Having lived in a rural area in SC that has seen a lot of development (tho 
nothing like this!) I can attest that this is not gonna be a good thing, except 
for the grain elevator company.

I do have several comments about it:

1 - As I said before, with the economic incentives being touted for the farmers 
and community at large, it is going to be difficult to combat this thing. 
Saying something is gonna bring in major money these days is like Marshy 
dangling the sidhis in front of everyone's noses and enticing us with a 10,000 
times more powerful program - and with about as much actual effect I am betting 
- again, I bet the main economic benefit will be to the folks who own this 
thing.

2 - It would be useful to see what MUM's official position on this thing is. I 
don't know what kind of community relations the school has with the town and 
county, but one would think that since MUM brings so many people who contribute 
to the economy of Fairfield and Jefferson County, the official position of the 
university would carry some weight with the city fathers. Has anyone asked them 
what their position is and if they are willing to support those who want to 
keep the grain elevator out?

3 - This is a good test of the Maharishi Effect. If this thing goes in, what 
will that say about the effect of yogic flying AND yagyas right there in 
Fairfield?

4 - If it does go in, since it is so tall, maybe just pay the company to paint 
in very large letters Marshy Tower of Invincibility and you'll all get blessed. 
(Sorry, couldn't resist!) I do in fact hope you can keep this thing out.
--------------------------------------------
On Thu, 4/10/14, Rick Archer <[email protected]> wrote:

 Subject: [FairfieldLife] Roger Leahy, re Grain Elevator
 To: [email protected]
 Date: Thursday, April 10, 2014, 3:35 PM
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
  
 
 
 
   
 
 
     
       
       
       Hi All,Sorry to take so long to update you
 all on what I learned on Monday immediately after the 4/7
 Supervisor’s meeting when I was talking with Todd
 Phillips, Exec VP of Heartland Coop.  I found out that Heartland does NOT
 have a comparable grain elevator for us to visit in
 Iowa. [Most of their
 63 elevators are decades old, and much smaller operations.
 They have never built an elevator of this magnitude. I asked
 him if he had any pictures or drawings that we could see,
 and he said that they were proprietary. I asked what he
 could tell me, then he happened to mention: “Phase 1 will
 be constructed of concrete. It will be 220’ high, and have
 eight sections each 78’ long.” [which totals 624’ in
 length]. 220’ high is roughly equivalent to a 22 story
 building, and 624’ is roughly 2 blocks long! This will
 be a massive structure. There are none other
 like it in the state. It will be by far the tallest
 building in most of SE Iowa. Outside of tall
 office buildings in Des Moines (12), Cedar Rapids (2), and
 Davenport (2), this will be Iowa’sTallest Iowa building in
 the other 96 counties!  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Iowa It will 
certainly be the tallest
 elevator building in Iowa. Once our Court House was the
 tallest building in Jefferson County. It will be dwarfed by
 this elevator. It will come to dominate not only the
 Fairfield skyline, but will most likely be visible as you
 are entering the county from all directions! Once we
 were known for our university or our meditation community or
 our entrepreneurial businesses or our artistic and creative
 community. Now we could become “the little Iowa town
 next to the giant elevator!”  And although Heartland says they will
 not initially be grinding grain here, I asked about drying
 grain, and Todd confirmed that drying will be
 happening. You already can hear grain dryers a mile or
 more away from those on individual farms. I would expect
 this elevator’s drying noise to be very
 uncomfortable not only at Overland and at Walton Lake
 and at Seven Hills, but probably over the whole western half
 of Fairfield. I’d guess you’ll be able to hear it on the
 Fairfield square if the wind is in the right direction. And
 Todd confirmed that the facility will be running night
 and day as needed during peak seasons. And that is, of
 course, over and above the noise due to thousands of extra
 grain semi’s and the extra train traffic.  Yes, we have to look at the 
potential
 danger to air quality and to water quality, to the costly
 wear and tear on our roads, to the financial costs to the
 county, and so forth. But the eyesore of this giant
 industrial structure, and the noise generated from their
 grain drying, could be the biggest detriments to our high
 quality of life in Fairfield.Please do what you can to get the
 word out about the size and noise of this facility. They
 have not been very forthcoming about the scope of this
 project. Just calling it a grain elevator sounds a little
 quaint. But this is something far more serious.  Roger  PS: I also want to 
mention my concern
 about lack of adequate available water, and risk of
 polluting our streams:  When Overland built here in 1984, we
 had planned to install fire hydrants at our cost to help
 protect our building. The Fairfield Water department
 adamantly prohibited us from installing those hydrants,
 saying there would not be enough water pressure if we had a
 fire to fight here at the same time that Parkview Center had
 a fire. So we backed off, and only got a 1 ½ ‘ water line
 and no hydrants for our building. Then in 2012 when we were
 considering building a warehouse next door on our property,
 we wanted to see if we could now get a 6” connection to
 install 3 fire hydrants and be able to supply sprinkler
 systems in one or both of our buildings. The City of
 Lockridge, which now owns the water line from Fairfield to
 Lockridge, was reluctant to agree, and scaled us back to
 just 1 hydrant and a potential 4” water line to our
 property. Subsequently, when getting a sprinkler system
 quote, we were informed that a 4” water line was
 inadequate for a sprinkler system for our building. I
 wonder what, if anything, is planned for water for fire
 protection for this 220’ elevator across the road from
 us. I asked Mayor Malloy yesterday, and he said there has
 been no request for, and the city has no plans to provide,
 such water service to the proposed elevator
 site.
             
 We built 3 large ponds on the back of our property in 1984.
 We stock them for fishing, and used to swim in them. Several
 years ago we had a major kill off of hundreds of fish in one
 pond, presumably by chemicals introduced by either by
 Burlington Northern or the neighboring farming when
 combatting weeds. Our ponds are fed by water that drains
 from the land across the road to be owned by Heartland Coop.
 I see today that Heartland Coop just posted a public notice
 that their storm sewers draining into “an unnamed creek discharging to Troy
 Creek to Crow Creek to Cedar Creek.” I believe that “unknown creek”
 goes through our land.
 What if one of the tens
 of thousands of trucks using this facility has some problem,
 or what if one of the later phases of the elevator project
 [this 220’ building is only “phase 1 of 3 per Todd
 Phillips of Heartland] involves transporting fertilizer or
 herbicides or pesticides coming in via rail, and what if
 there is then a toxic chemical spill? It might create a
 much bigger problem than killing our fish and harming our
 livestock. We really need to protect ourselves and our
 community from the danger of this potential water
 pollution.Thanks,
 Roger   
 
     
      
 
     
     
 
 
 
 
 
 
   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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