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This article originally provided by
Environmental News Service
CHARLESTON, West Virgina, June 22, 2009 (ENS) - West Virgina
officials have failed to abide by the federal Clean Water Act,
instead deferring to the industries they are supposed to regulate, a
coalition of environmental groups claims in a formal petition asking
the federal government to take back control of discharge permitting
and enforcement from the state.
The Sierra Club, West Virginia Highlands Conservancy, Coal River
Mountain Watch, and Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition want the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to begin formal proceedings to
withdraw approval of state's National Pollutant Discharge
Elimination System, NPDES, program, which they say is "grossly
deficient."
"The State's capitulation to the industries it is obligated to
regulate under the Clean Water Act and its resulting failure to
enforce or maintain its NPDES program leave EPA no choice but to
withdraw its approval of that program," the groups say in their
petition, filed June 17.
The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection's
failure to carry out the legal requirements of Section 402 of the
Clean Water Act "is greatly harming the State and has led to a the
impairment of over 33 percent of West Virginia's rivers, streams,
and lakes," the groups charge.
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Acid mine drainage in Preston County, West Virginia.
Acid mine drainage destroys aquatic life and makes water
unfit for human consumption. (Photo courtesy
Appalachian Center)
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Thousands of miles of the state's waters are impaired by
microorganisms, acidity, iron, aluminum, mercury and selenium, the
petition states.
"We take this action with great reluctance and in utter
frustration," said Cindy Rank, mining chairwoman for the West
Virginia Highlands Conservancy. "For decades, we've participated in
state-focused actions to assist, cajole, force and demand
improvements in the West Virginia Department of Environmental
Protection's handling of the NPDES permitting program."
"We can no longer stand by and watch while more and more of our
streams are slowly and irreversibly degraded by inadequate
permitting, lack of enforcement, and apparent ignorance or disregard
for the law," said Rank.
Under the Clean Water Act, states can seek EPA approval to
operate their own water pollution control programs. This allows
state regulators to handle water pollution permitting and
enforcement and most states have received approval to do so.
Calling on the EPA for "swift action" to protect West Virginia's
citizens and environment, the groups say there has been a "nearly
complete breakdown" of West Virginia's maintenance and enforcement
of its NPDES program.
"The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection's
abdication of its duties to regulate water pollution requires swift
action by EPA," says the petition, signed by environmental group
lawyers Joseph Lovett, Derek Teaney and Aaron Isherwood.
"West Virginia has a long history of allowing to coal operators
to evade the selenium requirements of the Clean Water Act," the
petition states.
One problem the groups cite in their petition stems from state
legislation passed this year that suspends all selenium water
quality based effluent limitations in West Virginia permits until
July 1, 2012, regardless of whether the regulated discharges have
the reasonable potential to cause or contribute to violations of the
selenium water quality standard. The groups claim this new law is
illegal.
"WVDEP consistently and blatantly disregards the permitting
regulations when issuing permits for mining operations with a
reasonable potential to cause or contribute to water quality
standards violations related to selenium," the groups say in their
petition.
Earlier this year, a federal judge ordered WVDEP to begin
regulating selenium, but DEP Secretary Randy Huffman has indicated
the state plans to appeal.
In their petition, the groups charge that West Virginia has
failed to issue NPDES permits for point source dischargers at bond
forfeiture mining sites and at abandoned mine land sites. But, they
point out, many of these sites produce acid mine drainage. The state
agency has also failed to obtain such permits for its own
reclamation work.
The state agency's failure to require NPDES permits for abandoned
mine lands discharges has led to "devastating statewide impacts
including the obliteration of aquatic life in many of the acid mine
drainage streams" impaired by iron and acidity, the petition states.
The petition draws attention to the abandoned Kempton/Coketon
Mine complex on the North Fork of the Blackwater River, straddling
the Maryland/West Virginia border.
An electromagnetic survey done by helicopter to characterize
abandoned mine land and flooded mine tunnels in the complex verified
adverse impacts in over 31 square kilometers in the headwaters of
two major watersheds, the petition states.
The state agency consistently fails to comply with the public
participation requirements of the Clean Water Act, the groups
charge, approving settlements and issuing final orders that result
in major modifications that are not subjected to the public notice
and comment requirements.
The WVDEP has issued scores of “modification orders” to extend
the final compliance date to the expiration date of permits, "not
one of which was subject to public notice or comment," the groups
complain.
The petition states, "West Virginia's unwillingness to force coal
operators to comply with their permit limits makes a mockery of the
Clean Water Act."
"WVDEP has a long history of failing to act on permit violations
and enforce NPDES permit limits," the coalition declares. "The lack
of permit enforcement fails to deter future violations throughout
the state."
The 26-page petition is online at:
http://wvgazette.com/static/coal%20tattoo/epapetition.pdf
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