Notice of Lawsuit Filed on Cape Wind
Town of Barnstable and Citizen Groups
Take Formal Steps, Preparing to Sue
State Environmental Secretary.
By IAN FEIN
Notice of Lawsuit Filed on Cape Wind
Town of Barnstable and Citizen Groups
Take Formal Steps, Preparing to Sue
State Environmental Secretary.
By IAN FEIN
Setting up another potential roadblock for the offshore wind farm proposed in Nantucket Sound, the town of Barnstable and two groups of Cape Cod citizens last week filed notices of intent to sue the state’s top environmental official for his endorsement of the project.
The three separate notices serve as formal appeals of the certificate signed last month by Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs Ian Bowles, who found that developers of the Cape Wind project had fulfilled their environmental review requirements on the state level.
Notice of Lawsuit Filed on Cape Wind
Town of Barnstable and Citizen Groups
Take Formal Steps, Preparing to Sue
State Environmental Secretary.
By IAN FEIN
Notice of Lawsuit Filed on Cape Wind
Town of Barnstable and Citizen Groups
Take Formal Steps, Preparing to Sue
State Environmental Secretary.
By IAN FEIN
Notice of Lawsuit Filed on Cape Wind
Town of Barnstable and Citizen Groups
Take Formal Steps, Preparing to Sue
State Environmental Secretary.
By IAN FEIN
A fisherman checking on his boat in Edgartown Harbor made a
grisly discovery Monday when he found a dead body on a small stretch of
beach at the end of Morse street.
The fisherman first
alerted Edgartown police of the discovery at 4:16 p.m. The body was
reportedly male and found face down on the beach, surrounded by broken
branches and beach grass uprooted up by the powerful storm that hit the
Island this week.
Ownership of the Chappaquiddick ferry clearly seems a good deal
to a lot of people, judging by the offers Roy Hayes has received since
he revealed that he is looking to sell after 19 years.
It’s not hard to see why someone would want the business
— a monopoly service with an assured and growing demand.
The Island's troubled fishing industry will be a major
focus of the Chilmark annual town meeting on Monday night.
In a town meeting warrant otherwise characterized as "very noncontroversial" by the chairman of the Chilmark board of
selectmen, J.B. Riggs Parker, "the shellfish articles will
obviously get much of the attention on the meeting floor."
Geological time mostly runs incredibly slowly, in measures of
hundreds of thousands, if not millions or billions of years. No wonder
Bob Woodruff was excited about what happened over the weekend.