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Re: speckulater post# 51635

Friday, 08/24/2007 9:48:40 AM

Friday, August 24, 2007 9:48:40 AM

Post# of 63795
Your Quote:

"" I no longer debate the Permit issue.""

Ronn/Conn's quote:

""USSE has been visited by officials from MS epa, and tested,
the plant has no potential for pollution. (until they make a law for
soybean storage)as my last posted stated from the chief inspector from
MS EPA, they may not need a permit. He would not put a statement out if
all no matter what had to apply.""

As if by magic if you say it will no longer be debated, it will just "poof" go away, not unlike the CEO's attitude, "Don't need no stinkin' permits", and magically the requirement goes away.

But alas a voice of reason in reply with verifiable fact:

There is no such thing as Mississippi EPA, there is MDEQ or Federal
EPA, Region 4 (whose jurisdiction MS is under) is in Atlanta, GA. Neither
has visited the site. Unless they are lying (as they laugh)
about it both have said they have never stepped foot on the premises.

Much has been said about permits that someone would think they might be
punitive in nature, when in fact they are just the opposite. Permits
and licenses are, if you will, the rights of passage to do business in
modern industrial America. After an inventor or developer of a process
that requires manufacture completes proof of concept he MUST get proper
permitting from the required jurisdiction, be it, local, state or Federal.
What it means is that the inventor or developer, if you will, has
"arrived" and is ready to take it to the next step, production for
revenue. An analogy might be a kid does odd jobs or has a lemonade stand
and doesn't pay any taxes, then tinkering on his computer, he devlopes
a game that takes off and it makes millions, now come taxes. Most
think taxes are punitive, but in fact, it means whatever your endeavor,
you are making money and are a success in America.

The simple part of this is that all this information is available to
anyone that wants to make the call to the aforementioned agencies instead
of hearing, he said she said.

What peaked my interest, last October, was the CEO saying in public,
that production would begin in 10-12 weeks. Since I have experience in
permitting (in other areas) with various state and Federal agencies it
was simple to find out how far along he was in the permitting process.
The logic was most responsible CEO's knowing the lengthy process would
have started that process long ago, well I MADE THE CALL, and you know
the rest of the story