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Before . . .
. . .
and after the
two-day clean-up
Volunteers Hand-Carry Debris from Two-Story House off the Island;
Clean-Up Is a Huge Success, but Some Work Remains
A two-day volunteer effort to remove debris from the
Town-owned island in Foster's Pond was hailed by organizers and
participants as an overwhelming success, as upwards of 75 cubic yards
of rubble were hand-carried from the crest of the island, transferred
by boat to the opposite shore, and loaded into dumpsters. The
rubble came from an abandoned two-story house, which the Town
demolished last year.
By the end of Day 2 of the clean-up, volunteers were
using hoes to scrape shards from the sagging boards on what was left of
the building's ground floor, having removed a five-foot-high mound of
wood, wire, and roofing material that had greeted them on the morning
of Day 1.
Even the organizers of the all-volunteer effort to
were astonished by the speed with
which 75 volunteers --
ranging in age from pre-teenager to septuagenarian -- whittled the
rubble down to size during the first day of the clean-up.
Laboring under sunny skies on Saturday, and
fortified with home-made cookies and brownies, the volunteers passed
the debris hand-to-hand to the island's edge, loaded rowboats and
canoes for the trip to the mainland, then hand-carried the debris to a
30-cubic-yard dumptser -- filling the cavernous trash bin in just two hours. The
volunteers, drawn from around the Pond and across the entire Town,
labored on for another hour, getting more than half of the original
rubble pile -- which measured about 25' by 40', and was 5' high -- off
the island to the mainland shore, where a second dumpster had to be
called in.
High spirits and a sense of accomplishment seemed to
permeate the crowd -- something like an old-fashioned barnraising in
reverse. The rubble pile came from an abandoned house on the
island. After the Town acquired the island more than a year ago
for nonpayment of taxes, Town officials -- worried that the house was a
fire hazard -- sent a contractor in last winter, when ice was thick
enough to support a small tractor, to level the structure.
Officials had planned to let the resulting debris pile decompose
naturally, but complaints that the pile was also unsightly and
dangerous led to the idea of a clean-up.
A smaller group turned out on Day 2, most of them
veterans of the first day but joined by a handful of fresh
reinforcements. By the time the Sunday squad's ranks began to
thin, the second 30-cubic-yard dumpster had been filled, and a large
mound of rubble stood on the mainland shore awaiting the arrival of a
third dumpster.
The all-volunteer approach was first suggested
by Alan French (at left),
owner of Moor & Mountain. He had previously
organized clean-ups of the Shawsheen River
and Bay Circuit
Trails.
He teamed up with Foster's Pond
resident David Adilman (at right),
who offered his
property at 15 Foster's Pond Road as the base of operations. The
Town, meanwhile, supplied the dumpsters.
French's idea was endorsed by Town officials
and received publicity in the local press. On November 13, the
Andover Townsman published an
editorial praising the
project as "the
type of effort every town needs." But few expected Saturday's
large and enthusiastic turnout -- and even French confessed that he had
underestimated the dumpster capacity that would be needed when his
all-volunteer workforce got cranking.
Among the volunteers was Jim Greer, the Town's
Conservation Director. Greer is staff to the Conservation
Commission, which has jurisdiction over the island. It will be up
to the Town to determine how to remove the remaining portion of the
house - including large beams under the ground floor, the floor boards,
and a much-reduced pile of debris the volunteers left behind.
Greer said he would confer with other Town officials and contact FPC
President Steve Cotton about the next steps.
To All
of the Volunteers: Thank You! An open letter from the FPC
To read more on the genesis
of the volunteer clean-up, click on the
links below:
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