Commission Closes Probe in 2014 West Virginia Water Crisis

West Virginia’s Public Service Commission on Thursday issued a final settlement order closing its investigation into West Virginia American Water’s role in a chemical spill and resulting water crisis in the Charleston area in January 2014.

Thousands of gallons of a coal-cleaning agent leaked from a Freedom Industries storage tank into the Elk River, leaving 300,000 people in nine counties without water for up to nine days. Businesses in the state’s largest drinking water system were temporarily shut. Hundreds of people headed to emergency rooms for issues from nausea to rashes after contact with tap water that smelled like licorice.

The settlement requires regular updates of the company’s source water protection plan, annual reports on potential contamination sources, continuous monitoring for various contaminants at its intake and an emergency reporting system. It largely reflects the proposed settlement filed by attorneys for the parties in the case in January.

The commission called it “just, reasonable and in the public interest.” The chemical released about a mile upriver got into the company’s raw water intake and into the region’s treated water supply.

The settlement requires West Virginia American Water to prepare a pilot study and install monitoring both 30 and 60 minutes if it can get necessary approvals.

Meanwhile, a federal judge is considering a settlement in a lawsuit that would result in residential customers and small businesses receiving thousands of dollars.

If approved, the settlement filing shows West Virginia American Water would pay up to $126 million and Eastman Chemical $25 million.

Residents would receive $525 each and small businesses would receive $6,250 each. Affected renters and homeowners could claim $170 for each additional person living in their household, plus medical expenses and repairs.

Larger businesses could get from $12,500 to $40,000 for lost revenue and documented property damages. Affected nonprofits and government entities would get $1,875.

Residents Demand Thorough Investigation of 2014 Water Crisis

A group of Kanawha Valley residents is demanding a full investigation of West Virginia American Water’s role in a 2014 chemical spill and a resulting water crisis. 

Thousands of gallons of a coal-cleaning agent leaked from a Freedom Industries storage tank into the Elk River in January 2014, leaving 300,000 people without water for nine days.

News outlets report that more than 65 concerned residents attended the Public Service Commission’s meeting Tuesday to urge the commission to not give in to persistent water company requests to narrow the scope of the PSC investigation. Residents want commissioners to examine how well West Virginia American Water prepared for such an event and how water company officials responded once the leak occurred.

About two dozen West Virginia American Water employees attended the hearing, but none spoke.

Testimony Begins in Water Company, Spill Investigation

A former Putnam County Public Service District employee says West Virginia American Water Company should have closed its intake at the Kanawha Valley plant after the Freedom Industries chemical spill three years ago.

Former South Putnam Public Service District general manager Fred Stottlemyer testified Thursday before the state Public Service Commission as part of the investigation into the handling of the January 2014 chemical leak.

Stottlemeyer testified the company didn’t close its intake because it hadn’t been producing treated water up to the plant’s capacity in the days before the spill. If production had been higher, he said, the company could have shut down its intake pipes to let the worst of the Freedom spill pass.

Testimony will resume Jan. 24.

State Officials Schedule Hearing in Water Crisis Probe

The West Virginia Public Service Commission has scheduled a formal evidentiary hearing as part of its investigation of a chemical spill that contaminated the drinking water of 300,000 people.

 

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports the hearing is scheduled for Jan. 24-26 at the commission’s headquarters in Charleston. The commission also scheduled two hearings to take public comment on Jan. 17 at 1:30 p.m. and 6 p.m.

 

The hearings are part of a general investigation of how West Virginia American Water Co. handled a water crisis stemming from a 2014 chemical spill at Freedom Industries.

 

Specifically, commissioners want to know if the company’s actions constituted “unreasonable or inadequate practices, acts or services” as defined by state law.

 

The commission could order the company to fix any problems it finds.

Trial Over 2014 Chemical Spill Set to Begin

Jury selection begins Tuesday in Charleston in the class-action lawsuit against a chemical company and a water utility. 

The trial over a 2014 chemical spill that resulted in the contamination of more than 300,000 people’s drinking water is set to begin this week. 

Tuesday, attorneys on both sides will appear before Judge John Copenhaver in U.S. Federal District Court to begin selecting the 12 person jury.

Hundreds of area businesses impacted by the chemical spill into the Elk River are suing Eastman Chemical and West Virginia American Water over the incident.

Eastman produces the coal cleaning chemical MCHM which was leaked into the water supply resulting in a do not use order. West Virginia American Water is the water utility that provides service to the impacted 9 county area.

The businesses allege the utility did not properly prepare to respond to the Jan. 9, 2014, incident and that Eastman did not properly warn Freedom Industries, the company storing MCHM mixed with other chemicals about a mile upstream of the public drinking water intake, about the chemical’s safety concerns.

Lawyers on both sides are reportedly still negotiating a settlement.

Judge: Utility Not Responsible in Wages Lost in Water Crisis

A judge has ruled against local workers who sued a water company to recoup wages lost during a January 2014 chemical spill.The Charleston Gazette-Mail…

A judge has ruled against local workers who sued a water company to recoup wages lost during a January 2014 chemical spill.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reports U.S. District Judge John Copenhaver in Charleston granted West Virginia American Water’s motion to dismiss those claims. The judge denied a similar motion by Eastman Chemical, the producer of the spilled chemical.

 

It was one of several rulings issued in the class-action lawsuit against the water company and Eastman by residents, businesses and workers who were ordered not to use contaminated water. A trial begins Oct. 25.

 

The lawsuit alleges the water company was unprepared for the Freedom Industries spill that spurred a do-not-use order on tap water for 300,000 people for days.

 

It claims Eastman didn’t advise Freedom of the chemical’s dangers.

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