barticus73
Silver Member
- Joined
- Apr 7, 2002
- Messages
- 220
- Tractor
- Cub Cadet 7272,Farmall 544
I have a small 40 acre farm that we raise Boer goats on. The railroad acquired land right through the center of my ground through Eminent Domain a few years back to build a new single rail line. In doing so, they had to build up the dirt rail bed about 14 feet by my house for slope purposes. The rail bed is now causing water to be a problem as it is not allowing it to drain as it used to. The railroads initial fix was to install 2 cement catch basins and tie these to a main drain. Well, they didn't install the basins in the low spots so water just pools up on the surface when it rains. This is making my yard very swamp like. I buried a pickup to the axle the other day driving though it. I have been in contact with the railroad for the past year to get this fixed and they said they would take care of it when things dried up a bit. Well, last week they send a crew out and a couple hours later a railroad representative all dressed up shows up and shuts down the job and tells my wife they suspect my septic is leaking and can't fix the drainage because of it. He got loud with my wife (I was at work) when she questioned why he thought it was a septic leak. The only thing he could come up with was an odor. He also said the previous land owner said that area was always wet before construction. I have lived there for 5 years now and that area was never wet. This spot has been wet for over a year now with a row of straw bales and plastic set up at the bottom of the rail bed slope. I would say the odor was rotten straw when they picked up the bales and they are using this as an excuse to not do the job as they are over budget now. So, I did a septic dye test using twice the called for red pills. I ran water at 5 gpm for 30 minutes as directed and have been checking for four days now and no indication of dye. Since they removed the straw bales there has been absolutely no odor at all. Now for my question. How do I go about getting this situation remedied? If the railroad refuses to cooperate, what are my rights and who can I contact. I would like to avoid attorney fees if possible as I suspect a simple perforated pipe with shale is all that is need to fix the problem (maybe 300 feet or so). I don't want to end up going to court for years and having the swamp get worse and end up paying more than it would be to fix it myself. It’s almost like the railroad knows this and is banking on us just dropping because they know it won't be cost effective for us to fight it. What are your thoughts on it?