Monday, August 18, 2008

Careful What You Wish For

Walt Neidlinger spent years trying to keep a Wal-Mart-anchored shopping complex from being built near his Wind Gap home.

The traffic would have been suffocating for their little community, neighbors argued, so when the massive retailer and its partners packed up their plans and left Plainfield Township last year, Neidlinger was ecstatic. He figured he'd wait for the next plan to come along and remembers thinking, ''What could be worse than Wal-Mart?''

Over the past year, Neidlinger says, he's gotten an answer: RPM Recycling -- the metal-shredding plant on the same land -- causes daily noise that sounds like a freight train rumbling down the street, and frequent explosions that shake his walls.

Last week, a fire at the recycling plant inflamed growing tensions between residents, who say the plant has ruined their neighborhood, and RPM co-owner Nolan A. Perin, who says he's spent $200,000 to help calm the noise and wonders why he's being criticized for bringing industry to an industrial park.

Neidlinger said the shredding operation is a payback for opposition to the Wal-Mart project.

You just might get it.  This is the kind of thing that I love.  People protesting when a company wants to put in a new store, which will create jobs, put money into the economy, and generate tax revenue, only to find out that if the land isn't being built for a new Wal-Mart, it'll be used for something else.

Enjoy your new recycling plant idiot.

 

Travis

travis@rightwinglunatic.com

2 comments:

One Mom, Five Kids said...

Ha! Ha! LOVE it!

Personally I would have taken a Walmart over a recycling plant any day. Walmart Rocks!

One Mom, Five Kids said...

Ha! Ha! LOVE it!

Personally I would have taken a Walmart over a recycling plant any day. Walmart Rocks!