#2
Geez Batman, Robin says
on
03/16/10 at 05:35 PM
According to the website, Rollcast Energy develops, owns and operates clean, renewable power plants that use wood or biomass fuel that is locally purchased.
Break it on down...... 'that use wood' - why didn't they say burns wood? oops; that means air pollution.
Break it on down......down.. 'that use biomass fuel' - why didn't they say burns biomass fuel? oops; that means air pollution and smell.
But I'm just a little Robin, so what do I know. - this is just my opinion.
"But I'm just a little Robin, so what do I know. - this is just my opinion"
Actually you just a little CAVE dweller. As in a Citizen Against Virtually Everything.
Here's a clue Toto. You don't live in McDonough or Peachtree City. Your textile mills are either dead or dying. Unless you get some jobs of some kind, your town is going to die as well.
That lottery funded college, aka University Of Drooping Pants, is not going to carry your town as well as you like to think.
Of course any town that won't allow a cell phone tower to be built while allowing a giant mural of dead textile plant managers has a plan for the future. LOL.
On their website, they have past news of opening a plant near Franklin, over in Heard county.
It might be of interest to follow up that story.
They announced the plans to open there in 2008 and expected to be open in 2010.
Wonder if that came/ is coming to fruition?
The problem is the very few number of low paying jobs it adds locally while dumping 250,000 tons of carbon dioxide, and 250 tons of toxic carbon monoxide and nitrogen oxides into the air. Also all the traffic on our roads.
Everything in the world is a tradeoff, but trading local air quality and roads for a handful of marginal wage jobs is not very smart. It would take 50 power plants like that to replace one Carter's mill.
Break it on down...... 'that use wood' - why didn't they say burns wood? oops; that means air pollution.
Break it on down......down.. 'that use biomass fuel' - why didn't they say burns biomass fuel? oops; that means air pollution and smell.
But I'm just a little Robin, so what do I know. - this is just my opinion.
How about,,,, let's line our local officials pockets?
Actually you just a little CAVE dweller. As in a Citizen Against Virtually Everything.
Here's a clue Toto. You don't live in McDonough or Peachtree City. Your textile mills are either dead or dying. Unless you get some jobs of some kind, your town is going to die as well.
That lottery funded college, aka University Of Drooping Pants, is not going to carry your town as well as you like to think.
Of course any town that won't allow a cell phone tower to be built while allowing a giant mural of dead textile plant managers has a plan for the future. LOL.
It might be of interest to follow up that story.
They announced the plans to open there in 2008 and expected to be open in 2010.
Wonder if that came/ is coming to fruition?
I'm so glad we're friends now Robin!
Everything in the world is a tradeoff, but trading local air quality and roads for a handful of marginal wage jobs is not very smart. It would take 50 power plants like that to replace one Carter's mill.