Protest marches against West Roxbury pipeline end with peaceful vigil; organizers say they may have to take more direct action
Groups of people opposed to the pipeline planned to run from Westwood to West Roxbury marched from West Roxbury and Dedham today and converged at Centre and Grove streets, where Spectra Energy plans to build a "metering and regulating" station to pump natural gas into National Grid's network, across from an active quarry.
Although organizers said today's marches and vigils were meant more to bond protesters and encourage the spiritual side of trying to keep the pipeline out, they said they will soon move beyond drumming and marching if need be.
Chuck Collins, already facing a vandalism charge after turning himself into E-5 detectives for painting a squiggly red line down Washington and Grove streets along the pipeline route, vowed to keep any of trucks that were surveying the proposed metering site off public roads. Several trucks were on the site last week, apparently doing soil testing; they were gone today. Some organizers hope to go to a workshop on civil disobedience downtown tomorrow.
Protesters say it is insanity to put a high-pressure gas main through a heavily populated neighborhood - and to build a transfer station across the street from a quarry that uses dynamite to blast boulders loose. And they say the pipeline's real purpose is not to help National Grid better regulate gas pressure and bring in more supplies of the fuel, but to help energy companies get the product of fracking in Pennsylvania to market in Europe.
The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved the pipeline in March, saying the pipeline company knows what it's doing and that quarry blasting no longer results in large rocks hurtling across the street.
In West Roxbury, about 30 protesters walked from the Theodore Parker Church at Centre and Corey to the proposed metering-station site:
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Comments
What's there to protest about
What's there to protest about? Find a different hobby for Petes sake...
If you really want to know
Follow some of the links in the post.
Pipeline Explosions Since 2001-2011
And since then,
In 2013, there was an explosion and fire on Middlesex Turnpike in Burlington, by the end of Crosby Drive. Here is a map from last year, showing the locations of gas leaks in the city of Medford, MA.
meanwhile...
since 2001...how many traffic deaths?
it's amazing to me there haven't been more accidents given the condition of the infrastructure.
401,299 deaths by car accident in US 2001-2011
A rough estimate, of course, to put it in perspective:
Risk of death by driving is much greater than this...it's something to do with the framework of accidents and empathy of people - which is incredibly interesting. I guess it's totally preferential, but when I choose things to protest for, this would be very low down on my priorities. Then again, i don't live there, but still;
lol
workshop on civil disobedience lmfao
why a workshop
Once there is a workshop and there is record of the workshop- there is no arguing from "authorities" that it was unruly or not done in a civil way- it's like taking the "Serve Safe" class for handling food - it is a well documented proof that the goal was to be civil... keep showing up in your ratty clothes and acting stupid and we'll be able to completely be cast aside as outliers instead of change makers.
felonies by accident
Absolutely. If you're going to protest by being civilly disobedient, learn the law so you don't end up with a felony charge instead of a misdemeanor. I.E. resisting arrest.
Serious questions
for the protestors: First, can you conclusively prove that, as proposed, this pipeline will eventually blow up? Second, if this pipeline isn't built as planned, what's your alternative to meet the needs this pipeline and station are intended to address?