In case you were wondering what our newly DEM-approved concrete plant being built in Cranston, Rhode Island, looks like when it rains heavily, here are some pictures:



These are recent photos taken since the rains that started on April 15. The river is expected to peak around midnight tonight. When the plant is operational, how will they prevent the byproducts of their concrete batching from getting into the water?
More information on stopping the concrete plant is available at stopcranstonconcrete.org.
I repeat: this is unbelievable.
How could the DEM allow this? Oh, wait. That’s right.
great reporting Kiersten. Have the local papers or even the projo given this any coverage?
Pat, The Projo covered it today:
Here’s the link: http://www.projo.com/ri/cranston/content/WB-CULLION_04-17-07_AL599ND.31ec632.html
I am that woman from a Hilltop in Glen Woods within a 7 minute walk to gazebo, under a mile from the proposed plant that is fighting its “being” in my City. Fact, all Cranston residents should stand in support of protecting our community for the many reasons listed on the Stop the Concrete Plant website.
Scientists (World Health Organization), doctors and health experts can confirm the danger of air pollution, but you don’t have to be rocket scientists to know the dust comes from not only the plant, but the constant line of trucks coming in out out, all shaking off the dust – all the while spewing out carcinogenic diesel exhaust. I don’t want to wait until my car has plant dust on it making me question my children’s health, as this dust is most easily inhaled into the deepest part of the lungs and can bypass the body’s natural defenses against fighting infection. The people in the greatest danger are the elderly, children and anyone with asthma or other breathing problems. Asthma just happens to be a serious problem for many children and it can be caused by toxic dust, or made worse if a child already has asthma. Additionally, children breath faster than adults and their lungs are still developing. Dust that gets into your lungs, is absorbed into the tissue and is proven to cause bronchitis, heart disease, lung cancer and other illnesses.
OSHA and the US government Occupational Safety and Health Administration requires companies to warn employees who work around silica or crystalline silica. It states, if you repeatedly inhale this dust, it will lead to silicosis, a fatal an incurable disease. OSHA states silicosis occurs after 15-20 years of moderate to low exposure. Will Cullion attorney’s WARN the people who live near the plant and will inhale the dust 24-7 without a breathing mask of those facts?
As a member of the Flood and Drainage Commission I could continue to argue from an infrastructure and a conservation angle but we don’t have time. Power is knowledge – reader’s need to educate themselves, something Cullion lawyer’s would like to not disclose you to the real dangers in a residential neighborhood.
Suzanne Arena
Glen Woods
“The world is a dangerous place to live; not because of the people who are evil, but because of the people who don’t do anything about it.”
Albert Einstein