[MassHistPres] ACHP Comments on the Cape Wind Project

Sam Bird greenbird-architect at comcast.net
Sat Apr 3 14:27:29 EDT 2010


Ms. Durkin,
I confess, I made a shorthand and sarcastic response as a follow up  
to my earlier comments on this listserve and on this topic. Perhaps  
you missed my original comments which are copied below.  Perhaps I  
was too flip, however I hoped to emphasize the absurdity of this  
decision, in my humble opinion.

To: Paul Bourdon
Cc: masshistpres at cs.umb.edu; Forum-L at lists.nationaltrust.org
Subject: Re: [MassHistPres] Areas of Water on the NR

I have to chime in here. This is an incredibly transparent use of  
"preservation" by folks who only want to defeat Cape Wind. I am an  
ardent preservationist - I've served on our local HDC for more years  
than I care to remember, and some of the decisions I've made have  
cost me some relationships in town - so be it. I have an 1892 farm in  
an area of Rhode Island I have to sell - but at the cost of a hefty  
discount on the price, I'm insisting the buyer place a preservation  
easement on it - I've sold land to conservation groups at deep, deep  
discounts. In short, I've put my money where my mouth is. I am also  
deeply concerned about our collective abuse of the environment.  
Climate Change is a very real threat that, if not dealt with swiftly  
and decisively, will certainly eclipse preservation concerns.  The  
notion of Nantucket Sound suddenly becoming a precious  historic  
resource coincident with the Cape Wind proposal is hog wash! Where  
were the Wampanoags and the "preservationists" on the issue of their  
precious sound 20 years ago?

Someone please tell me - is there any other 560 square mile area of  
marine bottom (or even dry land) currently on the NR on its own  
historic merits?  I didn't study the rulings but I did scan enough to  
get the flavor - Nantucket Sound was (when it was dry) probably the  
type of area the Native Americans might have hung out in. No one  
knows if they did - or if they didn't - it's just possible, maybe  
even likely. Does this seem a little thin to anyone else? Then let's  
ask - what would Nantucket Sound be preserved for? Will the public  
ever experience any of the history made there? Will it become a  
diving Mecca? If so, why isn't it one already? In short, what public  
good would come of listing it? I don't see one.

The ridiculous bending and twisting of "historic preservation" into a  
useful club to beat up a project unwanted by some for their own self  
interest does tremendous harm to those who are trying to legitimately  
practice preservation, which ain't easy.  If this was such a valuable  
historic resource, there would have been a push to protect it long  
before Cape Wind appeared on the horizon. If the push now is to  
preserve it, and it merits preservation on its own qualities, then go  
all out - start by banning all commercial fishing (the draggers have  
been ripping the bottom to shreds for decades). For that matter, ban  
all boat traffic because we could risk an oil spill, or a sinking, or  
anchors damaging some archaeological resource. Make the ferries go  
around (and the planes, too - have to protect those birds). Let those  
pushing for preservation pony up the bucks to pay for a massive  
underwater research dig.......

I'm all for historic preservation. I'm all for alternative energy.  
Both are vital - one for our physical survival, one for our cultural  
survival.  I'm all for a rational discussion and effective compromise  
to meet both goals but that is clearly not the case here - we simply  
have a bunch of Nimby's using whatever weapon they can find.

Sam Bird AIA, LEED AP
Concord
On Apr 3, 2010, at 11:27 AM, Bjdurk at aol.com wrote:

> We are all entitled to our opinions, Mr. Bird.  I do take  
> exception, however, to what I consider to be disparaging and  
> unsupported accusations made against the Tribes, SHPO, ACHP,  
> National Parks and the Keeper, with whom you disagree.
>
> Sincerely,
>
> Barbara Durkin
> Northboro, MA

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