Attorney General Says Broadwater Threatens Public Safety

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Branford Point — -CT Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, who is leading the legal fight against what he terms a monstrous” floating liquefied natural gas terminal 10 miles off Branford, plunged into Long Island Sound Sunday as part of an organized protest to Save the Sound. He termed the proposed Broadwater facility an unacceptable security risk” and a terrorist attraction. At issue, he said, was the safety of Connecticut residents.

The swimmers included State Senator Ed Meyer, who represents Branford and other shoreline communities and Branford’s Second Selectman Dick Sullivan. U.S. Senator Joe Lieberman said this was the wrong natural gas project for this region, that there were other natural gas applications for the Northeast that were less invasive and far less risky. Last year, he said, we passed a wonderful bill called the Long Island Stewardship Act. To put this monster into the middle of the Sound is to put at risk everything we have tried to do.” Congresswoman Rosa De Lauro said she agreed with him.

Lieberman did not take the plunge, preferring, he quipped, to delegate that to Blumenthal. Instead he gave the countdown. Among the 30 swimmers taking the polar plunge” were residents and members of Branford High’s swimming team. But it was hardly polar bear weather. At 44 degrees F, the water was warm enough for some to linger a bit for a short swim.Blumenthal minced no words. The terminal, 80 feet high and 1,200 feet long”“the size of four football fields”“was an environmental atrocity,” and unsafe. In an interview he told the Eagle that the U.S. Coast Guard had inadequate resources in protecting against terrorists, or providing emergency response to accidents.”He told us that a terrorist threat could come by air, from a plane, or by sea, via vessel. He said the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission’s (FERC) draft environmental impact statement fails even to mention the threat from the air. Obviously there are no more heavily traveled airways than in this part of the Sound.”“ In January or July, whether we swim in it , boat in it, or simply love it, we are not going to let it be degraded or desecrated by a bunch of utility corporate international owners that simply want to profit at the expense of our environment and our security, “ Blumenthal said. We are going to fight this battle and win because this project really is unnecessary and unacceptable.”The terminal would actually be located in New York waters, nine miles North of Wading River and 10 miles south of Branford. The Coast Guard would create a zone around the terminal that would extend into 40 acres of Connecticut waters, a concern to Connecticut lobstermen. The terminal would receive cold liquefied natural gas from tankers, heat it, turn it into gas and eventually pipe it ashore.Key to the outcome is New York’s position on whether the Sound may simply be turned over to a profit making private company. The New York State Department of State recently told FERC that the Broadwater proposal would impair the character of the Sound and would have an adverse impact on commercial and recreational fisheries and navigation. The company disputes all this, saying clean fuel is good for the environment.Right now Blumenthal says he won’t give up on FERC. But if he has to, he will mount a multi-forum legal battle. We are going to go to court; we are going to fight in the environmental agencies in New York, in Connecticut, in every forum where we can carry this fight, including the U.S. Congress.”This is the month that FERC holds public hearings on Broadwater, a partnership of Shell Oil and TransCanada Corporations. FERC says that the terminal would have only a minor impact on the environment or on public safety. However, at a recent meeting with Connecticut legislators, two academics said the FERC draft on the impact on the Sound was poorly researched.Before it can obtain a permit essential for construction, Broadwater must first obtain a final environmental report. And before that happens, FERC will hold four public hearings, two in New York and two in Connecticut. The final hearing will be held on Tuesday, January 16 at Branford High School Auditorium, 18 East Main Street, from 7 to 10 p.m.RTM member Lonnie Reed, who served as master of ceremonies for the event, urged everyone to attend the hearing. We oppose Broadwater not because we are anti-energy haters but because we are convinced we can get natural gas in a cleaner, safer way.”As for the stewardship of Long Island Sound, Lieberman put it this way: This event is our way of saying that Long Island Sound is really our water, not Broadwaters. It belongs to the people.” ###

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