Weird Ailments, Toxic Water, Dismissive Officials—and No, This Isn't Flint
The environmental justice disaster you've never heard of.
By Julia
Lurie
TThe
aftermath of the 2008 Kingston Fossil Plant spill in Tennessee—the
worst coal ash spill in US history Dot
Griffith/Appalachian Voices
29
February, 2016
Earlier
this month, Esther Calhoun stood before the US Commission on Civil
Rights in Washington, DC, describing some
of the unlikely ailments that have been plaguing her and her
neighbors these past few years. "I am only 51 years old and I
have neuropathy," she said. "The neurologist said that it
may be caused by lead, and it is not going to get better."
This
is not a
story about contaminated water in
Flint, Michigan. Calhoun, who lives in Uniontown, Alabama, was
talking about coal ash—a toxic byproduct of burning coal that has
quietly become one of America's worst environmental justice problems.
The ashes are typically laden with arsenic, lead, mercury, and other
toxins, and multiple studies have
found that the waste tends to be stored in low-income, minority
communities. In Uniontown, where 90 percent of residents are black
and about half live below the poverty line, an uncovered coal ash
landfill sits "directly across the street from peoples' homes,
and from yards in which their kids play," says Marianne
Engelman-Lado, an attorney with the environmental nonprofit
Earthjustice.
Coal
is slowly on the way out in the United States, but our existing
coal-fired power plants still generate roughly 130
million tons of
coal ash each year. That's more than 800 pounds for every man, woman,
and child in America. The regulations on disposal of coal ash are
weak, to say the least, making the experiences of Calhoun and her
neighbors far from unique. Here's a quick primer to get you up to
date on an environmental nightmare that shows no signs of going way.
Wait,
wasn't there some big coal ash disaster fairly recently? Yep.
Coal ash made national headlines in December 2008, when a dam at the
TVA Kingston Fossil Plant in Tennessee ruptured, releasing more
than 1
billion gallons of
toxic coal ash slurry onto the surrounding 300 acres. A wave
of sludge destroyed
homes, inundated ponds and streams, and formed "ash bergs"—heaps
that floated down the nearby Emory River. Tests of local waterways
after the breach turned up arsenic, a human carcinogen, at 149 times
the level deemed safe for drinking water. Four million tons of ash
were recovered and carted to an uncovered
landfill in Uniontown,
where Calhoun and others continue to feel its effects. There have
been other recent spills, too, including a 2011
breach that
contaminated Lake Michigan and a 2013 spill into
North Carolina's Dan River.
Coal
ash from the Kingston Fossil Plant spill is loaded onto train cars.
Four million tons of it was hauled to Uniontown, Alabama. Wade
Payne/AP
Dot
Griffith/Appalachian Voices
Is
my neighborhood contaminated? There
are more than 1,000 active ash landfills and ponds around the
country, not to mention hundreds of "retired" sites and
about 200
locations where
spills are known to have contaminated the surrounding water and air.
The EPA has found that low-income, minority communities are
disproportionately affected—1.5 million people of color live within
the catchment zone of a coal ash storage facility. Earthjustice
created the map of contamination sites below, with the caveat that
the sites it depicts are "likely to be only a small percentage
of the nation's coal-ash-contaminated sites in the United States.
Most coal ash landfills and ponds do not conduct monitoring, so the
majority of water contamination goes undetected." (This map is
best viewed on a computer, not a mobile device.)
Is there a solution? "This is a relatively easy problem to solve," notes Lisa Evans, a senior lawyer for Earthjustice. "We've always known how to dispose of coal ash." The tried-and-true EPA method consists of placing the dry ash into an enclosed, secure (lined) landfill so that it can't leach into the soil or escape into the air. Of course, this costs more than simply dumping the stuff into open ponds or landfills next to the power plant, particularly since it sometimes involves moving the coal ash to hazardous waste facilities off-site. But the human cost of improper disposal is far greater. As Evans puts it, "You have a lot of people hurt, and a lot of environmental damage for pennies on the dollar."
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