Volunteers, West Virginia DEP Remove More Than 1,000 Tires From Tug Fork River In Williamson

For as long as he can recall, Williamson resident John Burchett said that when you looked over the U.S. Highway 119 Bridge leading to Kentucky, all you’d see on the Tug Fork River were tires. 

“For tire businesses, individuals, the river was easiest way to get rid of things,” said Burchett, also a local part-time firefighter. “And unfortunately, that’s what people did, and we’re paying the price now.”

While a growing number of communities along the river are increasingly touting the waterway as a draw for outdoor recreation, there’s still a lot of work to be done to make sure it’s clean and safe.

Last week, Burchett was one of several local volunteers behind the Williamson PK-8 school, where there’s an access point to the river, half a mile down from the bridge.

With help from the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection and its Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan (REAP), the volunteers removed more than 1,600 tires from a couple 100 yards of river over three days. 

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Volunteers and state workers joined forces to remove more than 1,000 tires from a few hundred yards of the Tug Fork River in Williamson on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019.

According to REAP staff, the state has helped other river communities with tire clean-up projects, including those along the Coal and Elk rivers. The tires they remove go to the West Virginia Tire Disposal waste monofill in Summersville, a landfill exclusively for old tires. 

The organization’s website states it will hold on to the tires they can be recycled. 

“You know, if we’re going to be serious about tourism, growing that industry and helping our environment, this is what you have to do,” said Williamson Mayor Charles Hatfield. He was one of about eight volunteers present Monday morning, in addition to DEP employees and contracted workers, paid for by the DEP.

Other participants included Glen Allen Daugherty of Woodman, Kentucky, another Tug Fork River town about 30 miles downstream from Williamson. 

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Last Summer, Glen Daugherty kayaked nearly the entire length of the Tug Fork River in eight days with his son. Their journey, shared via pictures on a Facebook group for the river, garnered attention for the waterway’s recreational opportunities.

Last summer, Daugherty — who says his friends call him Grizzly Allen — and his son kayaked nearly the entire length of the Tug Fork River, from Welch, McDowell County to Louisa in Kentucky. 

“We had to pull the kayak, and we had about 150 pounds of gear, a little tent one-man tent and a one-man sleeping shelter,” Daugherty recalled. “And we went to survive, on our own, catching fish, eating ramen, camp.”

All the while, Daugherty was posting pictures of their journey to the Friends of the Tug Fork River Facebook group, which attracted attention to their trip. He said people began joining them, bought them food and let them sleep in local schools. 

“It’s such a beautiful river, and there’s so much good fishing and stuff on it, and we don’t have to drive very far to enjoy it,” Daugherty said. 

Daugherty said he’s showed up to help pick up tires in Williamson, to show support for the river and its future as a recreational waterway. 

“I just wish we would have more people that would get involved in these events,” Daugherty said. “And I would like to see it spread from town to town and in between, because what’s here in six months will be down there.”

Creating A ‘Wide Open’ And ‘Unimpeded’ River

Mayor Hatfield said the town is also looking forward to building a spillway around a low head dam upstream from town that is used for the city’s water intake. 

Credit Emily Allen / West Virginia Public Broadcasting
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West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Williamson Mayor Charles Hatfield helped remove tires from the Tug Fork River on Monday, Sept. 30, 2019.

That will allow the more than 150-mile river to flow unimpeded, an important factor for growing river-based recreation. The spillway could also alleviate dangerous conditions that can occur near the dam. 

According to Hatfield, the dam’s only about five feet tall, but as water flows over it, it can reach about 10 feet on the other side, creating conditions that can be fatal.

“If you go over the dam and get caught … it will not let you escape,” said Burchett, the part-time firefighter. “It rolls you, until you’re just out of breath.”

With a grant from the National Coal Heritage Area Authority, Williamson has created a construction plan for the spillway. 

The city is also applying for construction funds from the DEP’s program for Economic Development of Abandoned Mine Lands.

“If we can get the construction money from that grant, to do this, then this river, all 159 miles of it, will be wide open, unimpeded for recreational navigation,” Burchett said. 

Volunteers are scheduled to go out for a final day for tire removals on Wednesday, Oct. 2. Burchett said volunteers will gather behind the Williamson PK-8 school around 9 a.m.

Emily Allen is a Report for America corps member.

W.Va. DEP Accepting Applications for Abandoned Mine Land Grants

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection’s Office of Abandoned Mine Lands and Reclamation is accepting applications for grant funding to redevelop abandoned mine lands through July 1, 2019.

 

The agency says $25 million in grant funding is available through the U.S. Department of Interior’s Office of Surface Mining, Reclamation and Enforcement for economic development projects on abandoned mine lands across the state.

Projects must be located on or adjacent to mine sites that ceased operations prior to August 1977.

According to a press release, since 2016, 28 projects in 13 West Virginia counties have received $80 million in grant funding.

The grant application and more information can be found online on the WVDEP’s website.

WVDEP to Hold Public Meeting on Water Quality Standards

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection is holding a public meeting Tuesday to collect and share information about the revision of human health criteria in the state’s water quality standards.

The meeting will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Tuesday, May 14 at DEP’s headquarters in Charleston in the Coopers Rock Training Room.

 

According to the agenda, the purpose of the meeting is for agency officials to present information, answer questions and take public input about the revision of human health criteria in the water quality standards.

The rules govern pollution discharge into the state’s streams and rivers.

DEP’s proposed updates to the state’s water quality standards sparked controversy during the 2019 legislative session.

After more than a year of public comment and deliberation, the agency last summer proposed updating standards for 60 pollutants in line with 2015 suggestions by the U.S. EPA.

After much debate, the Legislature ultimately adopted a bill that contained no changes to the water standards. The move was supported by many of the state’s manufacturers.  

Earth Day Program Scheduled Next Month in West Virginia

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection is having an Earth Day celebration next month.

The event is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. April 23 at the Clay Center for the Arts and Sciences of West Virginia in Charleston.

The program is being produced by the agency’s Rehabilitation Environmental Action Plan Make-It-Shine Program.

Educational displays and activities promoting Earth Day and environmental matters will be available to individuals and school groups. Federal, state and local agencies as well as environmental groups will be among the exhibitors.

More than 300 students are expected to attend. To register a school group to attend or for more information, contact Travis Cooper at (304) 926-0499 extension 1117, or by email at Travis.L.Cooper@wv.gov.

Despite Little New Data, DEP Continues Review of Water Quality Standards

A public meeting to gather additional information that may affect an embattled regulation to limit pollution discharged into the state’s rivers and streams yielded little new data, but prompted concerns by environmental advocates that the state agency tasked with protecting human health and the environment is prepared to side with industry.

 

About two dozen people — from environmental groups to industry representatives to concerned citizens — attended the listening session at West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection headquarters in Charleston Thursday, Jan. 17.

After a years-long public process to update the state’s water quality standards — rules federally mandated under the Clean Water Act —  DEP was tasked by the Legislative Rulemaking Review Committee in November to gather more state-specific data that could affect the pollution limits set in the regulation.  

At the meeting, the committee voted to remove DEP’s recommendations to update standards for 60 pollutants known to have human health effects. That decision came after hearing from the West Virginia Manufacturers Association that its members had concerns over the updated rule.

However, by the conclusion of the two-hour listening session Thursday, DEP officials said they had only received one piece of new information to consider: comments by a public health researcher that urged the agency to select the most protective pollution limits.

No new data or analysis was presented that could be used to fundamentally change the way the agency calculated the water quality standards suggested in the regulation. When asked, DEP officials would not commit to standing by their recommendations to the Legislature.

“I can’t really say today exactly what we’re going to do because we just have started to listen to you all one more time,” said Laura Cooper, assistant director of water and waste management for DEP and one of the architects of the regulation. “I don’t know what the decision will be.”

 

A Process ‘Stalled’?

 

Credit Brittany Patterson / WVPB
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WVPB
About two dozen people attended a public listening session about the water quality standards at DEP headquarters Thursday Jan. 17.

 

Environmental advocates and some citizens in attendance expressed bewilderment that the agency would not stand up for its own recommendations, which took more than a year to craft and did factor in a 2008 study that showed West Virginians eat less fish than the national average.  

“On its face, it appears that the DEP, a state agency serving the people of West Virginia whose task is to protect public health and the environment is being complicit in a tactic to stall these updates,” said Angie Rosser, executive director of the West Virginia Rivers Coalition.

The final proposal, which was released last summer, garnered hundreds of pages of public comment. The agency proposed adopting 56, of the 94 human health criteria updates the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency suggested in 2015. Two-thirds of the updates made it so less of certain chemicals could be discharged into rivers and streams and one-third loosened pollution levels.

Human health criteria represent specific levels of chemicals or conditions in a water body that are not expected to cause adverse effects to human health, according to the EPA.  States are encouraged to develop their own specific criteria and draw from things like how much fish residents consume, water consumption, body weight, and the level of risk to disease state regulators deem acceptable.

Rosser and others noted that DEP spent more than a year drafting the updated rule and the process included multiple public comment opportunities.

“Suddenly now, today, or November, we’re hearing from the Manufacturers Association that they’re just now starting their study of this, and that the DEP is saying, ‘well, manufacturers we’ll wait for your study. You show us what you got,’” Rosser continued. “When? A year from now, three years from now, 10 years from now? Like, how long is this process going to keep stalling while we’re living in the 1980s?”

Following a request by the West Virginia Manufacturers Association that DEP should consider more state-specific studies and data that might alter the levels by which exposure to pollution is safe, the Legislative Rulemaking Review Committee during a November Interim meeting removed the updated standards proposed by the agency and tasked DEP with gathering more data.

“From the beginning, from the time the Water Quality Standards were proposed, industry had asked that they be calculated in accordance with West Virginia-specific data,” Dave Yaussy, an attorney with the law firm Spilman, Thomas & Battle who represents the West Virginia Manufacturers Association, said at the public hearing.

Cooper, with DEP, pushed back against that assertion.

Credit Brittany Patterson / WVPB
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WVPB
Laura Cooper, assistant director Division of Water DEP.

“So EPA put out their recommendation criteria in August 2015. Just a few days later we had a water quality standards meeting at which we mentioned, first of all just FYI everybody, EPA recommended some new criteria a few days ago,” she said. “And in September 2017 we had a specific water quality standards public meeting that was all related to human health criteria where we went over the equations and all that and how they were calculated So, it’s been some time since then that we’ve had to look at them so far.”

At the meeting, Yaussy introduced environmental consultant Jennie Henthorn who had been been retained by the trade group to begin this work, described in highly technical terms.

Henthorn said she had “just started” to dig into the data within the last week and couldn’t yet say how long it might take.

“We want to review all of it, or at least all of it that’s relevant to our members to see if that would have an effect on what the criteria would end up being,” Yaussy said. “We’re not aware of any place in the state where drinking water is being affected as a result of any of these criteria, so we don’t see any danger to the public in allowing some time to do that study.”

Danger Unknown

Continuing to wait on that study’s completion did not sit well with many of the attendees.

“DEP should defend what they did in July and the whole process. It took so many years. It wasn’t just the one year it was input all through those years,” said Helen Gibbons with the League of Women Voters. “We shouldn’t just throw something out because one group doesn’t … or maybe more than one group .. doesn’t think West Virginia is up to snuff in putting these standards in our scheme of things.”

Rosser, with West Virginia Rivers Coalition, said if state adopts the non-updated regulations, there are three examples of water quality standards that allow more chemical pollutants into streams and rivers than current drinking water standards.

That’s important because in some parts of the state, especially along the Ohio River, rivers recharge aquifers that are drawn upon for drinking water.

“Generally we have that concern that if we don’t make these updates, we’re continuing to allow more chemicals in our drinking source water than [sic] we want in our consumable water,” she said.

Environmental groups and public health advocates also expressed concerns that DEP’s proposal to include 56 of EPA’s suggestested human health criteria was not as stringent as it could be.

In an emailed statement, West Virginia University Public Health Professor Michael McCawley said any exposure to cancer-causing carcinogenic pollutants — even at levels deemed safe by EPA — may be too high of a risk.

Concerns were also voiced about two additional changes that remain in the proposed water quality standard update. DEP changed the way it calculated permitted limits how much pollution could be discharged and it adopted language that would allow the “mixing zones” for multiple chemicals to overlap as long as it didn’t happen near public water supplies.

Both of those changes were mandated by the Legislature in a bill it passed in 2017, HB 2506, which was put forward by the West Virginia Manufacturers Association.  

The Senate Energy, Industry and Mining Committee is expected to take up the bill that contains the water quality standards Tuesday.

Rockwool Developers Cited for Violating Environmental Rules

Developers of a coal and gas-fired manufacturing plant that’s under construction in West Virginia have been cited by state regulators for violating environmental regulations.

The Charleston Gazette-Mail reported Thursday that the Danish company building the plant, Rockwool, received the citation last week from the state Department of Environmental Protection.

The inspector wrote in the notice of violation that the citation was a result of a September inspection at the Jefferson County site where a sink hole was found. The inspector also noted other issues, such as Rockwool violating the terms of its water pollution control permit by not implementing controls.

The vice president for group communications at Rockwool, Michael Zarin, says each of the noted issues was fixed, but the company wasn’t required to stop construction.

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