McKinley Introduces Coal Ash Legislation with Bipartisan, Cross-Industry Support Apr 7, 2011 Issues: Economy and Jobshttp://mckinley.house.gov/issue/economy, Energyhttp://mckinley.house.gov/issue/energy
McKinley Introduces Coal Ash Legislation with Bipartisan, Cross-Industry Support Freshman lawmaker aims to strip EPA power to regulate coal ash as hazardous
Washington, DC - Rep. David B. McKinley, P.E. (R-WV) introduced legislation (H.R. 1391) late Wednesday evening that would prohibit the EPA from moving forward with plans to classify fossil fuel combustion waste, also known as coal ash or fly ash, as a hazardous waste under subtitle C of the Solid Waste Disposal Act. Regulating coal ash, which is recycled into dry wall and concrete and widely used in schools, homes and public buildings such as the one housing EPA itself, as a hazardous waste would trigger a large increase in disposal expenses for coal-fired power plants and other coal ash generators, likely increasing energy costs for manufacturers and consumers. Ten Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee - including Energy and Power Subcommittee Chairman Ed Whitfield (R-KY) and Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX), Chairman Emeritus and senior Republican on the committee - and three Democrats signed on as original co-sponsors of H.R. 1391http://www.congress.gov/cgi-lis/bdquery/D?d112,d111:1:./temp/~bdQ2Id:dbs=y:|/billsumm/billsumm.php|. West Virginia Rep. Nick Rahall is one of those Democrats, and Reps. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) and Bob Gibbs of southeast Ohio are also among the original co-sponsors. A broad cross-section of companies and organizations representing various industries have also endorsed the bill (see below). In a floor speech Thursday, McKinley discussed the economic harm that would be caused if the EPA's plans on coal ash are not stopped. For video of McKinley's speech as delivered, click herehttp://www.youtube.com/user/RepMcKinley?feature=mhum. "Fly ash is an unavoidable byproduct of burning coal to produce electricity, and the EPA has repeatedly studied and approved its beneficial use prior to President Obama," McKinley said. "Not only would the EPA's plan reduce demand for coal - by design to be sure - but it would also increase costs for dozens of industries, having a ripple effect that would ultimately destroy jobs and raise electricity prices. Recycled fly ash helps to keep electric generation costs down which in turn keeps electricity affordable for consumers. If the EPA persists with its plans to designate fly ash as a hazardous material, the expense of handling the material will increase logarithmically and so will our energy prices. Why would this administration want to increase the cost of electricity on our senior citizens, hospitals, schools and working families? By increasing the cost of power, it causes the price of producing American-made products to increase and puts America at a severe disadvantage against our foreign competition. President Obama's relentless 'War on Coal' has now expanded to include the many industries and consumers that depend on coal. It's critical that we stop the EPA now, and that's why I'm proud to introduce this bill with bipartisan support." McKinley's legislation has been referred to the Energy and Commerce Committee. The bill is similar to one of McKinley's amendments, #217, to the long-term continuing resolution passed by the House in February. The amendment overwhelmingly passed the Househttp://clerk.house.gov/evs/2011/roll136.xml, with 19 Democrats in support. Organizations and companies supporting McKinley's legislation include: American Coal Ash Association AEP First Energy Allegheny Power National Rural Electric Cooperative Association National Mining Association American Public Power American Municipal Power American Road & Transportation Builders Association Citizens for Recycling First National Ready Mixed Concrete Association Ash Grove Resources ASK Chemicals Beneficial Reuse Management Boral Material Technologies CERATECH, Inc. Charah, Inc. Clayton Engineering and Consulting, LLC DC Goss LLC Electric Energy, Inc Essex Cement LLC Full Circle Solutions Gypsoil, LLC Headwaters Resources Intermountain Power Agency John Ward Inc. LB Industrial Systems Muscatine Power & Water National Gypsum Company Phoenix Cement Company PMI Ash Technologies Public Service of New Hampshire Richard W. Goodwin Environmental Engineering Rosenmerkel Engineering SEFA Group Separation Technologies LLC Southern Illinois Power Cooperative Sphere One, Inc. Taulbee Chemical Consulting, LLC Titan America LLC USC Technologies U.S. Minerals, Inc.
As we know - captives of King Coal.
Jim Sconyers jim_scon@yahoo.com 304.698.9628
Remember: Mother Nature bats last.
________________________________ From: "Grubb, Karen" Karen.Grubb@fairmontstate.edu To: WV Chapter Energy Committee EC@osenergy.org Sent: Thu, April 14, 2011 5:18:10 PM Subject: [EC] all WV reps sign on to coal ash bill
McKinley Introduces Coal Ash Legislation with Bipartisan, Cross-Industry Support Apr 7, 2011Issues: Economy and Jobs, Energy McKinley Introduces Coal Ash Legislation with Bipartisan, Cross-Industry Support Freshman lawmaker aims to strip EPA power to regulate coal ash as hazardous Washington, DC – Rep. David B. McKinley, P.E. (R-WV) introduced legislation (H.R. 1391) late Wednesday evening that would prohibit the EPA from moving forward with plans to classify fossil fuel combustion waste, also known as coal ash or fly ash, as a hazardous waste under subtitle C of the Solid Waste Disposal Act. Regulating coal ash, which is recycled into dry wall and concrete and widely used in schools, homes and public buildings such as the one housing EPA itself, as a hazardous waste would trigger a large increase in disposal expenses for coal-fired power plants and other coal ash generators, likely increasing energy costs for manufacturers and consumers. Ten Republicans on the House Energy and Commerce Committee – including Energy and Power Subcommittee Chairman Ed Whitfield (R-KY) and Rep. Joe Barton (R-TX), Chairman Emeritus and senior Republican on the committee – and three Democrats signed on as original co-sponsors of H.R. 1391. West Virginia Rep. Nick Rahall is one of those Democrats, and Reps. Shelley Moore Capito (R-WV) and Bob Gibbs of southeast Ohio are also among the original co-sponsors. A broad cross-section of companies and organizations representing various industries have also endorsed the bill (see below). In a floor speech Thursday, McKinley discussed the economic harm that would be caused if the EPA’s plans on coal ash are not stopped. For video of McKinley’s speech as delivered, click here. “Fly ash is an unavoidable byproduct of burning coal to produce electricity, and the EPA has repeatedly studied and approved its beneficial use prior to President Obama,” McKinley said. “Not only would the EPA’s plan reduce demand for coal – by design to be sure – but it would also increase costs for dozens of industries, having a ripple effect that would ultimately destroy jobs and raise electricity prices. Recycled fly ash helps to keep electric generation costs down which in turn keeps electricity affordable for consumers. If the EPA persists with its plans to designate fly ash as a hazardous material, the expense of handling the material will increase logarithmically and so will our energy prices. Why would this administration want to increase the cost of electricity on our senior citizens, hospitals, schools and working families? By increasing the cost of power, it causes the price of producing American-made products to increase and puts America at a severe disadvantage against our foreign competition. President Obama’s relentless ‘War on Coal’ has now expanded to include the many industries and consumers that depend on coal. It’s critical that we stop the EPA now, and that’s why I’m proud to introduce this bill with bipartisan support.” McKinley’s legislation has been referred to the Energy and Commerce Committee. The bill is similar to one of McKinley’s amendments, #217, to the long-term continuing resolution passed by the House in February. The amendment overwhelmingly passed the House, with 19 Democrats in support. Organizations and companies supporting McKinley’s legislation include: American Coal Ash Association AEP First Energy Allegheny Power National Rural Electric Cooperative Association National Mining Association American Public Power American Municipal Power American Road & Transportation Builders Association Citizens for Recycling First National Ready Mixed Concrete Association Ash Grove Resources ASK Chemicals Beneficial Reuse Management Boral Material Technologies CERATECH, Inc. Charah, Inc. Clayton Engineering and Consulting, LLC DC Goss LLC Electric Energy, Inc Essex Cement LLC Full Circle Solutions Gypsoil, LLC Headwaters Resources Intermountain Power Agency John Ward Inc. LB Industrial Systems Muscatine Power & Water National Gypsum Company Phoenix Cement Company PMI Ash Technologies Public Service of New Hampshire Richard W. Goodwin Environmental Engineering Rosenmerkel Engineering SEFA Group Separation Technologies LLC Southern Illinois Power Cooperative Sphere One, Inc. Taulbee Chemical Consulting, LLC Titan America LLC USC Technologies U.S. Minerals, Inc.