FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE - July 31, 2012
Appalachian Communities Win Case Against Unlawful Mountaintop
Removal Mining Permit While Federal District Court Issues Decision Finding EPA
Must Act Through Regulation, not Guidance, to Address Pollution from
Mountaintop Removal Mining
Appalachian communities win challenge to state permit, but still
seeking federal protection from devastating mines and pollution
Washington, D.C. — Today, rulings were issued in both West Virginia and the
U.S. District Court demonstrating the need for Environmental Protection Agency
standards that are based on the overwhelming scientific consensus that
pollution from mountaintop removal coal mining and coal waste disposal
threatens Appalachian streams.
Today the West Virginia Environmental Quality
Board ruled that the state’s Clean Water Act permit for a
mountaintop removal mine, Patriot Mining Company’s New Hill West mine, is
unlawful because it does not limit harmful pollution that degrades water
quality. Also today the U.S. District Court for the District
of Columbia ruled in the coal industry case challenging a U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) guidance document meant to ensure
compliance with the Clean Water Act and protect Appalachian communities from
extreme mountaintop removal mining pollution. This court found that, to protect
Appalachian streams from the harm caused by mining pollution, EPA should have
issued a formal regulation instead of a guidance document. On these grounds,
the court vacated the EPA’s conductivity guidance.
The West Virginia Environmental
Quality Board decision demonstrates that the science is clear and stricter
permits are necessary to protect Appalachian waterways from coal mining
pollution, including very high levels of conductivity and total dissolved
solids that harm aquatic life. The EPA relied on these same studies to support
its final guidance, and although the federal court ruled against the guidance,
nothing in its decision questioned the scientific consensus behind the
guidance. The federal court ruling also does not affect the West Virginia
Environmental Quality Board decision.
In July 2011, the EPA issued this final guidance following
its own two extensive peer-reviewed scientific reports, as well as multiple
independent peer-reviewed scientific reports, that all found that mountaintop
removal mines create lasting, irreparable harm to streams and water quality. In
light of these scientific reports, EPA issued the guidance to assist its staff in
meeting longstanding and well established requirements of the Clean Water Act.
This final guidance also came after the EPA’s consideration of 60,000 public
comments.
Sierra Club and Appalachian
Mountain Advocates won the case in front of the West Virginia Environmental
Quality Board
In the federal case, the Sierra
Club, Coal River Mountain Watch (WV), Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition (WV),
West Virginia Highlands Conservancy, Kentuckians For The Commonwealth, Southern
Appalachian Mountain Stewards (VA), and Statewide Organizing for Community
eMpowerment (TN) — represented by Earthjustice and the Appalachian Mountain
Advocates — opposed this coal mining industry lawsuit as intervenors in support
of EPA’s effort to follow the Clean Water Act, consider the latest science, and
protect America’s waters from destruction.
The following are their statements:
Said Ed Hopkins, Sierra
Club's Environmental Quality Program Director:
"We are heartened to see the
West Virginia Environmental Quality Board affirm basic protections of the Clean
Water Act, and overturn the unlawful mountaintop removal mining permit today.
In addition to continuing to follow the Clean Water Act consistent with federal
court rulings, we urge the EPA to adopt the water quality benchmarks in the
guidance addressed by today’s court decision as federal rules to ensure full
protection for all local communities from the dangerous industry of mountaintop
removal coal mining. Together, the states and EPA must ensure that all
Appalachian communities finally receive the protection from mountaintop removal
mining that we deserve.”
Said Dianne Bady,
co-director of the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, based in
West Virginia:
“We're saddened that this federal
court ruling will prevent the EPA from using this scientific guidance to
protect Appalachia's waters from mountaintop removal mining operations
that have been linked to increased harm to human health. But with or without
this one particular guidance document, the EPA still has a duty to protect our
waters and our people directly under the Clean Water Act, and it is a relief to
see our state environmental quality board affirm the science and follow the
Clean Water Act. In keeping with today’s decisions, we urge the EPA to continue
advancing strong, science-based policies to safeguard our lives.”
Said Vernon Haltom, executive director of Coal
River Mountain Watch in West Virginia:
"Our people's health and the survival of our communities depend on strong
enforcement of the laws and regulations intended to protect us from pollution.
Since the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection chooses instead
to enable unfettered pollution from mountaintop removal, we must rely on the
U.S. EPA. It is a victory to see the state environmental quality board affirm
fundamental requirements of the Clean Water Act. Because the science is
clear on what we need to do to protect our waters, we hope that today’s court
decision does not weaken EPA's resolve to protect us from mountaintop removal,
which is increasingly linked to deadly human health problems."
Said Emma Cheuse,
Earthjustice attorney:
“EPA and state regulators still
have a legal duty to uphold the Clean Water Act, and today’s court decision
recognizes EPA’s authority to set rules to protect our waterways. It is
essential for both EPA and state agencies charged with protecting communities
to follow the science, and they must do everything possible under the law to
prevent the irreversible destruction of mountaintop removal mining, before more
mountains and streams are destroyed forever.”
Said Rick Handshoe of
the Kentuckians For The Commonwealth:
“The federal court decision is a
setback for the people of Appalachia. This conductivity guidance – based on
scientific evidence – gives us the first sign that something may be wrong with
our water. Whatever may happen in the courts, assuming today’s decision is
appealed, the science EPA has highlighted will continue to be a great tool for
people in Appalachia. It’s been a great tool for me. I’ve tested a creek where
the conductivity meter ran over 4000 micro Siemens. That told me something was
wrong, and after further testing was done we saw how bad it was – some of the
pollutant levels were 100 times the water standard. We need to do something
federally to protect Appalachians from mountaintop removal mining. And we
will continue to look to the Kentucky governor to use this science to protect
the water and health of people all over the Commonwealth.”
Said Cindy Rank, mining
board chair of the West Virginia Highlands Conservancy:
“For years mining companies have
fought science and even minimal clean water protections under the 40-year-old
Clean Water Act using every legal trick in the book. In some cases, such as
today’s federal court decision, they have won. This continues to put us living
in Appalachia in the unconscionable position of having to document our own
communities’ sickness, disease and other unexplained health impacts as reasons
to finally stop the devastating practice of mountaintop removal coal mining. As
we do this, it’s critical that the West Virginia Environmental Quality Board
keep doing as it did today and use strong science to deny permits.”
FURTHER INFORMATION:
Today’s decision by the West
Virginia Environmental Quality Board: http://www.sierraclub.org/environmentallaw/lawsuits/0583.aspx
Today’s U.S. District Court for the
District of Columbia ruling: http://wvgazette.com/static/coal%20tattoo/EPA%20Guidance%20Ruling.pdf
Final Guidance: Improving EPA Review of Appalachian Surface Coal Mining
Operations Under the Clean Water Act, National Environmental Policy Act, and
the Environmental Justice Executive Order:http://water.epa.gov/lawsregs/guidance/wetlands/upload/Final_Appalachian_Mining_Guidance_072111.pdf
Information on the EPA’s Clean
Water Act oversight of Appalachian surface mining activities: http://water.epa.gov/lawsregs/guidance/wetlands/mining.cfm
Information on Appalachian groups’
intervention to support EPA in lawsuit filed by the coal mining industry: http://earthjustice.org/news/press/2010/appalachian-and-national-organizations-defend-obama-administration-s-review-of-mountaintop-removal-mining-from-i
Final EPA Scientific Reports on
Water Quality and Mountaintop Removal Mining Pollution Impacts:
Final EPA Report: Review of Clean
Water Act § 402 Permitting for Surface Coal Mines by Appalachian States (2010): http://www.epa.gov/owow/wetlands/guidance/pdf/Final_Appalachian_Mining_PQR_07-13-10.pdf
Contacts:
Liz Judge, Earthjustice, (202)
797-5237 or (970) 710-9002 (cell), ljudge@earthjustice.org
Kim Teplitzky, Sierra Club, 267-307-4707,
kim.teplitzky@sierraclub.org
Dan Radmacher, Appalachian Mountain
Advocates, (540) 798-6683, dradmacher@appalmad.org
Cindy Rank, West Virginia Highlands
Conservancy, (304) 924-5802, clrank2@gmail.com
Vernon Haltom, Coal River Mountain
Watch, (304) 854-2182, vernoncrmw@gmail.com
Vivian Stockman, Ohio Valley
Environmental Coalition, (304) 360-1979, vivian@ohvec.org
Rick Handshoe, Kentuckians For The
Commonwealth, (606) 358-4912, handshoer@bellsouth.net
Jane Branham, Southern Appalachian
Mountain Stewards, (276) 679-7505, jabah2@comcast.net
Casey Self, Statewide Organizing
for Community eMpowerment, (865) 249-7488, casey@socm.org
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