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SAWHORSE
SOLAR ARRAY DEVELOPER FINED $1.14 MILLION FOR WETLANDS DAMAGE IN MASSACHUSETTS
A Pennsylvania-based solar array developer will pay approximately $1.14 million to settle allegations of federal storm water requirement violations.
A Pennsylvania-based solar array developer has agreed to pay approximately $1.14 million to settle allegations that it violated federal storm water requirements.
The alleged violations occurred during the company’s 2018 construction of a 4-megawatt, 17,000-panel solar energy project at a former sand and gravel pit at 103 Briar Hill Road.
The allegations include damaging protected wetlands and polluting the West Branch of the Mill River in Williamsburg, according to state Attorney General Maura Healey, reported the Daily Hampshire Gazette.
The consent decree was filed in the U.S. District Court and settles the April 2020 lawsuit filed by Healey's office.
The suit alleges that Dynamic Energy Solutions LLC disregarded pollution control requirements for construction sites under federal and state law when it constructed an 18.5-acre solar array on a steep hillside above the West Branch Mill River, according to the Daily Hampshire Gazette.
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A Pennsylvania-based solar array developer will pay approximately $1.14 million to settle allegations of federal storm water requirement violations.
A Pennsylvania-based solar array developer has agreed to pay approximately $1.14 million to settle allegations that it violated federal storm water requirements.
The alleged violations occurred during the company’s 2018 construction of a 4-megawatt, 17,000-panel solar energy project at a former sand and gravel pit at 103 Briar Hill Road.
The allegations include damaging protected wetlands and polluting the West Branch of the Mill River in Williamsburg, according to state Attorney General Maura Healey, reported the Daily Hampshire Gazette.
The consent decree was filed in the U.S. District Court and settles the April 2020 lawsuit filed by Healey's office.
The suit alleges that Dynamic Energy Solutions LLC disregarded pollution control requirements for construction sites under federal and state law when it constructed an 18.5-acre solar array on a steep hillside above the West Branch Mill River, according to the Daily Hampshire Gazette.
for more: