North Country: More Towns Mount Opposition To Proposed Landfill In Dalton

State Parks Director Expresses New Concerns

By Robert Blechl, The Caledonian Record (used with permission Jan. 14, 2021)

Voicing concerns about truck traffic and possible pollution of the Ammonoosuc River, more towns, as well as local business owners, are formally opposing the proposed Casella Waste Systems landfill in Dalton.

Casella representatives have dismissed those concerns, saying they are focused instead on Dalton and not on “outside groups.”

Joining the opposition are the Lisbon Conservation Commission, which wrote a letter to the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services, the agency that would approve the wetlands permit; the Littleton Conservation Commission, which has now submitted its letter to DES regarding impacts to the river; voters in the town of Carroll who submitted a petitioned warrant article resolution with concerns about truck traffic; a growing number of Littleton business owners, now more than 40, signing on to a petition; and fresh concerns from the state Division of Parks and Recreation.

Continue reading “North Country: More Towns Mount Opposition To Proposed Landfill In Dalton”

Littleton:Voters Petition To Oppose A Second Landfill In North Country

House Bill Seeks To Prohibit Landfills With 2 Miles Of State Parks

Littleton:Voters Petition To Oppose A Second Landfill In North Country
Opponents to a second commercial landfill in the North Country, some pictured here in background during a public hearing in September on a proposal to expand the Casella Waste Systems in Bethlehem, now include dozens of residents in Littleton who have signed a petition opposing any approval of a landfill near Forest Lake State Park in Dalton. (File photo)
  • (Reprinted with permission from Robert Blechl and the Caledonian Record)

LITTLETON — Opposition is mounting to a proposed commercial landfill in Dalton, and it now includes more people from neighboring towns.

Saying negative impacts would fall on their town and river from the proposed Casella Waste Systems landfill upstream in Dalton, 53 Littleton residents signed a petition to oppose a second landfill in the North Country.

The petition, non-binding, will appear at the March town meeting as a warrant article to oppose any approval by the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services of any application for another commercial landfill to be built in the region.

With environmental concerns, the Littleton Conservation Commission will also be writing to DES to ask the department to deny Casella’s wetlands permit for Dalton.

At the same time, local lawmakers are advancing a New Hampshire House of Representatives bill that seeks to prohibit landfills from being sited within two miles of state parks.

Casella is proposing its second commercial landfill in the area beside Forest Lake State Park.

Its existing landfill in Bethlehem is projected to reach capacity and close in about 2026.

Petition

During the Dec. 28 Littleton Board of Selectmen’s meeting, resident Pat Kellogg presented the petition to selectmen with the signatures of 53 registered voters that include state Rep. Linda Massimilla, D-Littleton; state Sen. Erin Hennessey, R-Littleton, also a co-sponsor of the House Bill; and John Hennessey, chairman of the Littleton River District Redevelopment Commission.

Continue reading “Littleton:Voters Petition To Oppose A Second Landfill In North Country”

State: Casella Wetlands Permit Application Missing Vital Information

By Robert Blechl

(Nov. 20, 2020 reprinted with permission of The Caledonian Record)

On Wednesday, the state Department of Environmental Services said Casella’s wetlands permit application has large pieces of missing information and the company did not consider other sites where impacts to wetlands would be less. (File photo by Robert Blechl)

The new battlefront on the proposed Casella Waste Systems in Dalton is the company’s dredge and wetlands permit application that opponents urge the state to reject and that the state now says is missing big pieces of information.

On Wednesday, the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services issued a five-page, 27-point letter to Casella stating that the missing information and company responses to local conservation commissions and advisory committees must be provided by Jan. 17 or the application that was filed in September will be denied.

DES officials also state there might be better areas for a new landfill that would have less impact on wetlands than the site proposed in Dalton, where some 17 acres would be destroyed.

Local opposition groups say DES’s findings indicate an application that is woefully deficient and poses much environmental harm. They ask DES to reject it.

Casella representatives said they would provide the information for what will be a long process.

Application Findings

The Vermont-based company needs a wetland permit to move forward with what they call the Granite State Landfill, a private, commercial landfill of 180 acres with a 40-year life that it seeks to site next to Forest Lake State Park.

In his letter to Casella, Craig Rennie, inland wetland supervisor with DES’s Land Resources Management, asked the company to address how future expansions of the three-phase landfill will impact surrounding wetlands and surface waters on the property, “as this long-term planning is critical to determine if avoidance and minimization of wetland resources have been fully demonstrated” under DES rules.

Regarding a Sept. 27 letter by DES’s Water Division requesting that alternative sites in neighboring states be considered because they might have less overall wetlands impact, Rennie said Casella’s analysis considered Maine and Vermont, both of which prohibit out-of-state waste, but did not consider Massachusetts as a potential sitting area.

If excavation and blasting will take place in Dalton, he said it is not clear in Casella’s application how those activities would impact surrounding wetlands, groundwater levels, or nearby drinking supplies, including a public water supply near Forest Lake and numerous private wells.

The company needs to provide a further analysis with supporting documentation, he said.

As the company stated and offered in its application, Rennie requested that Casella update meetings with public officials, conservation commissions, and local advisory committees for DES review.

Continue reading “State: Casella Wetlands Permit Application Missing Vital Information”

Dalton Select Board Takes Next Step After Casella Offer

Board Enlists Town Attorney To Look Into Zoning Question; Residents Offer Feedback On Casella Proposal 

Caledonian Record, Published September 12, 2020 by Robert Blechl, reprinted with permission

One week after Casella Waste Systems made its formal offer of $71 million over 25 years to the town of Dalton in support for a landfill beside Forest Lake State Park, selectmen took their next step — looking into the zoning question.

Since July 2019, Dalton has had temporary emergency zoning (coming out a special town meeting in 2019 in response a possible landfill), and the Board of Selectmen on Wednesday voted 3-0 to enlist the town attorney to look into the zoning application process.

“In terms of our next step as a board, I want to make sure that we are representing the town and the town is well-represented,” said Jo Beth Dudley, chair of the Dalton Board of Selectmen. “I think the next step is deciding whether [the proposed landfill] requires a zoning application or not.”

She read a Sept. 1 letter from the Casella engineer, John Gay in response to the zoning question, in which Gay said the “question about zoning, as we understand New Hampshire law, with landfills the NHDES [New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services] has exclusive authority over those areas that would usually be in a town’s zoning review. That’s why we weren’t prepared last night to discuss local zoning.”

One of the reasons Casella proposed the host community agreement (HCA) is because the company recognizes that state regulations preempt almost all local regulation, and under the HCA, Casella can create ways for the town to participate in state permitting that otherwise wouldn’t be possible, said Gay.

Dudley, however, said when she reads the state regulations, the zoning question isn’t entirely clear and an opinion by legal counsel should be the next step.

Continue reading “Dalton Select Board Takes Next Step After Casella Offer”

NH Parks and Recreation Division Rebuffs Casella Offer to Maintain Forest Lake State Park

Casella Waste Systems subsidiary North Country Environmental Services (NCES) recently made an offer of assistance to maintain Forest Lake State Park in Dalton NH. The offer was rejected. The correspondence below are the letters from Casella to NH Parks, the reply, and a recent letter to the editor of the Caledonian Record by Eliot Wessler.

Caledonian Record, Aug 27, 2020. Re-posted with permission.

To the Editor:

It did not look like Forest Lake State Park (FLSP) was going to open for the summer season due to state budget cuts that have hobbled NH’s Parks Division. But FLSP did open for July 4th weekend thanks to an incredible volunteer effort led by the Dalton Board of Selectmen and the Dalton Fire Department.

Soon after the opening, Casella sent a letter to NH’s Parks Division saying it wanted to help—specifically to help manage and improve FLSP. A response to Casella finally came on August 18th—Casella’s offer of help was rebuffed in a letter from Phil Bryce, the Parks Director, to a top Casella manager. This response didn’t take the usual tack of politely saying no thank you; it said NO WAY!

The Parks Division letter gives two reasons: 1) because Casella had already engaged in a strategy of trying to inappropriately box out the Parks Division from participating as an abutter in decision-making over Casella’s proposal to build a huge new landfill in Dalton, right next to FLSP; and 2) because FLSP is a state asset as well as a community asset, and it should be and will be the Parks Division that will make capital improvements.

Casella’s offer to help was seen by many as a Johnny-come-lately move, a cheap and transparent ploy to buy good will in Dalton and surrounding communities. Given the spirit of Mr. Bryce’s letter, it seems like NH’s Parks Division may feel that way too.

The good news out of all this is that despite state budgets cuts that might have kept FLSP closed for the season, FSLP is open for business, thanks to the efforts of many dedicated volunteers. In fact, attendance at the beach this year has been very good.

And the other bit of good news is that if and when Casella files permit applications at NH’s Department of Environmental Services (DES), Casella presumably now recognizes that it can’t buy the support of NH’s Parks Division. The vast majority of residents in Dalton and neighboring towns are determined to protect FLSP from the odor, scavenger animals, polluted water, and all the other environmental insults that would likely come to FLSP and the surrounding area if DES allows Casella to go ahead with its plans to build a huge new landfill right next to FLSP.

Vermont corporations please take note—NH’s North Country is not for sale.

Eliot Wessler

Whitefield, N. H.

Dalton: Public Comment Sought For Draft Zoning Ordinance

Bill To Prohibit Landfills Near State Parks Won’t Move Forward In 2020

The Caledonian-Record, June 9, 2020

Posted with permission

Robert Blechl

After nearly a year of public meetings by the Dalton Planning Board, which has been writing a zoning ordinance for a town that until last year did not have one, public comment is being invited for the draft zoning posted on the town web site.

The comment period closes June 26, planning board members said in a press release issued Sunday.

The draft ordinance is available on the town web site and hard copies will be available at the town office during regular business hours, and will also be available for viewing by appointment by calling 837-7027, ext. 10.

“Dalton residents are encouraged to provide feedback on this draft, and the Planning Board welcomes all constructive feedback (pro or con),” said planners.

Comments can be submitted online through the planning board website or by emailing planningboard@townofdalton.com, or delivered or mailed to Dalton Planning Board, 756 Dalton Rd., Dalton, NH 03598.

Town planners said they seek informal public comments as they recognize the difficulty of large public meetings during the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, and public participation via written feedback is encouraged.

When the final zoning ordinance is ready to go before Dalton residents for a vote, planners said there will be a notice of public hearing held prior to a town meeting.

In an update on the ordinance in March, Dalton planning board members said a vote would take place at a special town meeting later in 2020 or at the annual March town meeting in 2021.

The draft ordinance comes after a special town meeting vote in July 2019 in which residents voted 154-129 to adopt emergency temporary zoning in response to the proposed Casella Waste Systems landfill beside Forest Lake State Park.

Landfill Bill On Hold

Opponents of the landfill were hoping to have a some ammunition to fight it this year in the form of House Bill 1319, sponsored by state Rep. Elaine French, R-Littleton, which seeks to prohibit landfills within two miles of any state park.

Casella’s proposal is within that distance from Forest Lake State Park.

HB 1319 passed the New Hampshire House of Representatives in March and was expected to soon be taken up by the New Hampshire Senate.

In an email last week, however, a legislative aide notified Whitefield resident Sarah Doucette, member of the North Country Alliance for Balanced Change, that the bill will not be taken up by the Senate in 2020.

Doucette had written earlier to state Rep. Martha Fuller Clark, D-Portsmouth, to ask her if the bill would be considered this session.

“I spoke to the leadership staff and unfortunately due to the partisan vote on the bill out of the House, the bill will not be moving forward,” Jennifer Horgan, a legislative aide, wrote to Doucette on Wednesday.

Recent opposition to the bill came from the Androscoggin Valley Regional Refuse Disposal District, which runs the Mt. Carberry landfill near Berlin, and in a letter to the Senate in May said the legislation as written and without amendments would harm it and its member communities.

French plans to keep the bill moving forward and to address concerns.

“Provided I’m reelected, I will be resubmitting it and making sure it has the Carberry stamp of approval,” she said Monday. “If I’m not reelected, I will find somebody to reintroduce it.”

CALL TO ACTION: Please contact NH senators NOW to protect our state parks from abutting landfills

To all who enjoy NH state and national parks:

Imagine heading to your favorite state park in New Hampshire for some hiking, picnicking, or boating. 

You arrive and are greeted by:
– Foul odors of methane and garbage
– Mobs of seagulls 
– Trash on hiking trails and in the water
– The constant rumble and crash of heavy machinery

This scenario is likely to happen, as a large, out-of-state landfill company is attempting to put a dump right next to Forest Lake State Park in Dalton, New Hampshire. 

There is a way to prevent this, and we need your help.

House Bill 1319 was passed in the NH House of Representatives. This bill establishes a required 2 mile buffer between a state park and landfill development. This is a simple, common-sense way of ensuring these land uses don’t interfere with each other. The bill is due to be reviewed by the senate, but is in jeopardy in 2020 due to the abbreviated session as a result of COVID-19.

Will you please write a short email asking NH Senators to support HB 1319 during this session? Anyone who enjoys our parks can write in, regardless of where you live. 

Please see this page for a sample e-mail and addresses to use.

Thank you for your support of our natural, educational and recreational resources in New Hampshire!

Sample letter to NH Senators to support HB 1319

You can copy and paste the letter below into your e-mail client. Please change the first sentence to reflect your circumstances – and please add a sentence to personalize your email even a little personalization gives your message great impact.

You can use the following e-mail list to address the senators. It’s best to copy/paste this into the BCC: (blind carbon copy) address field in your e-mail client. This sends a copy to all recipients without allowing a reply-to-all.


David.Starr@leg.state.nh.usBob.Giuda@leg.state.nh.usJeb.Bradley@leg.state.nh.us; David.Watters@leg.state.nh.usMartha.Hennessey@leg.state.nh.usJames.Gray@leg.state.nh.us; Harold.French@leg.state.nh.usRuth.Ward@leg.state.nh.usJeanne.Dietsch@leg.state.nh.us; Jay.Kahn@leg.state.nh.us; Shannon.Chandley@leg.state.nh.usMelanie.Levesque@leg.state.nh.usCindy.Rosenwald@leg.state.nh.us; Sharon.Carson@leg.state.nh.usDan.Feltes@leg.state.nh.usKevin.Cavanaugh@leg.state.nh.us; John.Reagan111@gmail.comDonna.Soucy@leg.state.nh.usRegina.Birdsell@leg.state.nh.us; Lou.Dallesandro@leg.state.nh.usMartha.FullerClark@leg.state.nh.usChuck.Morse@leg.state.nh.us; Jon.Morgan@leg.state.nh.usTom.Sherman@leg.state.nh.us


Dear Senator,

(As a New Hampshire resident, a voter and an outdoor enthusiast,) I’m writing to urge you to support HB 1319, the bill to prohibit new landfills within two miles of any New Hampshire state park. 

This bill – passed by the NH House by a wide margin in March – will protect our treasured state parks from the environmental insults that come with dumps: foul odors, contaminated water, toxic spills, noise, incessant truck traffic and waste from seagull scavengers that fouls our lakes and streams.

I’m concerned about one park in particular:  the North Country’s Forest Lake State Park on the shores of pristine Forest Lake in Dalton. That’s where Casella Waste Systems – owner of the controversial Bethlehem dump – wants to build its next dump. 

HB 1319 will protect Forest Lake and all our state parks from the negative impacts of landfills…and help keep the North Country from turning into New England’s dump

For the sake of our children and our children’s children, I urge you to vote for HB 1319 in this year’s legislative session. 

Thank you for considering my opinion.  And thank you for your service to New Hampshire in this challenging time.

Sincerely,

Your name

Your address

Dalton: Man Sued By Casella Raises $6K In Fund-Raiser

Has Also Enlisted A First Amendment Attorney

The Caledonian-Record, April 27, 2020

Posted with permission

Robert Blechl

A Dalton man being sued by Casella Waste Systems for what the company alleges is his defamation of Casella has launched a fund-raiser to cover legal expenses that after three days after being online raised $6,000 toward a $10,000 goal.

On Friday, Jon Swan, a critic of Casella’s proposed 180-acre landfill beside Forest Lake State Park, set up his “Protect free speech and Forest Lake from Casella” campaign on gofundme.com.

On Monday, he said he now has his own attorney who has “a lot of experience with First Amendment cases.”

Swan, founder of the landfill opposition group Save Forest Lake, said he is not surprised by the $6,000 raised so far.

“It’s similar to Northern Pass, and I think this company’s reputation precedes it,” he said.

In his fund-raising campaign, Swan called Casella’s litigation “a PR stunt from a very desperate company … and a “frivolous SLAPP [Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation] lawsuit meant to harass and silence those opposed to their plans and presence.”

Casella’s lawsuit filed April 14 at Merrimack Superior Court in Concord also names as defendants the Forest Lake Association and up to 20 unnamed people in that group as well as in SFL.

The company alleges the intent of Swan’s campaign is to “disparage [Casella’s] reputation” by publishing false statements of fact” about the company and to prevent it from doing business in New Hampshire, and it alleges Swan made false statements “with the intent and effect of lowering Casella’s esteem in the community” and damaging its reputation in state government, and doing so with “ill will, hatred, hostility, or evil motive …”

As a result, the company alleges it “suffered harm to its reputation and business” and is entitled to a court declaration stating it has been defamed, damages for general harm to reputation without specific proof, and special damages for present and future damages.

Video

The lawsuit was filed one week after Swan created what he called a parody video, titled “Casella Waste Systems CEO Gets Bad News,” using a 4-minute segment from the 2004 German film “Downfall,” about the last days of Adolf Hitler’s life inside the bunker when he learned the Nazis had lost the Second World War.

In Swan’s video, which uses subtitles he wrote for the characters, Hitler is depicted as Casella CEO John Casella and Nazi military officers as several Casella employees.

In a bunker office where the characters are acting, Swan wrote a subtitle for one officer saying, “Mr. Casella, our situation in New Hampshire has become dire. We may have to ship trash to New York instead. This longer route will be costly. Word has gotten out about our bad reputation and we cannot fool anyone anymore.”

“What about Dalton?” Swan wrote for Hitler as John Casella. “They have no zoning. They are a small rural town.”

A tense moment passed between officers, before the Hitler character is informed Dalton voted for temporary, emergency zoning.

“You told me not to worry about the North Country!” Swan wrote in the subtitle for the Hitler character. “You said Ingerson and Gilbody had Dalton under control! You said Cliff Crosby could handle Bethlehem! The board of directors will be furious! Do you know how much money we will lose? John Gay, you said the lot line adjustment would be approved! And Kevin Roy, you said Bethlehem was under control! New Hampshire is supposed to be the center of our garbage empire!”

“But Mr. Casella, we did not know about Jon Swan,” said the first officer.

“Who the hell is Jon Swan?” Swan wrote for the Hitler character. “That sounds like a made-up name!”

“Sir, he rallied the people and formed Save Forest Lake,” said the first officer.

“Then start throwing false promises around and offer money!” Swan wrote in the subtitle for the Hitler character. “I want Forest Lake! These people mean nothing to me! We need a place in New Hampshire for Massachusetts trash! Do you know how much money we make from garbage? Send more mailers and have Cliff Crosby start another petition campaign! Host more family barbecues with pony rides! It is my destiny to make New Hampshire the heart of my garbage empire! I don’t care how you do it, form a new phony grassroots groups with clever names if you have to. We have worked so hard to fool so many host communities.”

After the Hitler character calms down, Swan wrote Casella as saying, “What can we do now? That lake is not that special. We could sue the pants off them like we’ve done elsewhere. We have expensive lawyers who are not dummies. Get the hell out of here, I want to cry.”

Online are a number of “Downfall” parodies that have been created by others using the same 4-minute film segment and they are found on a number of web sites, including on YouTube’s Hitler Rants Parodies channel. One such video includes the New England Patriots winning over the Seattle Seahawks Super Bowl 49 in 2015, to a fuming Hitler.

In an op-ed, John Casella said he has been in the solid waste management business for many years, but has never experienced “the kind of sustained, malicious attack on our company that Jon Swan of Dalton has carried out for nearly a year.”

“On April 7, though, Swan took his maliciousness to another level when he created and posted on the Internet a video portraying me as Adolph Hitler and Casella employees and other private citizens as Nazis,” wrote Casella. “This is not just tasteless, to stoop so low as to compare me to one of the greatest monsters in history and our company to the Third Reich, a regime guilty of the genocide of millions, all in an effort to win a community debate. This is the outright, vicious defamation of our organization and our people. It crosses the line into hateful, gutter politics.”

The company’s lawsuit states that Swan, who also goes by the name Jon Alvarez, has a “history of fomenting controversy through extreme and provocative public statements and conduct.”

The lawsuit states that before moving to New Hampshire, Swan lived in upstate New York, “where he formed what he called a ‘militia,’ held a contest on his talk radio program for best papier mâché pig made from the pages of the Koran, and posted a Facebook tribute to a pilot who flew a plane into a federal office building, killing himself and a federal employee.”

On Monday afternoon, Casella spokesman Joe Fusco was asked what the company thinks of Swan’s fund-raiser and Swan’s statement calling the company’s case a SLAPP lawsuit and was asked if Casella has any examples to date of how its business has been harmed by Swan’s statements, such as the loss of a contract or a loss or decrease in a revenue stream.

Fusco said the company has no opinion on Swan’s fund-raising, the legal action is for defamation and is not a SLAPP matter, and the company will present evidence of harm at trial.

Bethlehem: Public To Weigh In On Revised Landfill Expansion Application

Posted with permission.

New Plan Seeks To Lengthen Land-Filling Duration To 2026

Robert Blechl

The Caledonian-Record, April 20, 2020

After Casella Waste Systems in February pulled its application for landfill expansion in Bethlehem, one day before the state concluded it did not meet the public benefit requirement, the company has submitted a revised application that will once again go before residents at a public hearing.

On March 24, North Country Environmental Services, the New Hampshire subsidiary of Casella, submitted its amended application, which also proposes a longer duration of land-filling, lengthening it by several years and taking it to 2026.

The application for Stage 6 expansion is now under review by the New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services to determine whether it is complete.

The department under New Hampshire’s solid waste management rules has 60 days from the March 24 submission to determine if it is complete, representatives with DES’s Solid Waste Management Bureau said last week.

Following a determination of completeness, DES will undertake a technical review of the application and schedule a public hearing to gather input from residents that will be included as part of the department’s decision-making process.

A decision on the application is due four months from its receipt, which might or might not be measured from the March 24 date of submission depending on the completeness of the initial application, or 30 days following a public hearing, whichever occurs latest, said DES representatives.

The time line for DES review can be extended with the consent of the applicant.

Because of the variables, DES representatives said they cannot provide a firm date by which a decision will be made.

The Stage 6 expansion seeks to add 5.7 acres to the current 47-acre landfill footprint that would extend to the east and south of the existing landfill.

If an approval comes in the next few months, NCES in its application states construction would begin later in 2020 and land-filling operations in the new cell would begin in early January and extend through 2026.

The previous Stage 6 application submitted in 2019 had lifespan of 2.3 years before capacity would be reached, then in about 2023.

In its revised application, NCES seeks the same waiver of New Hampshire’s solid waste management rules for a leak detection system and location system design standards, similar to the waivers approved in the Stage 4 permitting in 2013 and Stage 5 in 2014, Bob Grillo, project manager with the Casella-enlisted CMA Engineers, said in a letter informing the town of the new application.

Stage 6 would accept municipal solid waste, construction and demolition debris and special waste, with municipal solid waste making up 60 to 70 percent of the waste received at the Trudeau Road landfill, he said.

In February, DES determined that the initial Stage 6 application did not meet the state’s substantial public benefit requirement because its then proposed 400-ton annual waste disposal rate for 2.3 years would occur during a time when New Hampshire is projected to have excess disposal capacity and no regional or statewide capacity need.

In that application, DES concluded NCES was presenting “alternative calculations” on the amount of solid waste to be generated within the state during a 20-year planning period, a statewide shortfall in existing permitted disposal capacity is not projected by DES to occur until after 2025, and land-filling is the least preferred method of solid waste management under the state’s solid waste management statute.

In the revised application, Casella engineer John Gay said the public benefit demonstration has been updated to include 2018 annual facility reports.

According to the new application, the annual rate of fill will drop significantly from the previously proposed 400,000 tons a year to an average annual rate of 175,000 tons to reach the 2026 lifespan, in total taking in about 900,000 tons of waste.

In the application, the company states it “firmly disagreed” with DEC’s conclusion in February that the public benefit requirement was not met in the previous application, but “recognized that DES would not approve the 2019 application as submitted.”

The Stage 6 expansion includes the boundary of a new property Casella purchased in 2015.According to the revised application, company representatives said they anticipate DES approval of Stage 6 in September and phase one construction to be complete and capacity available in January 2021 and phase two of Stage 6, the eastern phase, to undergo construction in 2022 or 2023.