Thursday, March 11, 2010

Act NOW! Proposed Louisville Coal Ash Pond Threatens Your Health and Water Share

Act NOW! Proposed Louisville Coal Ash Pond Threatens Your Health and Water Share

5.7 Million Cubic Yards of Hazardous Coal Ash May Be Dumped At E.ON’s Cane Run Coal-Burning Power Plant. Action needed by March 13th!

Problem

E.ON’s Cane Run Power Station has applied for a Section 404 permit through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to add a 60-acre coal combustion waste (CCW) landfill adjacent to the power plant.

The current CCW pond on-site at the Cane Run Power Station is one of 44 classified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as “high hazard” – meaning that a spill would result in significant damage or loss of life.

CCW is the solid waste left over from burning coal. CCW is a combination of waste from the coal plant’s air filters and the residue from coal boilers. The ashy part of the waste, called coal ash, contains concentrated pollutants, including many toxins known to cause cancer in humans.

The proposed permit would:

# allow 5.7 million cubic yards of CCW, which contains toxins known to be hazardous to human health, to be dumped on site. The U.S. EPA states that 1 in 50 adults and 1 in 100 children that live near CCW storage sites are at risk of developing cancer

# allow more than 3,000 feet of ephemeral and intermittent streams and 8 wetland areas to be filled

# allow use of an inferior containment liner that deteriorate over time, likely resulting in toxic chemicals leaching into groundwater

# ignore restoration requirements for 5 of the wetlands and require only minimal restoration for the other 3

# allow this waste to be dumped on land located at the end of the Ohio River floodwall, clearly in the river’s flood plain putting residents downstream at risk


--Find out more about the impacts coal ash can have on your community and health here.

--Louisville District Corps of Engineers Public Notice No. LRL-2010-35 is available for viewing here.

Cane Run Rd. Coal plant. (photo from Courier-Journal website)


Solution

Let the Army Corps of Engineers know that you oppose this permit!

**Please take action by March 13, 2010 deadline**

Action Needed:
Send an email requesting that the Army Corps deny this permit to:

lrl.regulatorypubliccomment@usace.army.mil

Put the permit # LRL 2010-35-mdh as the subject. Provide your physical mailing address and telephone number.

OR write to:

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Louisville
Romano Mazzoli Federal Building
600 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Place
Louisville, KY 40202

A SAMPLE LETTER

Please deny E.ON’s request for a permit to expand Cane Run Power Station’s CCW landfill

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Louisville
Romano Mazzoli Federal Building
600 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Place
Louisville, KY 40202

March 13, 2010

To Whom It May Concern:

Please support clean air and the health of Kentuckians by denying E.ON’s permit request to expand the Cane Run Power Station’s coal combustion waste landfill. Coal ash exposure puts our health at risk. The EPA estimates that up to 1 in 50 nearby residents could get cancer from exposure to contaminants in poorly stored coal ash. Other health effects may include damage to vital organs and the central nervous system, especially in children.

This permit is problematic for several reasons:

· The dump will not be properly contained, putting nearby residents and families at risk of health hazards and death.

· The permit allows over 3,000 feet of ephemeral and intermittent streams and 8 wetlands to be filled with 5.7 million cubic yards of coal combustion waste.

· Minimal restoration requirements for destroyed wetlands.

· The land selected for this expansion is not an extension of the existing landfill and is right outside the end of the Ohio River floodwall in the flood plain putting residents downstream at risk.

The Cane Run plant’s current coal ash pond already puts nearby residents at risk of death and serious health impacts. Enough is enough. Help Louisville lead the way toward better environmental standards. E.ON can invest in energy efficiency, weatherization, and renewable energies to reduce and eliminate the need for hazardous expansions like this permit request.

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