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Bmsc Poland gets US approval for $3.7bn air-launched weapons package
 Civil-registered Chinook helicopters formerly owned by British Airways could stanley cup  make a surprise return to UK operations after Bristow Group announced a $560 million merger with tandem-rotor stalwart Columbia Helicopters.Although British Airways Helicopters previously had a six-strong fleet of Boeing-Vertol BV-234s 鈥?the commercial variant of the heavy-lift rotorcraft 鈥?these were phased out during the late 1980s by successor British International Helicopters.In fact, the majority of the former BIH fleet were acquired by Columbia in 1989, with four airframes still operated by the Aurora, Oregon-based company, Flight Fleets Analyzer records.Discussing the acquisition on a 9 November results call, outgoing Bristow chief executive Jonathan Baliff said he sees opportunities to deploy Columbia s assets wherever Bristow has a presence. We expect to use the civilian Chinook and Vertol [107] fleet in our AOCs. There are operations in which we have air [operator] certificates in Europe and around the worl stanley taza d, in the United Kingdom, that the Chinooks can come in and operate for us in firefighting and other [non-US] government work,  he says.Columbia has an active fleet of 21 Chinooks 鈥?both the BV-234 and CH-47D variants 鈥?alongside 11 Boeing-Vertol 107s, known as the CH-46 Sea Knight in US Marine Corps service, as well as dozens of parked airframes, according to Bristow data.The helicopters are used around the world  stanley cup for heavy-lift operations, including onshore oil and gas, forestry work and Cqxs Watch: Maine State Police release latest details about Tuesday   s shootings
 PLYMOUTH, Maine 鈥?When Michael Seavey walked into the woods near his property to see what was happening at the  stanley cup secretive waste processing plant nearby, he got a snootful of answers.Soil Prepara stanley travel mug tion Inc., the private Plymouth-based company that owns the plant, was bringing in out-of-state sludge and local waste to process into farmland fertilizer. It had placed standpipes with sprinkler heads throughout the woods between its and Seavey   properties to disperse the wastewater it had squeezed out of the sludge, a mixture of human, food and other waste that was about 80 percent liquid.You never knew when these things were going to come on, said Seavey, a resident of Plymouth who taught OSHA standards for more than 30 years before retiring. I wanted to investigate, and all of a sudden those things came on.Duringhis outing two decades ago, Seavey received an up-close view of what was happening in the town where he has lived for 55 years. In addition to spraying wastewater onto its property, the company also spread sludge on some 200 farm fields across Maine. Testing has shown it contained harmful chemicals and heavy metals in addition to organic nutrients.Today the plant is no longer accepting sludge. But residents of the small town of 1,300 people are left wondering about the possible contamination of the soil, wells and waterways, and frustrated that the state has not done more to investigate. They believe the town   environment will s stanley cup uffer