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Fairfield Renewable Energy Project

Friday, November 30, 2012

Brooklyn Park Vows to Renew Fight Against Incinerator

Community and environmental groups did not attend a hearing before a PSC law judge in which the company submitted technical documents.

UPDATE (12:30 p.m. Monday)—Brooklyn Park residents have vowed to renew their fight against Energy Answers International, the company that wants to build an incinerator that would generate electricity in nearby Curtis Bay, following a hearing Friday before a law judge for the state Public Service Commission (PSC). Todd R. Chason, an attorney representing Energy Answers, filed several technical documents during the 15-minute hearing before PSC law judge Dennis Sobol. Although Sobol asked a few brief questions about the documents, he did not indicate when he would make a decision on when the plant could proceed with construction. Energy Answers International wants to build the Fairfield Renewable Energy Project on the site of the former FMC …

Deborah Q. Frank

9:29 pm on Saturday, December 1, 2012

It's nice to have a real reporter back at Patch who knows how to write a story that impacts the community and the people who live there. Debbie Frank President, Arundel Neighborhoods Association and Sue Sturms , Treasurer e   more ›

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Brooklyn Park Residents Incensed Over Incinerator

Residents are trying to get public comment portion extended past Sept. 14 deadline.

Curtis Bay and Brooklyn Park share a boundary along the Anne Arundel County line. Mark Hranicka, vice president of the Brooklyn Heights Improvement Association, said he has every reason to believe that chemicals and other pollutants from a proposed incinerator would affect not just his neighborhood, but a large swath of the Chesapeake Bay watershed. When he heard about Energy Answers International’s plans to build the Fairfield Renewable Energy Project on the site of the former FMC chemical plant at 1701 E. Patapsco Ave., he said he was upset. The incinerator would burn tires, wood waste and automobile shredder residue, said Andy Galli, Maryland program coordinator for Clean Water Action (CWA). Galli helped organize residents to attend a …

Thomas

9:35 am on Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Sulfuric acid, mercury and lead poisoning !!! This can't be real.   more ›

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