By Nicholas Brown
Staff Writer
Pembroke
officials are urging residents to speak out against a state Department
of Transportation fueling facility planned for construction in the
aquifer that feeds water to Pembroke, and parts of Allenstown, Hooksett
and Concord.
The state is hosting a public informational meeting about the
plan on Monday, Oct. 30, at 7 p.m., at the Pembroke Academy cafeteria.
Some local officials have been adamantly against the state’s
plans for three 10,000-gallon fueling tanks off Route 106 for months,
and contend it’s an imminent threat to Pembroke’s public water supply.
“The public’s health is at risk here,” said Pembroke Water
Works Superintendent Paul Whittemore. “I’m not going to lay down and
say we can’t stop this. I think we can.”
The Route 106 fueling station which would be the largest of
more than 90 statewide would be placed at the site of the Department
of Transportation’s Mechanical Services Division, just north of the
Pembroke town line. The fueling station planned to store fuel for
state vehicles would replace a current facility at Stickney Avenue,
Concord.
The state is proposing safety measures well exceeding state
standards for the tanks including two layers of fiberglass lining
surrounded by a concrete vault.
But Whittemore said engineering can’t always protect against human error.
“It’s the operation of the facility that’s going to cause
contamination to the groundwater,” he said. “We’re not talking it might
contaminate, we’re talking it will contaminate eventually.”
The state has envisioned the Route 106 location for the
facility since 2004. Since then, the state agency has fielded
complaints from local state representatives in Pembroke and Concord, as
well as other state representatives. The governor’s office has been
reviewing the plans in recent months.
The Department of Transportation has already had informational
sessions with the Concord Planning Board, which can’t enforce its
zoning regulations on the state project.
The upcoming meeting with Pembroke is strictly for the state
to present information about its plan and gather feedback, said
Pembroke Town Administrator Troy Brown, and local boards won’t have an
official say on whether the plan moves forward.
Brown said the issue carries significance beyond the town borders.
“What’s to say that other communities aren’t going to need this water supply 10 years from now?” he said.
Thomas Ballestero, a University of New Hampshire professor and
engineer who who designed the Pembroke well nearest the proposed
fueling facility, warned against the state plan to local officials.
“By allowing the construction of a refueling facility on this
formation, we have basically learned nothing from our past mistakes,”
he wrote to Whittemore. “In my opinion, it is not a question of ‘if’ a
fuel spill will occur, but rather ‘when’ and ‘how much.’”