Thursday, April 27, 2017

Secret meeting about Burrillville power plant excludes press

Posted by Wayne G. Barber
This morning the Energy Facilities Siting Board (EFSB) held a secret, “pre-hearing conference regarding Docket No. SB-2015-06—Invenergy’s Clear River Energy Center.” The communication for this meeting was sent to the attorneys involved in the case, but not to the general public or reporters. Going in all I knew was that the scheduling of the case was to be discussed.

I arrived at 8:30am and set up my cameras. Max Greene and Jerry Elmer, attorneys representing the Conservation Law Foundation (CLF) arrived around 9:10am. Patricia Lucarelli, a Public Utilities Commission (PUC) attorney, entered the room and began arranging the tables in Hearing Room A into a square, so that the attorneys could face each other.
Minutes after the tables were set, Lucarelli left the room. Alan Shoer, an attorney with the law firm Adler, Pollock and Sheehan, representing Invenergy, the company wishing to build the $1 billion dollar fracked gas and diesel oil burning power plant in Burrillville, entered Hearing Room A, exchanged pleasantries with Jerry Elmer and left.
Minutes later, Lucarelli re-entered the room and asked this reporter to leave.
“This is not an open meeting,” said Lucarelli.
“Why is that?” I asked.
“Because only attorneys were invited.” Lucarelli said that attorneys may need to bring something up in the process of the meeting that would be protected information.
“There are already processes for dealing with such disclosures in open meetings,” I reminded Attorney Lucarelli.
Lucarelli stuck to her guns. “This is not an open meeting and I have to ask you to leave.”
“Could you ask the attorneys if they object to my being here? If no one minds me being here, then what’s the problem?” I asked this because I suspected that Lucarelli had been asked by Shoer, outside of Hearing Room A, to kick me out. She had given no indication, when in the room re-arranging chairs and tables, that my presence was a concern, it was only after Shoer’s arrival that my presence became problematic.
“No,” said Lucarelli. “This is not an open meeting.”
I nodded and began to pack my cameras.
With Attorney Shoer was his assistant, Attorney Nicole Verdi, and a young woman who was revealed to be a student at Bristol High School, interning, for free, with Shoer’s law firm.
“Wait a minute,” I said, “You’re going to let a high school student attend a meeting where potentially confidential, valuable and/or private information might be exposed, and you’re kicking me out?”
This led to some confused looks from Lucarelli to the lawyers around the room.
“She’s an intern,” said Verdi.
“Is she an intern on this case?” asked Elmer.
More confused looks.
“Yes,” said Verdi.
More confused looks. Lucarelli looked at Elmer, almost daring him to say something.
“I just don’t see any legal reason to ask [the reporter] to leave,” said Elmer.
Lucarelli stood firm.
As I left I ran into Todd Bianco in the hallway. Bianco is a coordinator with the PUC. “I will be registering an objection with the Attorney General’s office,” I said.
The issue, said RI ACLU director Steve Brown, is whether the “pre-hearing conference” constitutes a meeting as defined in the Open Meetings Act. This is an issue that requires some legal expertise do decide.
In a phone call after the meeting Jerry Elmer confirmed that, “no confidential information of any kind was discussed at the scheduling conference.
“More importantly however,” continued Elmer, “everyone knew in advance that no confidential information would be discussed because the purpose of the meeting was to set a schedule for the case, that is, what events would occur on what dates. In fact, nothing confidential was discussed.”
I’ll be researching this further and I welcome any expertise on the Open Meeting Act to clarify the situation. Source:   RI Future.Org

Wednesday, April 26, 2017

Spectra Schedules Blowdown

Posted by Wayne G. Barber

April 26, 2017
BURRILLVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT
PUBLIC NOTIFICATION
SPECTRA ENERGY HAS ADVISED THE BURRILLVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT THAT THEY WILL BE PERFORMING A BLOW DOWN AT THE ALGONQUIN LANE FACILITY WITHIN THE NEXT FEW HOURS.
RESIDENTS IN THE VICINITY OF THIS FACILITY MAY HEAR SOME RELEASE NOISE ASSOCIATED WITH THE BLOW DOWN.  THERE IS NO CAUSE FOR CONCERN.
THANK YOU

Tuesday, April 18, 2017

No Urgency to Repair a Broken Valve

Posted by Wayne G. Barber

BURRILLVILLE, R.I. — Valve 38 represents the risks and perhaps accepted collateral damage from natural-gas power plants and pipelines. According to area residents and local officials, the valve site about a quarter of a mile from the Ocean State Power facility has been leaking natural gas for months and possibly years.
Uxbridge, Mass. resident Ralph Billington has been jogging near the fossil-fuel facility for more than a decade, traversing the roads near the 560-megawatt power plant. Billington said he has reported the smell of sulfur — the rotten-egg-scented chemical mercaptan added to natural gas to detect leaks — at Valve 38 near Sherman Farm Road dozens of times over the years. When he first noticed the odor, Billington called the emergency phone number posted on a sign at the valve station.
“I’ve waited for hours and no one shows up,” he said.
He has raised the matter at local meetings and with police and fire officials, but the response was tepid. The odor continues.
“I’ve never been able to get anyone’s attention to this,” Billington said.
Last October, Billington started calling 911 to report the leak. The calls produced little more than a cursory response, he said. In those instances, a fire utility truck responded promptly, then waited about 20 minutes for a repair person from the pipeline company to arrive. Whatever work, if any, performed on the valve, he said, failed to fix the problem. The smell endures.
Billington’s repeated calls to Spectra Energy Partners LP, the Houston-based owner of Valve 38 and the Algonquin natural-gas pipeline, has only led to frustration. But he’s learned over the course of several phone conversations with Spectra employees that the valve is outdated, too expensive to replace and, therefore, will continue to leak an unmeasured amount of natural gas.
Local officials familiar with the situation confirmed to ecoRI News the persistent leak and Spectra’s reluctance to replace the faulty valve.
Spectra didn't responded to multiple requests for comment, but several fire-safety experts have also confirmed that the valve is leaking natural gas. Harrisville Fire District chief Mark St. Pierre told ecoRI News that Spectra has issued a work order to repair or replace the valve. But, he said, a custom valve must be made and then tested before repairs can begin. Construction is tentatively scheduled to start in October.
Billington said he heard the same promise of repairs from Spectra in previous years.
The Texas corporation has a large presence in Burrillville. A subsidiary operates the 1,129-mile natural-gas pipeline that runs through the northwest corner of Rhode Island. The pipeline fuels Ocean State Power and feeds into a massive compressor station on Wallum Lake Road.
Neighbors living near the compressor station complain of a persistent, low rumble, as well as periodic and jarring “blowdowns” that wail like screeching jet engines. The noise has only worsened since Spectra added larger, more powerful engines that increase the volume of natural gas moving through the pipeline.
In addition to noise, compressor stations release harmful emissions. Toxic plumes appear during venting and blowdowns. The chemicals in the emissions are linked to a host of illnesses, including cancer. Residents report a prevalence of asthma they blame on air pollution from the compressor station.
Ocean State Power also produces noise pollution. Billington and other neighbors complain that the facility roars and screeches when the plant is generating electricity, as doors that buffer the sound are often left open to vent heat from the building. A compressor station at the power plant also emits loud explosive sounds as gasesous buildups are ignited. Billington said calls to Ocean State Power, TransCanada, the power plant's owner, and the police are met with skepticism.
“The town is sweeping the power-plant issue under the rug because of the tax revenue,” Billington said.
A spokesman for TransCanada recently told ecoRI News that the power plant's doors are always closed during operation, and that Ocean State Power hasn't received noise complaints.
In addition to Ocean State Power, a second natural-gas power plant is moving forward. If built, the proposed Clear River Energy Center would have nearly twice the energy output of Ocean State Power. The $1 billion project, being developed by Chicago-based Invenergy Thermal Development LLC, is sited next to the compressor station, raising concerns of greater noise, air and water pollution, and destruction of habitat in one the state’s largest corridors of contiguous forest.
Local and statewide opposition to the Clear River Energy Center has been vigorous since the project was announced in 2014. The Town Council opposes a new power plant, as do Burrillville’s representatives in the General Assembly. But public opinion has little influence on the decision to approve or deny the fossil-fuel facility. Instead, the three-member Energy Facilities Siting Board (EFSB), an entity within the state Public Utilities Commission, decides if the application meets the criteria: the need for the power plant; cost justification; environmental impact; and socioeconomic impact on the state.
Opponents have been trying to have the application thrown out on a technicality, but so far have been unable to derail the project. Public hearings are expected this summer and, if the schedule holds, a decision from the EFSB is expected this fall.
Without knowing the extent of the leak at Valve 38, it’s unclear if it can jeopardize new projects or serve as an acceptable cost of doing business as outlined by the federal Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration. However, a pipeline valve leak in North Weymouth, Mass., has upset town officials. The leaky valve is on Spectra’s Algonquin pipeline and a well-organized opposition is fighting the company's plan to build a compressor station in town.
Opponents of increased natural-gas infrastructure have called for efforts to quantify the leaking of natural gas from pipelines and related facilities so that it can be determined if the so-called benefits of natural gas outweigh the harm to health, the environment and its contribution to climate change.
"It's outrageous and it's astounding, how little we know [about leaks]," Boston University researcher Nathan Phillips wrote in article for Scientific American. Source:and photo by TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI News staff

Tuesday, April 4, 2017

DEM, ARBOR DAY FOUNDATION OFFER FREE TREES TO HOMEOWNERS

Posted by Wayne G. Barber

PROVIDENCE – The Rhode Island Department of Environmental Management (DEM) and the Arbor Day Foundation are teaming up once again to give away 1,000 trees as part of the State’s Energy-Saving Trees Program. The Program helps homeowners conserve energy and reduce utility costs while beautifying their neighborhood. 
"We’re happy to partner with the Arbor Day Foundation again this spring to offer free trees to Rhode Islanders,” said DEM Director Janet Coit. “I hope homeowners will take advantage of this opportunity to plant a tree with their families and watch it grow. It’s a great way to reduce monthly expenses, create lasting memories, and promote a healthier and more beautiful environment.”  
 
Trees play an important role in cooling streets and homes, filtering air, and reducing stormwater pollution. The trees distributed under the Energy-Saving Trees Program are approximately four to six feet tall and will be distributed in three-gallon containers for easy transport.  The Rhode Island Tree Council will provide planting and care instruction to homeowners – as well as guidance on how to maximize energy-savings.  When planted properly, a single mature tree can save $30 annually in heating and cooling costs. 
Registration is open and is required in order to reserve a tree. Supplies go fast, so early registration is recommended.  For more information and/or to register for the program, visit www.arborday.org/RIDEM.  Trees can be picked up during one of the following pick-up events:
Saturday, April 29 (9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.)  
Warren Highway Department, 25 Birch Swamp Road, Warren
 
Saturday, May 6 (9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.)  
Riverpoint Park, 401 Hay Street, West Warwick
 
Saturday, May 13 (9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.)
Dexter Field, 96 Dexter Street, Providence
 
Saturday, May 20 (9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m.)
DEM Parks & Recreation Headquarters, 1100 Tower Hill Road, North Kingstown