| FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE: January 27, 2005
CONTACTS:
- Alan Banks, Kentucky Riverkeeper, (859) 622-1622, alan.banks@eku.edu
- Teri Blanton, Kentuckians For The Commonwealth, (859) 986-1648,
tblanton@mis.net
- Judith Petersen, Kentucky Waterways Alliance, (270) 524-1774,
director@KWAlliance.org
Kentucky Groups Sue U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
for Permitting Coal Companies to Destroy More Than 35 Miles of Kentucky
Streams
“Streamlined” Permit
Violates Clean Water Act, groups say
LEXINGTON (January 27, 2005) – The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
is illegally allowing the destruction of Kentucky streams under
tons of coal mining waste, according to a lawsuit filed today by
three Kentucky environmental and citizen organizations.
“In the last three years, the Corps has rubber-stamped more than
50 permits for 191 valley fills that will destroy more than 35 miles
of Kentucky’s streams,” said Teri Blanton of Kentuckians For The
Commonwealth. “This is an absurd and outrageous abuse of their power
and neglect of their duty to protect the nation’s waterways.”
The groups--Kentucky Riverkeeper, Kentuckians For The Commonwealth
(KFTC), Kentucky Waterways Alliance (KWA)--charge that the Corps'
use of a Nationwide Permit 21 (NWP 21) for valley fills violates
the federal Clean Water Act.
“The NWP 21 program was meant for activities that have only minimal
adverse environmental effects, both individually and cumulatively,”
said Alan Banks, president of the Kentucky Riverkeeper board in
Richmond, Kentucky.
The groups are challenging 54 NWP permits issued in the last three
years by the Corps “for mining operations with valley fills.” Instead,
they want the Corps to apply another section of the Clean Water
Act that calls for “individual” permits which considers site-specific
environmental impacts on the stream and watershed and provides an
opportunity for public comment.
The valley fills cited in the suit are located in the Cumberland,
Kentucky, Big Sandy and Licking River watersheds.
“Since 1992, the Corps has used NWP 21 to allow ‘Big Coal’ to
bury more than 1,200 miles of headwater streams throughout Appalachia,”
added Banks. “The Corps has also buried the truth by calling this
major environmental disaster a cumulatively minimal impact.”
Valley fills bury streams with sediment and rock. This “fill” smothers
aquatic life, and filling headwater streams with sediment can harm
aquatic habitat downstream. Therefore, sediment is considered a
pollutant requiring a discharge permit under the Clean Water Act.
“Coal mining and valley fills bury more streams than any other
activity in the country,” said Judith Petersen, KWA’s Executive
Director. “Valley fills bury streams under tens of thousands of
tons of waste rock, dirt and sediment, killing all aquatic life
below and affecting water quality downstream.”
“We are asking the court to declare that the Corps’ use of NWP
21 in Kentucky is illegal and to block the Corps from using NWP
21 to authorize any new valley fills in Kentucky,” said Amanda Moore
of the Appalachian Citizens Law Center based in Prestonsburg, Kentucky.
In a similar suit in a different jurisdiction, the Corps of Engineers
was enjoined from issuing permits under NWP 21 for valley fills
in West Virginia. The West Virginia decision, however, does not
apply to Kentucky valley fills, and hence the lawsuit in Kentucky.
“Last July, a West Virginia federal judge decided that the Corps’
use of this same general permit for coal mining valley fills in
southern West Virginia was illegal,” said Jim Hecker, Environmental
Enforcement Director for Trial Lawyers for Public Justice. “This
case applies the same legal principle to Kentucky.”
The groups do not intend to stop coal mining, but do demand that
the Corps and the coal companies comply with the law. “Valley fills
are so damaging that the Corps must use individual permits, not
NWP 21. Individual permits under the Clean Water Act can only be
issued after careful scientific review and public comment, which
the Corps has evaded by using NWP 21,” said Joe Lovett, Executive
Director of the Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment
(ACEE).
“It is totally unnecessary for the coal industry to destroy our
streams in order to mine coal. The coal industry is flaunting the
law, and the Corps of Engineers has been a willing partner in this
crime,” added KFTC’s Blanton. “For the sake of Kentucky's future,
we need to put an immediate end to practice.”
The plaintiffs are represented by Joe Lovett, Appalachian Center
for the Economy and the Environment; Brent Bowker and Amanda Moore,
the Appalachian Citizens Law Center; Jim Hecker, Trial Lawyers for
Public Justice; and Joe Childers, Esq.
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Resources:
Legal Representatives:
- Joe Childers, Attorney, Lexington, Kentucky (859) 253-9824,
childerslaw@yahoo.com
- Brent Bowker and Amanda Moore, Appalachian Citizens Law Center,
(606) 886-1442,brent@appalachianlawcenter.org, amanda@appalachianlawcenter.org
- Jim Hecker, Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, (202) 797-8600,
JHECKER@TLPJ.ORG
- Joe Lovett, Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment,
(304) 645-9006,jlovett@appalachian-center.org
A copy of the complaint in Kentucy Riverkeeper
et.al. v. Rowlette is available online at www.tlpj.org,
together with a map showing the locations of the permitted mines
that are being challenged in the case.
The West Virginia court decision in Ohio Valley
Environmental Coalition v. Bulen is available at http://www.wvsd.uscourts.gov/district/opinions/pdf/BULEN_FINAL.pdf.
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