of whom have been fighting for over a decade to close the coal plant - including members of the Coalition for Clean Air. Without their dogged persistence and visionary commitment, along with our partners in the Coal Free Mass Coalition, today’s victory would not have been possible.

And, as important as today's announcement is, we still have much work to do. First, we must ensure that the plant does in fact close by 2017 (it sounds like some appeals are possible) and that Governor Patrick and the Mass legislature ensure a just transition for the plant's workers and the community of Somerset. Second, we must not let our guard down and allow one fossil fuel to be replaced by another—already, there are three natural gas plants slated for construction in the state. We must not let them be built.

We must stand strong for a just transition and fight for the true solutions of efficiency, conservation, and renewables, because that is the only fair and just way we can meet our energy demand without destroying our communities, poisoning our air, and risking climate disaster. Fighting for those true solutions is our charge moving forward. It's a challenge we heartily embrace in our Deval Patrick Climate Legacy Campaign.

Today, we should celebrate. Our movement has real power, and change is in the air.

Tomorrow, we will build on our success and continue the fight for the better future we all need and deserve. Will you join us?

Here's how you can help:

1) Sign up to join the Climate Legacy campaign and push Governor Patrick to ensure a just transition for workers and Somerset and make sure we replace coal with conservation, efficiency, and renewables, not natural gas.

2) Sign up to join the State Campaign Summit on November 2nd, where leaders around the state will come together to learn about and engage in our two campaigns, the Climate Legacy campaign and the State Divestment campaign to push MA to be the first state to divest from fossil fuels.

3) Tweet! Here are three sample tweets for Governor Patrick:

@MassGovernor #braytonpoint is closing. Let's ensure a just transition for workers and Somerset. This is your #ClimateLegacy @350Mass

@MassGovernor #braytonpoint is closing. Let's replace w/ efficiency/conservation/renewables. No new gas. This is ur #ClimateLegacy @350Mass

@MassGovernor #braytonpoint is closing. Let's put the nail in the coffin and ban coal. This is your #ClimateLegacy @350ma

Onward and upward!

Craig


350.org

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