As summer winds down, the battle over Virginia’s long-term solution for coal ash disposal is heating back up. This summer saw several significant events and improvements in the fight against reckless coal ash disposal in Virginia.
First, the Virginia Sierra Club and Southern Environmental Law Center teamed up in court to sue Dominion for violations of the Clean Water Act at its leaking Chesapeake coal ash ponds. The trial spanned 4 days in Richmond, at the end of which Judge Gibney said he was inclined to agree that arsenic was in fact leaking from the Chesapeake coal ash ponds and that Dominion was in violation of the Clean Water Act, but said he was not yet sure of a solution. He plans to rule on the case within the next few months.
This summer also saw the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency close a significant loophole in its coal ash rule. Previously, if utilities managed to close their inactive coal ash ponds within three years of the issuance of the rule, they would essentially escape all federal regulation. We speculate that this is why Dominion was moving so quickly–faster than almost all other utilities in the country–to close its inactive ponds. Thankfully, thanks to a lawsuit brought by Earthjustice and others, this loophole is now removed.
We view this as a significant win. Before this update, inactive coal ash ponds that closed early were not subject to any groundwater monitoring or other post-closure care requirements–basically, they were unregulated under federal law. Under this new rule, Dominion no longer has an incentive to meet the April 2018 closure deadline and, if it does, the company will still not be able to escape the full requirements of the coal ash rule. Dominion’s inactive ponds are now subject to monitoring and corrective action; groundwater contamination at the site is subject to strict cleanup standards; and these monitoring and cleanup requirements apply for 30 years after closure. We hope that this new EPA rule will result in Dominion giving more thought to its closure plans.
Despite these victories, there is still much work to be done. The next permit fight on the table is a dewatering permit for Dominion’s Chesterfield coal ash ponds. These ponds, which sit directly next to a playground and park, hold millions of tons of coal ash. They were shown to be leaking into the James River during a study conducted by Duke University earlier this summer.
This permit process goes before the Virginia State Water Control Board on September 22nd in Richmond, Virginia for a public hearing. The hearing will begin at 9:30 am at the General Assembly Building, House Room C (9th & Broad Streets) in Richmond. This permit still has serious deficiencies–from the high temperature of the released water to impacts to the endangered Atlantic Sturgeon habitat. We need Virginians to come together and show Dominion and state regulators that we demand a closure process that will protect our drinking water for decades to come, not Dominion shareholders’ bottom line. Especially as more southeastern states agree to excavate and move their coal ash to modern, lined landfills, or decide to recycle it–creating an economic windfall out of a toxic situation–Dominion lags farther and farther behind.
I’m hopeful on this campaign, friends. This summer hundreds gathered to march in 100* heat in Richmond to call on Governor McAuliffe to move us away from a future full of fossil fuels and dirty energy. To stand with Virginians, not with Dominion. Our movement is growing in Virginia and beyond. From the beautiful blockade against the Dakota Access Pipeline, to the unprecedented deployment of renewable energy across the globe, the tide is turning. We need your help to push us there.
Coal Ash Stories Across Virginia
The past few months has seen fierce resistance across the state of Virginia to Dominion’s plans to dump toxic coal ash wastewater into our rivers, and then to leave the coal ash in unlined pits that could leak heavy metals into our groundwater for decades to come.
We’re angry, and rightfully so. Dominion wants to keep up with business as usual – getting what they want, when they want it. But not anymore.
Dominion has received the necessary permits from the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality to ‘dewater’ two of its four coal ash impoundments — at Possum Point along Quantico Creek and at the Bremo Station along the James River. But Dominion still needs two more wastewater dumping permits, and four permits to deal long-term with the leftover coal ash waste. We have lots of work ahead to protect our water supplies from this reckless corporation.
Over the next few weeks, we’re partnering with friends and organizations across Virginia to spread awareness of the dangers of coal ash, and root ourselves in community action moving forward.
We’re helping host a series of screenings of Coal Ash Stories, an incredible documentary series by filmmaker Rhiannon Fionn and Working Films.
Coal Ash Stories paints a picture of what life looks like in communities threatened by coal ash contamination. People are unable to drink their own water, take a bath, fish or farm without worrying about long-term health effects. These fears are already being felt by communities located near coal-fired power plants in Virginia.
We’ll watch, discuss, and plan; and we need you to be there.
Look for an event near you!
March 31st –
Alexandria, VA – 7pm – Alexandria Beatly Branch Library,
5005 Duke St., Alexandria, Va.
Click here for the Facebook event page.
April 4th –
Richmond, VA – 7:30pm – Rag & Bones Bicycle Coop
3110 W. Leigh St., Richmond, Va.
Click here for the Facebook event page.
April 5th –
Dumfries, VA – 7pm – Dumfries Triangle Rescue Squad
3800 Graham Park Rd., Dumfries, Va.
Click here for the Facebook event page.
April 20th –
Charlottesville, VA – 7pm – Jefferson-Madison Regional Library
201 E Market St, Charlottesville, VA 22902
Click here for the Facebook event page.
Chesapeake, VA – To be announced
Check out the trailer here:
Coal Ash Chronicles extended trailer from Coal Ash Chronicles on Vimeo.
Maryland Judge Gives Mixed Ruling in Coal Plant Suit Brought by CCAN and EIP
Washington County Circuit Court Judge Sets Good Precedent Concerning Citizens’ Right to Appeal but Drops the Ball on Pollution Permit for R. Paul Smith Power Plant
On April 21st, 2011, Judge W Kennedy Boone, a lower state court judge in Washington County, Maryland, rendered his decision in a case brought by the Chesapeake Climate Action Network (CCAN) and the Environmental Integrity Project (EIP). The case focused on Allegheny Energy’s water pollution permit related to the R. Paul Smith power plant in Williamsport, MD. Continue reading
48 hours left to Tell EPA: Regulate Toxic Coal Ash! Take action now!
We shouldn't need Superman
Families and kids rallied outside the EPA this morning to urge them to keep children and communities safe from toxic coal ash that needs to be regulated. With just two days left before the end of the public comment period on choices between regulations, today CCAN helped with the Sierra Club to pull out all the stops in support of Subtitle C
Dirty Energy Exposed: Town Hall Meeting in Baltimore on Sept. 30th!
EPA Holds First Public Hearing on Coal Ash Proposal
This is a guest post by Jason Von-Kundra, a student at George Mason University. It is crossposted from the Mason Goes Green blog.
On Monday, August 30th, the Environmental Protection Agency held its first public hearing on a proposal to address risks of unsafe coal ash disposal. The EPA is proposing an unprecedented national rule to ensure the safe disposal and management of coal ash from coal-fired power plants. Students from George Mason, Virginia Tech, and University of Maryland joined hundreds of other citizens at the hearing in Arlington, VA to deliver statements in support of strict regulation of this hazardous waste.
Coal is dirty from mining to burning. Coal ash, a byproduct of the combustion of coal at power plants contains contaminants such as mercury, cadmium and arsenic, which are associated with cancer and various other serious health effects. Coal ash is disposed of in liquid form at large surface impoundments and in solid form at landfills. The dangers associated with structurally unsafe coal ash impoundments came to national attention in 2008 when an impoundment holding disposed waste ash broke open, creating a massive spill in Kingston that covered millions of cubic yards of land and river. The spill displaced residents, required hundreds of millions of dollars in cleanup costs and caused widespread environmental damage.
In testimony at the hearing, GMU student Emily Miles criticized the coal industry for “continually putting profits over people”. She urged the EPA to regulate the coal industry to limit their destruction. “As a concerned citizen, I am here today to tell the EPA to do its job and protect people and the environment.” Kara Dodson, a student at Virginia Tech working on their Beyond Coal Campaign, described the negative health effects that coal ash from her campus’ coal-fired power plant has on students. Jason Von Kundra, an earth science major at Mason, delivered a statement urging the EPA to put stricter regulation on the coal industry to embrace the “clean energy economy that our country and our president are calling for”.
Six more hearing on the proposed rule to address coal ash are scheduled for September. Public comments may also be submitted by email to rcra-docket@epa.gov and should be identified by Docket ID No. EPA-HQ-RCRA-2009-0640. Continue reading
EPA to regulate Coal's Dirty Little Secret
EPA officially opened their comment period on the federal regulation of coal ash under the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). The basic question posed by EPA during this comment period is whether toxic coal ash should be regulated as a hazardous waste under Subtitle C of RCRA or as a solid waste under Subtitle D. Really? Do we need a debate about this??? The very nature of coal ash is HAZARDOUS. Coal ash is riddled with heavy metals that are toxic to humans and the environment. For more information on the nature of coal ash and its impacts on the environment click here.
EPA's Question of the Year: Do we regulate Coal Ash like hazardous waste or like household trash?
Today, the Environmental Protection Agency issued draft rules on the federal regulation of coal combustion waste.
"Do you mind if we put a 160-foot-high mound of dirty coal ash in your community?"
Imagine hearing this question Continue reading