I am fairly sure if this is a reference to the Coresco site.  Here are some notes from the (unapproved) minutes I took for another organization when scientists Petra and John Wood came and spoke to us:
Coresco Landfill - (Petra) - The strip mining occurring close to our home has a high acidic coal that in the past wouldn't have been mined, but now it is being performed with the justification that the alkaline substitutes from coal combustion waste (fly ash - fluidized bed and scrubber waste) that are being added, neutralizes the site. However, this has been shown to have associated problems like heavy metal leaching. We have become cognizant about how bad coal combustion waste issues can be, and EPA is slowly establishing regulations. Meanwhile, the Coresco site may be one of the largest in the Nation. This is a time bomb waiting to happen because of the leaching of heavy metals.

(Jim Kotcon)  ... Coresco would receive fly ash from a coalition of powerplants (Hatfield, Longview, etc). Coresco argues that they are exempt from certain landfill laws. Their landfill would be 500 feet tall on a 300 acre plot without any liner. Our argument is that DEP should wait until there are new landfill rules; DEP hasn't been very helpful and they are intent on allowing a permit to Coresco. ...

Yes, I support this, and I am glad that MVCAC is on top of this.  I suggest we invite the Woods to a public informational meeting.

-Jonathan

Reger-Nash, Bill wrote:
Duane et al,
 
I support this proposed action.
 
Be well and have a nice holiday weekend.
 
Bill
Bill Reger-Nash, EdD
 
Walk 30 minutes or more daily. 
Feel the Power of Half an Hour.
 
WVU Department of Community Medicine
Room 3812 E, Health Sciences South
One Medical Center Drive
Morgantown, WV 26506-9190
304-293-0763
wreger@hsc.wvu.edu
 

From: mvcac-bounces@cheat.org [mvcac-bounces@cheat.org] On Behalf Of Paula Hunt [pjhunt@xemaps.com]
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2010 9:43 PM
To: mvcac@cheat.org
Subject: Re: [MVCAC] PROPOSED ACTION ON COAL ASH TOXIC WASTE

Let's do it!

- paula huntAt 3/31/2010 07:58 PM, you wrote:
IT IS HEREWITH PROPOSED THAT THE MON VALLEY CLEAN AIR COALITION JOIN OTHERS REGARDING
THE PROTECTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT FROM THE SPREADING OF COAL ASH WITHOUT ADEQUATE
SAFEGUARDS.   COAL ASH FROM BOTH THE FORT MARTIN POWER PLANT AND THE LONGVIEW POWER
PLANT ARE BEING CONSIDERED FOR "BENEFICIAL USE" DISPOSAL IN NORTH WESTERN MONONGALIA
COUNTY.  THIS PLAN INVOLVES SPREADING THE ASH ON THE SOIL, CLAIMING TO NEUTRALIZE ACIDIC
COMPONENTS IN THE SOIL, WITHOUT FULL CONSIDERATION OF THE DEPTH OF APPLICATION OR THE
TOXIC ELEMENTS THAT WILL LEACH THEREFROM.
 
PLEASE INDICATE BY APRIL 5TH WHETHER YOU SUPPORT THIS PROPOSED ACTION BY THE "MVCAC".
 
THANK YOU FOR YOUR CONSIDERATION,  DUANE NICHOLS (DUANE NICHOLS,  304-216-5535)
 
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
 
From: Emily Enderle [ mailto:eenderle@earthjustice.org]
Sent: Wednesday, March 31, 2010 2:10 PM

Subject: Organizational CEO-level Sign on Letter to President Obama - Protect People from Toxic Coal Ash
 
Dear Friends and Colleagues,
 
Thank you all for your continued support on the coal ash issue.  We hope your organizations will again join us in supporting another effort to protect people from this toxic waste.
 
EPA committed to releasing a rule regulating the disposal of toxic coal ash, the second largest industrial waste in the U.S., by the end of 2009.  EPA did its part by submitting the rule to the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in mid-October.  OMB has taken more than five months to review the rule—an extraordinary length of time.  Durring this time, OMB has had more than 30 meetings with industry groups, providing industry with unprecedented closed-door access.  Additionally, the White House itself has met with industry groups on this topic.  The longer this rule drags out, the more time industry has to instill fear in lawmakers and the public by wildly exaggerating the costs and impacts of the regulation.  In the meantime, as the Administration delays, our communities and environment are put at risk from the devastating impacts of unsafe coal ash disposal.
 
In this letter, the CEOs of Earthjustice, NRDC, Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark-Atlanta University, Physicians for Social Responsibility, Southern Environmental Law Center, Environmental Integrity Project and Sierra Club, are asking President Obama to stand by his Administration's principles - to allow science not industry to decide, provide a transparent process that enables the public to participate in a meaningful way, and protect people and their environment from toxic waste.
 
Please have your organizations join us in signing on to the attached CEO-level letter (also pasted below).  A fact sheet on the issue is attached. 
 
To sign on, please email your CEO-level sign on information to Jeremy Graham at Earthjustice (jgraham@earthjustice.org) by Tuesday, April 6, 2010. Also, it'd be much appreciated if you'd circulate this to your networks. 
 
CEO Name
Title
Organization
City, State
 
Thank you in advance for your help on this critical issue.
Emily
 
­_____________________________________
Emily Ederle
Legislative Associate
Earthjustice
1625 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Suite 702
Washington, DC 20036
T: 202-667-4500 ext. 201
C: 202-253-2397
F: 202-667-2356
www.earthjustice.org
 
 
April ____, 2010
 
 
President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW
Washington, DC 20500
 
Dear Mr. President:
 
On behalf of our millions of members and supporters, we urge you to protect  communities across this nation from the widespread mismanagement of coal combustion waste that endangers public health and the environment – and for which there are no current federall regulations.
 
Following the disastrous spill of more than 1 billion gallons of coal ash from the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Kingston Fossil Plant in December 2008, 109 directors of environmental groups called upon EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson to develop federally enforceable standards for regulating coal combustion waste.  Shortly thereafter, Administrator Jackson pledged to publish a regulatory proposal by December 2009. In keeping with her commitment, Administrator Jackson submitted a draft coal ash rule to the White House Office of Management and Budget (OMB) in October 2009—but over five months later, this rule remaiins under review at OMB.  The undersigned [number of] public interest groups ask you to side with the public and sound science to ensure a rule that protects people and the environment is released in April.
 
Continued delay in the issuance of federal regulations for the disposal of the 136 million tons of toxic coal combustion waste generated annually is dangerous and unacceptable. Unmitigated harm, often to poor and minority communities, continues to threaten the lives and environment of millions of Americans.  Communities near America’s thousands of coal ash dumps are threatened with poisoned drinking water, polluted waterways, and life-threatening failures of decades-old dams.  The failure to act makes another catastrophic failure, like the disaster in Kingston, ever more likely, and it makes the poisoning of additional water sources a near certainty.
 
Releasing the draft rule would trigger the public process of rulemaking, thereby ensuring a fair and open process in which all stakeholders have an equal opportunity to address the complexities of the proposed rule. Until the draft rule is released for public comment, the debate occurs almost entirely behind closed doors. Industry groups that oppose mandatory federal standards have had more than 30 meetings with OMB on this rule – more than ever before on any single topic. These groups continue to present unfounded claims of power plant closures and exaggerated cost estimates as “fact,â€� thereby fomenting widespread but unwarranted fear of EPA regulations.
 
One of the issues industry is using to slow down the rulemaking process is the argument that the regulation of coal combustion waste will place a stigma on the recycling of fly ash.  We believe this argument is overstated.  Our groups support the beneficial use of fly ash. We do not expect the reuse of fly ash to decrease if the disposal of ash is regulated as hazardous waste.  On the contrary, companies will be able to avoid the hazardous waste requirements by using coal ash beneficially.  Therefore, we think coal ash regulation will promote more beneficial use.  However, if the coal ash is not going to be reused or recycled, then it needs to be disposed of following tailored hazardous waste rules.
 
The EPA’s latest scientific findings lend urgency to the promulgation of federally enforceable standards. New EPA leach tests, specifically designed for coal ash, reveal that toxic chemicals such as arsenic, chromium and selenium, can leak from coal combustion waste in concentrations far exceeding the threshold that the EPA uses to identify hazardous waste. The EPA also found that the cancer risk for children exposed to arsenic in drinking water from unlined ash ponds is as high as 1 in 50, which is 2,000 times the EPA's goal of reducing cancer risk to 1 in 100,000 individuals.
 
Further, leading coal combustion waste (CCW) scientists, with more than 100 years of combined research experience on the environmental fate and toxic impacts of coal ash, recommend federally enforceable standards.  Drs. E. Dennis Lemly and Christopher Rowe, among others, recently submitted a letter to OMB stating “Make no mistake about it, CCW is a deadly poison to fish and wildlife, and a threat to human health when improperly managed.â€�  They conclude:
 
Some of the most destructive and pressing environmental problems with CCW are not ‘in the distant past’ but are taking place NOW using ‘state approved’ disposal practices. Threats and impacts are not being addressed by the coal power industry and they will not go away.  They will be a recurring, escalating problem unless adequate regulatory controls are put in place.  State efforts are inadequate….federall regulatory oversight is necessary.  Experience shows that CCW’s will need to carry a hazardous waste ‘C’ designation if they are to be regulated and disposed in a manner that will afford adequate protection to fish and wildlife, as well as humankind.
 
We urge you to consider the EPA’s latest scientific findings and the recommendations of scientific experts and put an end to further delay. 
 
Thus the undersigned [number] public interest organizations, representing several million citizens, respectfully ask the Administration to release the proposed coal ash rule for public comment this month and to ensure that the rule proposes federally enforceable standards that will protect all United States citizens and their environment from a truly toxic substance.
 
Signed:
 
 
Trip Van Noppen
President
Earthjustice
Oakland, CA
 
Eric Schaeffer
Executive Director
Environmental Integrity Project
Washington, D.C.
 
Dr. Robert Bullard
Director
Environmental Justice Resource Center at Clark Atlanta University
Atlantic, GA
 
Frances Beinecke
President
Natural Resources Defense Council
New York, NY
 
Peter Wilk
Executive Director
Physicians for Social Responsibility
Washington, D.C.
 
Michael Brune
Executive Director
Sierra Club
San Francisco, CA
 
--
Ryan Rittenhouse
Public Citizen Texas
1303 San Antonio St.
Austin, TX 78701
512-477-1155
www.CoalBlock.org

"If we use fuel to get our power, we are living on our capital and exhausting it rapidly.
This method is barbarous and wantonly wasteful, and will have to be stopped in the interest of coming generations."
- Nikola Tesla, 1915

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