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Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Kent Furnace
October 10, 2005 05:57PM
DURANGO HERALD ARTICLE DOES DAMAGE TO D&SNGRR
The October 7th Durango Herald article by staff writer Shane Benjamin has done damage to the Durango & Silverton NG Railroad and to all coal fired railroads in general. This is a repeat of the Dec 14, 2004 story on the same subject as she just likes to stur up trouble over and over.
If a family decides the house they can afford happens to backs up to the Pennsylvania Turnpike or any Interstate, they cannot expect to close down that highway because of noise or fumes from the traffic. If another couple buys the house they can afford next to the school play yard, they should never get the local newspaper to be their voice in trying to close or relocate that school, because they didn¹t like the noise of the kids playing. When people buy property, they have to compare all the advantages and disadvantages to decide what they can afford and accept. For this reason all property near railroads, interstates and airports, etc. have a generally lower land value for residence, and correspondingly lower taxes because of that proximity to noise and smoke.
Now, lets review the history of Durango. The railroad bought the entire place and built the enginehouse when there was NO one living south of the Animas River at the Main Street Bridge. This history is detailed in John Norwood¹s book ³Rio Grande Narrow Gauge²(1983) page 58-59. Briefly, the rails were spiked into what became Durango on July 27, 1881, but there was advance work in 1879 by the company¹s chief negotiator in real estate, Dr. William Bell. He went through the Animas Valley to arrange for the Durango Terminal. The only residents were in Animas City and a proposal to them for the terminal was refused. Bell then arranged for some loyal residents to homestead claims south of the river, and then in legal time frame, purchased those homesteads under the name Durango Land and Coal Company. The roundhouse and railroad yard were built on this legally owned and empty land and the town of Durango was quickly laid out to the north of the new station. And very shortly thereafter, the silver and gold, coal burning, smelters were built directly west across the river from the station. The ³lower side of town² south of the station became industrial with cattle pens, iron foundry and coal industries. Regardless of its convenience to the station and lower land value, the residents did not generally live in this area because of the coal smoke. If you bought land in Durango, it has been after the entry of the railroad or the smelters. Remember that date: JULY 27, 1881. There should be annual celebrations by the D&SNGRR on that date and smoke it up.
Now, lets go one step further and look at the taxes that have been paid to the town by all the landowners within the smoking limits of the Durango RR roundhouse. These taxes over 125 years are greatly reduced compared to other land in the town, because they are based on the value of that land as established by fair trade transactions that weighed its advantages or disadvantages of location. Location, location, location is the law of real estate. If the present day landowners want to remove the smoke disadvantage of over all these years which has kept that real estate from collecting more taxes, they should pay up that total amount in arrears of what these taxes would have been. They are attempting to increase their land value without paying for it, unlike all the other owners of that land in the past 125 years.
And the Durango Herald article on October 7, 2005 and 12/14/2004 attempts to MAKE news instead of reporting news on this old issue of smoke in the city. It has been a dead issue for years, and although the article attempts to read very favorable to the D&SNGRR, that progress is being made, it quotes combatants and just stirs the pot in attempt to make things boils again. It makes a distant reader wonder what is behind hurting the railroad, that brings much life into the city. IS it because the city wants to buy the north yard land instead of the railroad leasing that land for its benefit of value to the till? Is this the way to bring pressure on the railroad? The Durango Herald did about 20 articles about the Narrow Gauge RR in 2004 that were very interesting and useful to their readers, far and wide, but these article should never have been published. Smoke is a non-issue, non-news, unless you live in Animas City, and your relatives were there before July 27, 1881.
Additionally, if you really want to reduce the volume of smoke, the landowner, who will benefit with increased land value, should pay for it with a surcharge on their taxes, proportional to the distance or direction of the smoke. That surcharge will cover the added cost over what the railroad now pays for coal, in order to buy and ship high BTU coal of the Pocahontas type from Southern West Virginia. This kind of coal is proving very fine in the 2¹ gauge steam engine on the Maine Narrow Gauge RR Co. & Museum in downtown city wharf area of Portland, Maine. This nations¹ electric user in Florida, New Hampshire and all points west, now pay to buy Wyoming coal for it low sulfur content. Therefore, is it unreasonable to ship good clean burning coal across the nation to Gallup, NM and truck it up to Durango? Remember, it is the historic image of a coal burning steam locomotive train that is needed to capture the style, smell and looks of old, to be of value to the historical recreation of the past. People ride the Silverton train because it is History, not just because it is a scenic train ride! And it costs a lot of money to keep those steam engines going, so any cost of smoke abatement or reduction should not be paid by the railroad in any part. If the @#$%& don¹t like the coal smoke, don¹t come and try to live in (cheaper real estate) downtown Durango.
This editorial is public domain and can be printed anywhere, copied and mailed to the Durango Herald. I dare them to print it on their editorial page.
Subject Author Posted

Durango Smoke Problems *LINK*

Fritz Klinke October 07, 2005 10:13AM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Matthew October 07, 2005 11:17AM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Ron Keagle October 07, 2005 08:06PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

William Reed October 07, 2005 12:16PM

Trainorders discussion *LINK*

Charles October 07, 2005 12:17PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Chris October 07, 2005 05:51PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Chris Webster October 07, 2005 07:26PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Chris October 07, 2005 11:07PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

J. Ferris October 07, 2005 11:35PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Chris October 07, 2005 05:52PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Fritz Klinke October 07, 2005 08:22PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

tom leaton October 07, 2005 10:51PM

Durango is Still Special. Same As It Ever Was.....

Mike Trent October 08, 2005 07:34AM

Re: Durango is Still Special. Same As It Ever Was.

Ron Keagle October 08, 2005 09:06AM

Re: Durango is Still Special. Same As It Ever Was.

Mike Trent October 08, 2005 09:32AM

Re: Durango is Still Special. Same As It Ever Was.

Chris October 08, 2005 10:10AM

Re: Durango is Still Special. Same As It Ever Was.

Ron Keagle October 08, 2005 10:19AM

Re: Durango is Still Special. Same As It Ever Was.

Trevor Hartford October 08, 2005 12:03PM

Re: Durango is Still Special. Same As It Ever Was.

John Cole October 08, 2005 09:41AM

Coal Smoke = Money

roger hogan October 07, 2005 08:23PM

The real issue is more than money

Greg Scholl October 08, 2005 01:03PM

Re: The real issue is more than money

Wayne Knape October 08, 2005 02:49PM

Re: The real issue is Zoning and Land Use

Andy Roth October 09, 2005 11:59AM

Re: The real issue is more than money

Al Patterson October 08, 2005 04:03PM

Re: The real issue is more than money

John Farrell October 08, 2005 08:18PM

Re: The real issue is more than money

Mike Trent October 08, 2005 09:00PM

Where the money is coming from

RichB October 08, 2005 09:27PM

Re: Where the money is coming from

Mike Diamond October 08, 2005 10:54PM

Re: Where the money is coming from

Ed Stabler October 09, 2005 01:57AM

Re: The real issue is more than money

John Farrell October 09, 2005 06:27AM

Re: The real issue is more than money

Mike Trent October 09, 2005 09:16AM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

T. Bones October 09, 2005 12:36PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Bruce R. Pier October 09, 2005 07:54PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Charles October 10, 2005 07:46AM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems??/ @#$%& problem !!!!!!

Hobosteve October 10, 2005 06:36AM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Kent Furnace October 10, 2005 05:57PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Marv. October 10, 2005 06:50PM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Ron Ruhoff October 11, 2005 08:05AM

Re: Durango Smoke Problems

Jerry Halbert October 11, 2005 03:36PM

Re: Durango Smoke NOT a Problem, but Preferred

Russ Sperry October 11, 2005 11:04PM

You should complain too Russ!

Greg Scholl October 12, 2005 07:01AM

Re: Smoke @#$%& are a bunch of thieves.

PRSL October 12, 2005 01:15PM

Re: You should complain too Russ!

Russ Sperry October 13, 2005 12:20AM

Re: You should complain too Russ!

Hobosteve October 14, 2005 05:12AM

Re: Actually only 2.5 hours or less ...

Russ Sperry October 14, 2005 08:15PM



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