State Deadline Reached, Freedom Tanks Still on Site

A tank cluster that leaked chemicals into 300,000 West Virginians’ drinking water shows few signs that it’s on the brink of destruction.
 
Freedom Industries hit a state deadline Saturday to start scrapping its chemical storage headquarters. So far, crews have carved a small patch out of one tank to remove chemical remnants.

Department of Environmental Protection Secretary Randy Huffman said the order is both protective and symbolic.
 
Federal Chemical Safety Board officials said it’s unique to force a facility like Freedom to be torn down, since there was no major explosion or similar destruction at the plant.
 
Department of Environmental Protection spokesman Tom Aluise said there’s no firm timeline for knocking down the tanks. But the black licorice chemical smell will likely resurface.

W.Va. DEP Orders Fayette Co. Frack Waste Permit Revoked

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection has ordered a permit for an underground injection well in Fayette County to be revoked.

The DEP renewed the permit for a class two (UIC), or underground injection control disposal well owned by Danny Webb Construction on February 6.

The permit allows the company to accept fluids from oil and gas exploration, development drilling, and production fluids for another five years. 

Since then, the Rist Law Office in Fayetteville filed an appeal requesting the D.E.P. to reverse the permit.

Tom Rist is representing the Natural Resource Defense Council, the West Virginia Surface Owners’ Rights Organization, the Plateau Action Network and citizen Brad Keenan.

“I think this is very important especially for this area,” Rist said. “Fayetteville is near and dear to the hearts of a lot of people in West Virginia.” 

On March 4, the DEP issued an order to revoke the permit. In an email James Martin with the Office of Oil and Natural Gas said the office made the decision after the permit “received significant public interest.”

Martin went on to say, “Consequently, as we were verifying information associated with the issuance we discovered procedural issues regarding certain notices and felt that the prudent direction would be the revocation of the permit and a re-start of the process.”

The company’s original permit expired in October 2012, still the operator continued to collect waste.

Groups say that’s against state and federal law.

In a public hearing in June 2013, several residents and even former employers expressed their concerns about the site, especially the open above ground waste pits which the DEP admitted were at risk of leaking.

The DEP found that the pit above ground does not meet the minimum pit and impoundment standards. So when the DEP granted the underground (UIC) permit on February 6, the office ordered the pit shut down.

The Natural Resource Defense Council says the problem with this site in Fayette County is the same for fracking disposal systems across the country. Federal law that governs hazardous materials has a loophole for oild and gas waste, exempting it from regulation as hazardous waste. That exemption was created in 1980’s with the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act.

“These chemicals are toxic and radioactive,” Fayetteville resident Mary Rahall said. “They should be regulated just as the coal industry’s regulated there’s no reason in the world they shouldn’t be. I think it comes back to public health people should be more focused on public health instead of dollars.”

Studies have found dangerous levels of radioactive material in both solid and liquid waste streams from  ‘fracking’ sites, as well as alarming organic contaminants like benzene.

The NRDC is supporting the `CLEANER Act’ or the `Closing Loopholes and Ending Arbitrary and Needless Evasion of Regulations Act of 2013′ that would eliminate the loophole.

Rahall requested her county officials to enact an ordinance that would ban fracking waste. She was disappointed to receive a memo from the Fayette County prosecuting attorney’s office stating that the county has no authority to control matters that fall under federal or state laws. 

States across the country are continuing to adapt and choose directions for regulatory oversight. A recent article published in the Journal of Environmental Science and Technology examined how three states were developing with fracking policies.

Texas, a state with deep ties to the oil industry, is cited as having successfully created local ordinances while Pennsylvania is more prone to develop state policies. According to the article, Colorado’s policies falls somewhere in the middle.

The journal concludes that industry relationships and political climate along with sheer attention to the matter influence regulatory decisions.

Tom Rist says he plans to file another appeal because the language of the DEP’s new revocation order is somehow almost exactly like the granted permit allowing the operator to continue to collect waste unpermitted.

Danny Webb Construction did not immediately return our request for comment.

Manchin Proposes Ban on Zohydro

Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia has introduced a bill that would force the Food and Drug Administration to withdraw the heavily criticized painkiller Zohydro, which has sparked a national debate about the abuse of pain medications.
 
Zohydro is the first single-ingredient hydrocodone drug ever cleared for U.S. patients. The extended-release pill contains up to five times more of the narcotic hydrocodone than older combination pills, such as Vicodin.
 
Manchin and other lawmakers have argued that the drug could be easily abused without a tamper-proof formulation. His bill would also prohibit the FDA from approving similar medications without such abuse-resistant features.
 
The announcement comes just hours after the FDA’s commissioner testified in the Senate that Zohydro met the government’s standards for safety and efficacy.
 

Basketball Players, Fans Bring High Hopes and Water Bottles to Charleston

The four-day West Virginia Girls state basketball tournament began Wednesday and many athletes and fans say they came to Charleston anxious about taking showers and drinking tap water.

After reading about the city’s water issues since the Jan. 9 chemical  spill into the Elk River, which fouled the air with licorice-smelling water, those arriving from outside the spill zone are making their own decisions on bottled versus tap water at area hotels and restaurants.

Some have brought their own bottled water for drinking and brushing teeth, while others believe the problem is well in the past, as they prefer to focus on the moment — winning a championship.

The girls basketball finals are Saturday.

Gov. Tomblin Appeals FEMA Denial of Federal Assistance for Elk River Spill

Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin today appealed the decision by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) to deny West Virginia’s request for federal assistance and emergency protective measures in response to the January 9 Elk River chemical spill.

“No one could foresee the far reaching impact the Elk River chemical spill would have on the 300,000 West Virginians in the affected nine-county area.  It was an unprecedented disaster-and I believe it is of such severity and magnitude to warrant further public assistance,” said Tomblin Tuesday in a news release.

 

“The financial impact has been significant and certain aspects will continue to demand public assistance including ongoing testing, which will help provide much needed information to the scientific and public health communities. I strongly urge FEMA to reconsider its denial for federal assistance and emergency protective measures in West Virginia.” 

 

Gov. Tomblin requested FEMA modify the current federal Emergency Declaration on January 27, 2014.  FEMA denied the governor’s request on February 10, 2014.

 

As the current Emergency Declaration stands, public agencies that have made expenditures to distribute supplies and meet the needs of those in the affected areas are presently denied access to Category B Emergency Protective Measures funding.  A modification to the current declaration would allow eligible applicants in the affected counties to receive FEMA support, including reimbursement.

W.Va. Health Exchange Enrollment Surpasses 10,000

West Virginia continues to lag behind the rest of the country in the number of younger people enrolled in health insurance through the federal marketplace.
 
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services said as of March 1, 18 percent of those signed up through the federal exchange in West Virginia were ages 18 to 34. That’s only a slight improvement from a month earlier and ties West Virginia with Oregon for the lowest percent of signups from that age group. Arizona, Hawaii and Maine were at 19 percent.
 
Among all age groups, enrollment in West Virginia’s health insurance marketplace has risen to about 10,600.
 
Open enrollment in the marketplace and the state’s expanded Medicaid program began Oct. 1 and will continue through March 31.  
 

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