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Senate, House bills would prevent EPA from ever setting federal safeguards for toxic coal ash

ASHEVILLE – The Congressional Research Service has issued an analysis of two pending pieces of coal ash legislation—H.R. 2273 and S.3512—finding that the bills lack a clear purpose and would not ensure state adoption and implementation of standards “necessary to protect human health and the environment.”

These bills—one passed by the House of Representatives in October 2011 and the other now pending in the Senate—would prevent the EPA from ever setting federally enforceable safeguards for the disposal of toxic coal ash.

A copy of the report can be found by clicking HERE.

Just days before the fourth anniversary of the devastating billion-gallon coal ash spill in Kingston, Tenn., that damaged and destroyed dozens of homes, the report concludes that both bills:

• Give states the discretion to implement coal ash permit programs that are less stringent than the programs applicable to household waste landfills;
• Have a “level of uncertainty [that] defeats the purpose of a permit program and would not be consistent with other programs under RCRA.”
• Provide “no federal backstop authority to implement federal standards comparable to its authorities established under other environmental law, including RCRA.”
• Create a program without “detailed regulatory standards, [which is] unprecedented in federal environmental law.”
• Lack a clear “standard of protection” to guarantee that state programs actually protect human health and the environment, which is “unique among all federal environmental law.”

Furthermore, the report questions the reason for creating a program that fails to address the risks posed by both dry and wet disposal of coal ash stating, “Absent the creation of standards applicable to CCR [Coal Combustion Residuals] landfills and surface impoundments that address risks specifically associated with CCR disposal, the purpose of creating a CCR permit program is not clear.”

“The Congressional Research Service has confirmed what we already know,” WNCA’s French Broad Riverkeeper Hartwell Carson said. “This bill takes North Carolina backwards and does nothing to protect the French Broad River from toxic coal ash.”

The Senate bill—the so-called “Coal Ash Recycling Act of 2012,” (S.3512)—blocks an EPA rulemaking that would prevent spills and water contamination at hundreds of coal ash sites across the country. More than 200 sites have already contaminated nearby rivers, lakes, streams, or aquifers with dangerous pollutants like arsenic, lead, selenium and more. Introduced earlier this year, rumors abound that S.3512 could be attached to unrelated must-pass legislation at any time, the result of intense lobbying from the coal and power industries.

Millions of tons of coal ash are currently stored in immense earthen dams. The report states that a structural failure “could result in a catastrophic release of coal ash slurry.”

Due to the unique risks posed by coal ash ponds, the EPA proposed that dangerous surface impoundments be subjected to design and inspection requirements similar to those established by the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA).

Although the CRS report states that the “potential for structural failure could be minimized by various means, including ensuring that the units meet certain design standards and are inspected regularly,” the report notes that these requirements are absent from the House and Senate bills. This absence is critical, as the report also notes the “majority of states” do not have “siting controls, inspection, or structural integrity requirements for surface impoundments—requirements necessary to minimize the potential of a structural failure.”