Jefferson County Woman Walks 70 Miles Across Denmark To Protest Rockwool

Residents in the Eastern Panhandle continue to protest Denmark-based, stone wool manufacturing facility, Rockwool. For more than a year now, hundreds of residents still rally at commission and town council meetings in Jefferson County and at the Rockwool construction site – in an effort to stop the plant from being built.

Recently, a Shepherdstown resident traveled to Denmark to walk 70 miles from Kalundborg to Copenhagen to protest the facility.

 

Tracy Danzey is a mother of an 8-year-old and a registered nurse. She’s also the president of the anti-Rockwool group, Resist Rockwool. A few years ago, one of her legs had to be amputated after contracting a rare form of bone cancer, which she said was caused by pollution from heavy industry in her former home of Parkersburg, West Virginia.

 

 

Credit Emily Vaughn
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Shepherdstown resident Tracy Danzey in Denmark.

West Virginia Public Broadcasting spoke with Danzey via Skype, just before she finished her 11-day walk over the weekend.

 

“I am walking in the American tradition of marching for justice,” Danzey said in the interview. “My experience of being poisoned by industry is a huge motivator. As a nurse, my focus is often on health and the health of the community around me.”

 

West Virginia Public Broadcasting reached out to Rockwool for comment. Rockwool spokesperson Michael Zarin emailed a statement stating Rockwool invited Danzey to their headquarters in Denmark. He said the Danish factory uses the same core technology that will be used in Jefferson County.

 

“It is unfortunate that Tracy Danzey did not accept our invitation to visit the ROCKWOOL factory in northern Denmark or meet with us at our headquarters,” Zarin said via email. “The Danish factory uses the same core technology as will be used in Jefferson County. This would have been a prime opportunity for Ms. Danzey to see first-hand a similar facility in operation.”

 

Danzey did not accept that invitation, but instead invited Rockwool to visit Jefferson County to address community concerns.

 

“I came here to speak with the Danish people,” Danzey said via text message to West Virginia Public Broadcasting. “Rockwool has had over a year to reach out and be willing to chat, and they have consistently been unavailable and dishonest to our citizenry and representation. Additionally, though I can speak to the health concerns as a nurse, and the potential violation of the industry from a personal health standpoint, I would not feel comfortable touring a facility and representing my community in this way alone. I am not an industrial specialist and would have to depend on what I was being told. [Rockwool] has been so dishonest with our community that it would only be proper that some of our community’s own specialists attend these tours and meetings with me.”

 

Rockwool in Ranson, Jefferson County is expected to offer 150 new jobs and be completed by mid-2020, according to Rockwool’s North American President Trent Ogilvie.

 

The facility would feature two, 21-story smokestacks releasing a range of chemicals and will be located just a few miles from four public schools.

 

Residents are concerned about the potential health and environmental risks to the area. Rockwool states their technology is state of the art and that air quality is a top priority.

 

“Air quality is one of our top priorities & primary reason for constructing tall stacks in Ranson,” Rockwool said on their Twitter page on Aug. 3, 2018. “Tall stacks improve the dispersion of the steam plume and thus reduce particulate and other matter that might reach people on the ground.”

 

Since the facility broke ground in June 2018, there have been several pending lawsuits filed from opposition groups, rallies and an overall division within communities in the Eastern Panhandle.

Rockwool Reaches Out to Jefferson County Residents Through Community Open Houses

There’s been contention in recent weeks in Jefferson County between thousands of residents and a new manufacturing plant being built called Rockwool. In response to the pushback, the Denmark-based company has scheduled community open houses through Saturday to engage with community members.

Rockwool is a European-based company that makes stone wool insulation. The product is made from basalt rock and recycled slag and is fire and water resistant. The facility in Ranson, Jefferson County is the second the company has built in the U.S., and it’ll offer 150 jobs.

But thousands in the community are upset. The plant will feature two smokestacks and will be located just a few miles from four public schools.

Rockwool held the first of four community open houses Thursday at the Jefferson County Community Center in Shenandoah Junction.

Rockwool’s North American President Trent Ogilvie said he hopes to connect with residents to allay their fears.

“What we didn’t do enough of is engage with everybody,” Ogilvie said. “We missed a part of this community in our communication and didn’t answer their questions well enough. We want to get everybody’s questions, get the facts, and try to earn people’s trust.”

Rockwool filed for its Air Quality Permit with the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection last year and was approved in April.

But residents are still concerned about the impact on air quality.

Ogilvie said the Ranson plant will feature air monitoring stations around the facility with publicly available data. He also hopes to foster better communication between Rockwool and Jefferson County beyond the open houses.

“We’re forming a stakeholder group of eighteen, a cross-section of the community,” he said. “Eighteen people that will meet every month, advise us, [and] tell us concerns they’re hearing. It won’t end after the factory starts either. We’ll always have a really enhanced community relations program.”

There will be three more Rockwool community open houses located at:

Jefferson County Community Center, 235 Sam Michals Rd, Shenandoah Junction, W.Va.

Friday, August 24:

  • 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.
  • 5:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.

Saturday, August 25:

  • 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m.

A rally against the plant is also scheduled for Saturday morning at 10:00 outside the Jefferson County Community Center.

Ground Broken for West Virginia Insulation Production Plant

A stone wool insulation producer has broken ground on a $150 million manufacturing facility in West Virginia.

Rockwool North America held a ceremony Tuesday in Ranson. The company says in a news release the 460,000-square-foot facility will employ about 150 people. Production is expected to start in early 2020.

Rockwool has production facilities in Byhalia, Mississippi; Milton, Ontario, and Grand Forks, British Columbia. Stone wool is a fiber-based insulation produced from natural stone and recycled content.

International Insulation Plant to Be Built in Jefferson County

A new manufacturing plant will set up shop in the Eastern Panhandle. Gov. Jim Justice announced it will create up to 150 new jobs in the state.

The new plant will produce stone wool insulation. This type of product is used in buildings, industrial applications, and in acoustic ceilings.

The plant will be built by ROXUL Inc. – a group based out of Denmark. ROXUL is part of the ROCKWOOL Group, which is the largest producer of stone wool insulation in North America.

The new plant will be based in Ranson in Jefferson County, on an estimated 130 acres on the Jefferson Orchards site. The plant will be the second facility ROXUL has opened in the United States.

It has manufacturing sites in Marshall County, Mississippi, as well as Milton, Ontario and Grand Forks, British Columbia in Canada.

ROXUL estimates the West Virginia project will cost around $150 million to build.

A groundbreaking ceremony will be held in October 2017, and construction is expected to be completed by early 2020.

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