TVA fined $11.5 million for violating state environmental laws

June 16th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

us money photo 100x100 TVA fined $11.5 million for violating state environmental lawsThe Tennessee Valley Authority () has been slapped with $11.5 million in fines by the Department of Environment and Conservation for violating state clean-water and solid waste disposal laws following the December 2008 coal ash spill in an east community. In a statement released to media, Environment Commissioner Jim Fyke called the fines an appropriate response “to an unprecedented event.”

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TVA hit with $11.5 million fine as a result of Tennessee coal ash spill

June 15th, 2010 by Wendi Lewis

tennessee seal 100x100 TVA hit with $11.5 million fine as a result of Tennessee coal ash spillThe Tennessee Valley Authority () received word Monday that it will be required to pay $11.5 million in fines as a result of a December 2008 coal ash spill at its Kingston, Tenn., coal-fired power plant. The fine was levied by the Department of Environment and Conservation after the agency determined the is guilty of violating state clean-water and solid waste disposal laws. The Dec. 22, 2008, spill dumped about a billion gallons of toxic sludge on the Kingston community, located about 35 miles west of Knoxville, spreading across more than 300 acres of land and contaminating the adjacent Emory River.

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Gulf coast oil spill reminiscent of coal ash disaster

May 10th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

oil spill protective barrier SQUARE 100x100 Gulf coast oil spill reminiscent of coal ash disasterAnother preventable environmental crisis strikes again, leaving behind a murky forecast for those in its wake. First there was the coal ash spill that dumped a billion gallons of sludge on to homes, property and waterways in east . Then came the massive oil spill following an explosion in a rig 50 miles off the Louisiana coastline, a still uncontained problem that is oozing millions of gallons of oil into the ocean wreaking havoc in its wake.

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Report shows coal ash makes people sick

March 29th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

smokestack Report shows coal ash makes people sickPeople who live near coal-burning power plants have as high as a 1 in 50 chance of developing cancer and have an increased risk of damage to their lungs, kidneys, liver and other organs, according to a 2009 report by environmental legal advocacy group, Earthjustice. Elisa Young, a resident of Meigs County, Ohio, the site of the country’s second-largest concentration of coal-firing plants, says she’s seen the havoc coal waste has wreaked on her family and friends. “I’ve lost neighbors to lung cancer who have never smoked,” she told Huffington Post. “I’ve lost them to brain cancer, breast, throat , colon, multiple myeloma, pre-leukemia. … There isn’t a house on this road that hasn’t been touched by cancer.”

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New class action lawsuit filed against TVA, consultants

March 2nd, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

judge gavel 100x100 New class action lawsuit filed against TVA, consultantsPlaintiffs in three class action lawsuits have joined forces to fight the Tennessee Valley Authority () and two of its consultants for compensation to cover unspecified damages and payment for medical monitoring as a result of the December 2008 coal ash spill from the ’s Kingston Fossil Plant in east . The amended complaint redefines the class of potential plaintiffs, which includes anyone who owns property in the Swan Pond community around the plant north of the Clinch River, anyone who lived in the same area when the spill occurred, and anyone who owns property on Watts Bar Lake from the mouth of the Emory River to Watts Bar Dam. Attorneys say the classification could add hundreds more plaintiffs to the lawsuit.

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Activist documents coal ash dangers in letter to EPA

February 18th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

perry county map 100x100 Activist documents coal ash dangers in letter to EPA“Are the people of Perry County, Ala., less valuable than the people in Kingston, Tenn.?” asks Hurricane Creekkeeper John Wathen. The activist sent a complaint letter to Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) administrator Lisa Jackson this week in an effort to stop shipments of coal ash recovered from the east spill site to a poor, black community in Alabama. Residents near the Uniontown, Ala., landfill say the is stinking up their town. And they, too, worry that the same toxic sludge that poured down on the community of Kingston causing serious damage and threatening human health, may create problems for them as well.

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TVA says Emory River coal ash cleanup nearly completed

February 17th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

emory river 100x100 TVA says Emory River coal ash cleanup nearly completedThe cleanup effort in east following the December 2008 spill of coal ash from a Tennessee Valley Authority () impoundment pond is costing more than the utility had expected, but so far the results look promising, says director of the ’s cleanup effort, Steve McCracken.

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Illinois lawmakers ask White House not to classify coal ash as hazardous

February 10th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

illinois 100x100 Illinois lawmakers ask White House not to classify coal ash as hazardousA group of Illinois lawmakers are asking the White House not to classify coal ash as a hazardous material because doing so would cripple their state’s economy. In a letter to the Office of Management and Budget, the bipartisan group of congressmen expressed concerns that reclassifying the byproduct from coal-firing plants would raise the cost of energy for Illinois consumers. It would also hamper local utilities’ ability to recycle the in products like cement, concrete and other building materials, a process that the group says generates thousands of jobs in Illinois.

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Trickle-down effect causing problems for coal ash disposal

February 9th, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

mobile bayIt was bad enough when the coal ash impoundment pond at the Tennessee Valley Authority () Kingston, Tenn., plant holding more than a billion gallons of toxic sludge ruptured, sending a wave of onto a neighboring community and into nearly waterways. Cleaning it up hasn’t been a walk on the beach. One challenge was locating a landfill that would accept the recovered . The newest issue is finding a company willing to treat the wastewater from that landfill.

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Lawsuit to halt coal ash dumping held up by landfill’s bankruptcy

February 3rd, 2010 by Jennifer Walker-Journey

alabama 100x100 Lawsuit to halt coal ash dumping held up by landfills bankruptcyThe residents of Perry County, Ala., were just gearing up to file a lawsuit against Arrowhead Landfill. The landfill had entered into an agreement with the Tennessee Valley Authority () to accept coal ash recovered from the east spill site, generating millions of dollars and a handful of jobs for the very poor, predominantly black community. But residents argued that the benefits came at too high a price. is toxic, containing arsenic and carcinogens that have been linked to serious health problems. To make matters worse, the constant trainload deliveries of to the landfill were literally stinking up the town.

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