MassDEP Penalizes Highway Auto Salvage Facility in Northampton

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BOSTON — The Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) has penalized 182 MTR, LLC, owner of Highway Auto Salvage, Inc. in Northampton, $7,470 for failure to dispose of septage in accordance with the requirements of the Commonwealth's wastewater regulations. 
 
Evidence of the septage disposal violation was observed on Dec. 31, 2021, by MassDEP when responding to a complaint alleging that an employee of Highway Auto Salvage had pumped the contents of a septic tank from the onsite sewage disposal system to an area adjacent to the Mill River in violation of the Commonwealth's groundwater discharge regulations. In addition, 182 MTR, LLC failed to comply with Title 5 septic system requirements to perform a system inspection in accordance with MassDEP regulations.
 
182 MTR, LLC must pay $5,750 of the assessed penalty, and MassDEP has agreed to suspend the remaining amount if the site wastewater system is brought into compliance and 182 MTR complies with the Commonwealth's wastewater regulations. 182 MTR has cooperated with MassDEP and the Northampton Department of Health and Human Services on this matter and has retained an engineering firm to remedy the noncompliance.
 
"The Commonwealth's wastewater regulations provide for the protection of public health, safety, welfare, and the environment by requiring the proper siting, construction, upgrade, and maintenance of on-site sewage disposal systems," said Michael Gorski, director of MassDEP's Western Region Office in Springfield. "This action brings the property into compliance with the Commonwealth's wastewater regulations, and penalizes 182 MTR, LLC for the blatant nature of this violation."
 

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Lee Elementary School Holds Entrepreneur Fair

By Sabrina DammsiBerkshires Staff

Fifth-grade students created potential businesses based on their interests. The entrepreneur fair is an outgrowth of author Ty Allan Jackson's 'Danny Dollar' series that teaches children financial literacy. 
LEE, Mass. — Hundreds of students gathered last week in the Lee Elementary School cafeteria for its first-ever entrepreneur fair. 
 
Over the last two months, the school's fifth graders have been introduced to financial literacy and developed their own businesses based on their interests. 
 
The students kicked off this endeavor toward the end of April, Financial Literacy Month, with the reading of Ty Allan Jackson's first book, "Danny Dollar,"  which he wrote while living in Pittsfield. The book's description says it teaches kids "about finance, banking, investing, and entrepreneurship in a fun and relatable way." 
 
The entrepreneur and author is the founder of the Danny Dollar Entrepreneur Fair, a program that teaches children life and financial literacy skills in collaboration with schools. 
 
Jackson and his buddy "Danny Dollar" flew in from California to admire the students' hard work. The kids flocked around Danny, giving him high-fives and hugs as they proudly showed him what they had developed. The students also received a free copy of Jackson's second book, "Make Your Own Money." 
 
As part of the program, the entrepreneur fair provides the schools with a template that includes its concept and curriculum. The teachers then cater that curriculum to the school's needs, Jackson said. 
 
"We really don't give them a lot of guidance. We kind of give them the format, and then we let them run with it," he said.
 
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