News Tagged ‘landfill

Cumberland residents say ‘no;’ officials say ‘yes’ to coal ash

Cumberland County 2Cumberland County, , officials saw dollar signs and improved highways when they approved the relocation of coal ash recovered from a neighboring spill site to a landfill atop Smith Mountain. “I call it the Good Neighbor Plan,” says Commissioner Lynn Tollett. “We’ve got a place to put (the recovered ). We can help out and we’re going to gain some income at a time when the economy is not what it ought to be.”

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Coal ash cleanup still months, years away from completion

tva ash cleanup 2009 100x100 Coal ash cleanup still months, years away from completionNine months after more than a billion gallons of coal ash tumbled from an impoundment pond at a Kingston, Tenn., coal-firing plant and created one of the nation’s largest environmental disasters, only one-third of the total sludge has been removed from the Emory River, leaving behind 2 million cubic yards in the river and 2.4 million cubic yards in Swan Pond Creek and neighboring land. The cleanup effort is still months – maybe years – away from completion and is expected to cost the Tennessee Valley Authority () at least $1 billion by the time it is complete.

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Proposal to store coal ash could bring jobs to Cumberland County

Not everyone is trying to keep the Tennessee Valley Authority () from dumping coal ash on its property. One company wants the to pay them to haul and hold in its Cumberland County strip mine.

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Pennsylvania says no to TVA coal ash storage

Coal ash that poured from the Tennessee Valley Authority () Kingston, , Fossil Plant onto an east community last December and recovered by cleanup crews is far too toxic to be stored in Pennsylvania’s coal mines, according to officials in that state. Authorities issued a statement saying it has strict regulations for the material to be stored there.

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Poor, black counties to receive coal ash from TVA cleanup

Criticism continues to fly as the Tennessee Valley Authority () labors on with its extensive and expensive coal ash cleanup effort following the December 22, 2008, spill from its Kingston, , fossil fuel plant. A breach in an impoundment pond dumped more than a billion gallons of on to a neighboring community, destroying homes and damaging property in its wake. The Institute for Southern Studies now finds that the counties where the utility will be dumping much of the retrieved from the community in which it was spilled are largely populated by African Americans and have high poverty rates.

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Study: Cancer risk ‘disturbingly’ higher near coal ash ponds

eip logo 100x100 Study: Cancer risk disturbingly higher near coal ash pondsCancer rates among people living near coal ash ponds are “disturbingly high,” according to Environmental Integrity Project and Earthjustice, nonprofit organizations that studied Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data from 210 ponds across the United States. The data is compiled in a report titled, “Coming Clean: What EPA Knows About the Dangers of .”

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TVA considers new sites to bury coal ash from spill

The Tennessee Valley Authority () is eying a dormant landfill near its Kingston, , plant and an abandoned strip mine in Cumberland County, , as possible locations to bury the ash it is cleaning up after one of its impoundment ponds leaked and dumped more than a billion gallons of coal ash on to an east community, according to WAAY-TV.

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EPA to begin inspection of coal ash storage areas

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) will send its first teams of inspectors to coal ash storage areas across the country within weeks, according to Knoxville Business News. The inspections are the first step in developing new regulations for an industry not currently overseen by federal regulations.

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Coal combustion sites need government regulations

epa 150x150 Coal combustion sites need government regulationsPower plants in the U.S. produce more than 125 million tons of coal combustion waste each year, most of which ends up in dry landfills or in above-ground coal slurry pounds. In 2000, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) listed that material as non-hazardous and thus it didn’t fall under any strict government regulations.

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TVA granted permission to dredge Emory River

tva logo 150x150 TVA granted permission to dredge Emory RiverThe Tennessee Valley Authority () has been given permission to dredge the Emory River to remove ash that spilled into it after the utility’s coal ash pond failed last December and poured more than a billion gallons of toxic material on to 300 acres of east property, according to MSNBC. The dredging is part of the ’s $1-million-a-day effort to clean up the massive mess, and was one of the items detailed in the utility’s cleanup plan aimed to return the community to “as good, if not better (condition) than they were before.”

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