

Stop Amazon's 1.3 Million Square-Foot Mega-Warehouse in Killingly, Connecticut


Stop Amazon's 1.3 Million Square-Foot Mega-Warehouse in Killingly, Connecticut
The Issue
Amazon wants to build a 1.3 million square-foot warehouse on 556 acres of land in Killingly, Connecticut — a rural community near I-395. The project, internally called "Project Husky," would bring 60 loading docks, 430 trailer parking spaces, and a constant flow of heavy truck traffic through a town that residents chose specifically because it isn't an industrial corridor.
At a planning commission meeting this week, every single resident who spoke was opposed to the project. They raised serious concerns about damage to wetlands, increased traffic, air pollutants, threats to drinking water, and the permanent loss of Killingly's rural character.
When Amazon's consultants presented studies concluding the project would cause no unsafe conditions, residents in the audience responded with mock laughter. Even members of the commission questioned the conclusions.
"This is not progress, this is destruction," one resident said.
Amazon has offered to donate 292 acres of the site as open space — a gesture that would still leave neighborhoods as close as half a mile from a massive industrial facility operating around the clock. A land donation does not offset contaminated drinking water, diesel exhaust from hundreds of trucks daily, or the irreversible transformation of a community that took generations to build.
The site plan review continues on May 18. The Killingly Planning and Zoning Commission and the Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Commission still have the power to say no.
Sign this petition to demand that Killingly's planning commissions reject Project Husky and that Connecticut officials require a full, independent environmental impact assessment before any mega-warehouse of this scale is approved in a rural community.

950
The Issue
Amazon wants to build a 1.3 million square-foot warehouse on 556 acres of land in Killingly, Connecticut — a rural community near I-395. The project, internally called "Project Husky," would bring 60 loading docks, 430 trailer parking spaces, and a constant flow of heavy truck traffic through a town that residents chose specifically because it isn't an industrial corridor.
At a planning commission meeting this week, every single resident who spoke was opposed to the project. They raised serious concerns about damage to wetlands, increased traffic, air pollutants, threats to drinking water, and the permanent loss of Killingly's rural character.
When Amazon's consultants presented studies concluding the project would cause no unsafe conditions, residents in the audience responded with mock laughter. Even members of the commission questioned the conclusions.
"This is not progress, this is destruction," one resident said.
Amazon has offered to donate 292 acres of the site as open space — a gesture that would still leave neighborhoods as close as half a mile from a massive industrial facility operating around the clock. A land donation does not offset contaminated drinking water, diesel exhaust from hundreds of trucks daily, or the irreversible transformation of a community that took generations to build.
The site plan review continues on May 18. The Killingly Planning and Zoning Commission and the Inland Wetlands and Watercourses Commission still have the power to say no.
Sign this petition to demand that Killingly's planning commissions reject Project Husky and that Connecticut officials require a full, independent environmental impact assessment before any mega-warehouse of this scale is approved in a rural community.

950
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Petition created on May 13, 2026