Wednesday, November 30, 2011

It's funny how statistics are just numbers, there is no emotional attachment. That is, unless a good friend becomes one. A nice gentleman that lives about 100 yards from the ash landfill @ Cane Run had a stroke 2 weeks ago. Nitrogen oxide (combustible particulates) I'm sure contributed to his medical issue. He just came home today and is happy to have gotten to the hospital in time, got the clot busting shot and rehabilitated quickly. But isn't it sad that because he lives near a power plant it is acceptable to our government that he has to breath dirtier air than the rest of Jefferson County. The government (ran by the corporations - the 1%), the politicians bought and paid for by the lobbyists deep pockets, have determined that coal ash needs to be protected from the people, not the other way around. We, the 99% need to step up now, before it's too late.

LG&E Fined up to $26,000 for Coal Ash Problems at Cane Run

LG&E Fined Up to $26,000 for Coal Ash Problems at Cane Run
by Erica Peterson on November 4, 2011

Louisville Metro Government has fined Louisville Gas and Electric for several violations surrounding equipment malfunctions at the company’s Cane Run Power Station.
In the Notice of Violation, the Air Pollution Control District fines the company $26,000, but notes the company could enter in a settlement with the district and undertake remedial action. If LG&E chooses that option, the settlement amount would be $19,500.

The APCD cites three specific violations—all surrounding excess emissions of coal ash at Cane Run. During six days in June, July and August, an equipment malfunction at the sludge processing plant sent clouds of dust into the air, causing a nuisance to neighbors. The district also found that the company failed to take reasonable measures to prevent the release of ash into the neighborhood on three dates in July, and failed to report excess emissions from the plant on four days in August.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

WFPL Series on Coal Ash Contamination at LG&E Cane Run Plant

The Coal Ash Series, In Full


Erica Peterson July 22, 2011| 

Coal ash series in full here
You can’t see the smokestacks of the Cane Run Power Station from Stephanie Hogan’s home, even though she lives a block away. And while the power plant isn’t visible, it’s still a looming presence in Hogan’s life.
“Oh, he breathes so bad, he sounds like Darth Vader.” Hogan shakes her head, and her two-year-old son Cody wheezes. “You ain’t even been running.”


Friday, April 29, 2011

LG&E Announce Possible Retirement of Coal Burning Power at Cane Run!! James Bruggers-CJ

LG&E Energy's Cane Run power plant

Possible closures at power plants

Cane Run, Louisville, LG&E. Began commercial operation in 1954. Three of six units already retired. Three remaining units, which began service in 1962, have a generating capacity of 563 megawatts. Plant burns 1.3 million tons of coal per year. 
Green River, Central City, KU. Began operation in 1950. Two units have a generating capacity of 163 megawatts. Burns about 400,000 tons of coal each year. 
Tyrone, Versailles, KU. Began operation in 1947. Three units. Two oil-burning units already retired and one coal 75-megawatt coal unit has been mothballed.

Neighbors of Cane Run plant worry about health impact of coal ash by James Bruggers-Courier Journal

Coal ash and scrubber sludge are combined at the landfill at the Cane Run power plant. The landfill is very close to many homes in the area. City has confirmed coal ash collected on at least one home, and more testing is to occur. LGE wants to expand the landfill. (Kylene Lloyd, The Courier-Journal) April 12, 2011
Coal ash and scrubber sludge are combined at the landfill at the Cane Run power plant. The landfill is very close to many homes in the area. City has confirmed coal ash collected on at least one home, and more testing is to occur. LGE wants to expand the landfill. (Kylene Lloyd, The Courier-Journal) April 12, 2011 / cj/cj

Mountains are leveled in Eastern Kentucky to produce coal, but one Louisville neighborhood has been watching a different kind of mountain grow — one made of waste from burning coal at a power plant.
“We call it Coal Mountain,” said Kathy Little, who has lived for 32 years in Claremore Acres, which is in the shadow of Louisville Gas & Electric Co.'s Cane Run power plant along the Ohio River.
When we first moved out here, you could look over and see Indiana,” she said. Now that view is blocked by the rising pile of coal ash and scrubber sludge — some 650,000 pounds of coal-burning waste in 2009 alone, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Toxics Release Inventory. “In drier times, you can see ash just blowing off the top.”
Some residents have been so concerned about the potential impact on health from the ash that they have been calling on state and local regulators to investigate their complaints. Testing by the Louisville Metro Air Pollution Control District has found evidence of ash in the neighborhood.
Given those concerns about the existing landfill, Little and many of her neighbors are worried about LG&E plans to build a new, 140-foot coal-burning waste landfill on 60 acres at the Cane Run plant.
LG&E, which still needs state Division of Waste Management and U.S. Army Corps of Engineers approval to proceed, has said the new landfill is needed because the existing one will run out of room in about three years. The company says the new landfill, like the existing one, will not harm residents.
Neighbors have their doubts.
“It's dirty and nasty,” said Debbie Walker, who lives on Cane Run Road directly across from the existing dump. While grass grows atop much of the dump, a large, black area in the front where new waste is placed remains uncovered.
The residents' concerns focus mostly on the potential hazards of coal-burning wastes, which contain a mixture of toxic metals and other compounds. They say it has blown onto their cars and homes, and gets into their windows.

Something in the air- LEO Article about Mrch 17 Clean Air Rally at Cane Run



 

March 23, 2011

Something in the air

New EPA air standards prompt rally, industry reaction
Less than a week after the Environmental Protection Agency issued new national mercury and toxic air regulations for power plants, roughly 30 residents of southwest Jefferson County — home to LG&E’s Cane Run Road coal-fired power plant and EPA-designated “high-hazard” coal ash pond — gathered to rally for cleaner air and protest the utility’s ongoing intention to build a new 5.7 million-square-foot ash landfill near low-income residential neighborhoods located there.

Monday, March 14, 2011

March 17th 5:00 Rally at LG&E Cane Run Plant for Clean Air and to Demand Kentcucky State Government Protect us from Coal Ash!!



News Advisory
3/13/2011

Contact:
Thomas Pearce, 502-489-4700, thomas.pearce@sierraclub.org
Kathy Little, 502-448-6333, kathy_little@insightbb.com


We Oppose the Proposed Coal Ash Expansion and Demand Clean Air!
Louisville and Cane Run Residents Support Clean Air, Call for State Protection from Coal Ash

“We support EPA Clean Air Protections, and call for the state of Kentucky to protect residents from toxic coal ash by passing House Bill 237” Kathy Little, Neighborhood resident
What: Louisville residents and Cane Run neighborhood activists will rally to support efforts to demand old coal burning power plants like the LG&E Cane Run Plant be required to protect residents from toxic emissions and the effects of dirty coal ash.
Who: Sierra Club and Louisville Residents for Power Plant Justice, http://caneruncoalplantjustice.blogspot.com/
Where: In front of the LG&E Plant at 5300 Cane Run Rd next to Nana’s Country Kitchen on the Riverwalk
When: March 17th 2011, Thursday, 5:00-7:00
Refreshments served at Nana’s
Debra Walker and her Granddaughter Lilly. Debra and her family deal with health issues from toxic coal everyday!

Thursday, March 10, 2011

PROPOSED COAL ASH LANDFILL IN WINCHESTER KY

I was invited to speak before a group of residents in Winchester that are facing a very real possibility of EKPC, a power company, buying 200 acres of land near their homes and putting a coal ash landfill right in the middle of this rolling pristine countryside. Nick Comer from the utility company was giving a "coal ash is good" speech and I am looking around the room. This is not something these residents were expecting, they work hard, as we all do, build their homes, have children, and now, a possibility of a coal ash landfill? I was asked to talk about my experience living right across the street from a coal ash landfill. The day to day reality. Here is what I said;

Hello, my name is Kathy Little, thank you for inviting me here to speak this afternoon. I'm a mom and a nana. I have lived in my house in Louisville KY immediately adjacent to the LG&E Cane Run power plant for the last 32 years. Within their confines, they have numerous ponds, one being high hazard, and the almost filled to capacity dry ash landfill, similar to the one proposed here. It's approximately 200 yards away from my home. LG&E is in the process of requesting approval of a permit to expand and build another dry ash landfill at another location on their property. I and others are presently fighting to keep that from happening. The plant is 45 years old with three working units.

Thirty two years ago the area that I live in was rural, green, with numerous farms surrounding modest homes. It has changed dramatically with the addition of the present dry ash landfill. The company has a history of numerous violations. Just last week, lab analysis confirmed fly ash on three seperate samples taken from my house by the APCD. This fugitive fly ash is everywhere, it is brown to black, gritty and if you open your windows a fine dust settles everywhere. Airborne fly ash is extremely dangerous with the primary components being silica and limestone which cause lung disease with prolonged exposure. Fly ash in water releases mercury, chromium and other heavy metals that cause a host of illnesses including cancer. Children are particulary vulnerable to mercury intoxication which may lead to impairment of the developing central nervous system as well as lung and kidney damage. Ingesting soil from areas on which fly ash has been applied or settled is the most common way of exposure for children. I have an 8 year old granddaughter that lives with us, we have permanent custody of her, she's a great kid, she sent me an email the other day, it said "I am bitiful, I am intalagint and I have intalagince" the spelling was a little off, but the message is good, she believes in herself. I feel helpless that I cannot protect her from this chronic exposure. Fly ash is not benign and it will impact you and your children if the ash landfill becomes a reality here. Many of my neighbors are ill or have been ill with heart disease, cancer, COPD, kidney disease. Many homes were on well water up until 7 years ago, including a family with an autistic son. His mother has not had her mercury levels checked, however, she is convinced that living so close to the landfill and drinking from an unprotected water source caused his developmental delay.

As you turn left off of Lower Hunters Trace on to Cane Run Road you cannot miss seeing the ash landfill, it is huge, megastories straight up and very wide. It feels as though we are at ground zero, the craterous look of it reminds me of the topography of the moon. Large gray, rocky and most of the time there is a misty look at the top. On windy days you can see the fly ash blowing off the top. LG&E is suppose to wet it down to help prevent this from happening but the reality is, they do not, that is, unless we complain, then they'll do it for a few weeks.

Our taxable property values are 20 to 30 percent less than the same house sitting somewhere else. The current economic plunge including home values have just made a bad situation worse.

As far as current regulation of the dry ash landfill, or for that matter the high hazard ash pond, there is very little. What can be done is being done. The present dry ash landfill is unlined and is leaching enough arsenic and other heavy metals into ground water at levels that are eligible to be federal damage cases. Their present Title V operating permit and NPDES water discharge permits expired in 2007, the APCD and The Division of Water are working very slowly to update these. Rep. Joni Jenkins has introduced HB237 to the state legislature that would require official Emergency Response Plans for existing coal ash impoundments. It is presently stuck in committee and is very unlikely to see the light of day due to corporate greed. This is a safety issue and the lack of an EAP puts many residents, many children in unnecessary danger. I am telling you this because you will have a great deal of difficulty with present regulations now in place.

Thanks again for allowing me to speak.

Best wishes Winchester, fight with all you have to prevent this beautiful land from being destroyed.

Monday, February 14, 2011

Tell Obama and the EPA We Need Clean Air Regulations to Protect Us From Coal Fired Power Plants


Sierra Club - Explore, enjoy and protect the planet

Coal asthma


Tell Obama and the EPA We Need Clean Air Regulations to Protect Our Communities From Power plants
Did you catch President Obama's State of the Union address?

The President discussed a bold plan that stresses American innovation to create clean energy jobs and put Americans back to work. We're excited about the President's forward vision - but Republicans are already looking to roll back environmental protections that will hurt our economy and make our families sick.  

I wish I were exaggerating, but just yesterday Newt Gingrich announced that the EPA should be abolished.1 Really.

Sign our petition to demand Obama stand up for our health against Republican attacks! 

The Sierra Club is launching a massive grassroots blizzard with powerful activities all across the country aimed at reminding the new Congress and Obama Administration that they need to keep standing up for the health and protection of our families, not Big Oil and Coal polluters.

Our first step is to to hand-deliver 100,000 signatures to the White House to stress that the nation's physical and economic well-being depends on passing and enforcing strong environmental standards to protect our health and our economy. Together, we can turn back the tide!
Please add your name to the petition to protect our health from pollution!
Big Coal and Big Oil are working with their allies in Congress to eviscerate our health safeguards - this  is a real and urgent threat to each and every one of us.  As EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson has pointed out, making polluters clean up their act during the past 40 years not only saved millions of American lives, but also has added trillions of dollars to our economy.2  
Yet Rep. Carter (R-TX) has already gotten the demolition ball rolling by attempting to use an obscure procedure called the Congressional Review Act (CRA) to shutdown the EPA's finalized standards to control extremely toxic air emissions from cement plants. 
This one obscure rule alone is a big deal for the health of everyone you care about. Cement plants are the third largest emitter of dangerous, mercury pollution.  The new EPA standards will prevent up to 2,500 premature deaths a year along with 130,000 days of work missed due to pollution related health problems. Imagine cutting more rules like this.  It's a stark choice.  We know Carter and his friends have decided to stand with corporate greed. Let's make sure that Obama stands with us. 
Next year's State of the Union can be the story of how we beat back polluters to defend our health.

Tell Your Legislator to Support HB 237 to Protect Our Communites and Rivers From Coal Ash



Debra Walker and Granddaughter Lilly Want You to Protect Them From Coal Ash



Right now coal ash is inadequately regulated in the state of KY. Many of the coal ash containments around our state are leaking toxic chemicals into our water.
In fact, residents living near the containments are at an increased risk of cancer and respiratory illnesses.
State Representative Joni Jenkins of Louisville has introduced a bill, HB237, to increase safety standards at KY coal ash containments but the bill is unlikely to get a hearing.
Representative Jenkins' bill would require power plants to have emergency plans in place in case of a coal ash spill like the one in Kingston, TN in 2008 that sent 1.1 billion gallons of coal ash sludge barrelling through the community, destroying homes and covering 300 acres.
The bill would also require new coal ash containments to put in place state of the art liners to prevent any more toxic chemicals from seeping into our water. 
Thanks for all you do to protect Kentucky's environment!

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

Hexavalent chromium in Louisville KY tap water

Coal ash waste contains hexavalent chromium
February 1, 2011
Washington, D.C. —
Just weeks after recent headlines about hexavalent chromium, a cancer-causing toxic chemical, contaminated drinking water systems around the U.S., a new report shows that scores of leaking coal ash sites across the country are additional documented sites for such contamination.
Hexavalent chromium first made headlines after Erin Brockovich sued Pacific Gas & Electric because of poisoned drinking water from hexavalent chromium. Now, new information indicates that the chemical leaks readily from leaking coal ash dump sites maintained for coal-fired power plants.
Public interest law firm Earthjustice, Physicians for Social Responsibility and Environmental Integrity Project are pushing for federally-enforceable safeguards from coal ash as this new information is released. Also, in a signal that the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee recognizes the hazards of hexavalent chromium exposure, they have called on U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson to testify tomorrow on a hearing about the chemical.
"Communities near coal ash sites must add hexavalent chromium to the list of toxic chemicals that threaten their health and families," said Lisa Evans, senior administrative counsel at Earthjustice. "It is now abundantly clear that the EPA must control coal ash disposal to prevent the poisoning of our drinking water with hexavalent chromium."
Coal ash, the leftover waste from power plants, contains arsenic, lead, cadmium, mercury, selenium and many other chemicals that can cause cancer and damage the nervous system and organs, especially in children. Hexavalent chromium is a highly toxic carcinogen when inhaled, and recent studies from the National Toxicology Program indicate that when leaked into drinking water, it also can cause cancer.
"The cancer risk from hexavalent chromium is one more serious threat to health from coal ash," said Barbara Gottlieb, Deputy Director for Environment & Health at Physicians for Social Responsibility. "To protect the public from carcinogens and other dangerous substances, the EPA needs to regulate coal ash as a hazardous waste."
"The pollution from coal ash sites is making people sick," said Dalal Aboulhosn who works on coal ash for the Sierra Club. "As we’ve seen time and again, big polluters can’t be trusted to police themselves. We need the EPA to hold them accountable."
"Studies by the EPA, the state of California, and the Agency for Toxic Substances Disease Registry show that ingesting minute amounts of hexavalent chromium increases the risk of cancer," said Eric Schaeffer, executive director for Environmental Integrity Project. "Coal ash dumps have contaminated groundwater with much higher concentrations of this deadly carcinogen, according to the industry's own monitoring data. The Obama Administration should keep its promise to respect science and protect the public’s health, by putting strict standards in place to keep this contamination from spreading even further."
Among the findings from the new report:
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency found that the type of chromium that leaches from coal ash sites is nearly always of the hexavalent variety, which is the most toxic form of chromium.
The threat of hexavalent chromium drinking water contamination is present at hundreds of unlined coal ash sites across the country.
At least 28 coal ash sites in 17 states have already released chromium to groundwater at levels exceeding by thousands of times a proposed drinking water goal for hexavalent chromium.
Power plants dump more than 10 million pounds of chromium and chromium compounds into mostly unlined or inadequately lined coal ash landfills, ponds and fill sites each year. The electric power industry is the largest single source of chromium and chromium compounds released to the environment.
The U.S. Department of Energy and electric utility industry have known for years about the aggressive leaking of hexavalent chromium from coal ash.
Hexavalent chromium contamination from coal ash is clearly a grave threat. Yet the U.S. EPA, which is currently in the process of deciding whether or not to regulate coal ash as a hazardous waste, has completely ignored the cancer risk from chromium in groundwater.
View the entire findings in the full report: EPA's Blind Spot: Hexavalent Chromium in Coal Ash
Factsheet about the report: Hexavalent Chromium in Coal Ash
Contact:Lisa Evans, Earthjustice, (781) 631-4119Barbara Gottlieb, Physicians for Social Responsibility, (202) 587-5225Patrick Mitchell, Environmental Integrity Project, (703) 276 3266Virginia Cramer, Sierra Club, (804) 519-8449
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Friday, January 28, 2011

LET'S KICK SOME ASH

Thanks to all that attended the meeting last night at the VFW, but for those that didn't, good news, things are moving in the right direction!! We have a state representative willing to submit legislation to committee regarding coal ash issues. We have Sierra that continues to help us locally, and also willing to help on the national level. Wonderful people, my sincere appreciation for your efforts. Ken says, we're just people that like clean air and water.

Many thanks to allies from KFTC and the interfaith community for your support last night. You guys rock!

I will be emailing and calling people in my neighborhood, on the southside of the power plant regarding forming a neighborhood organization in a week or so. No fees, no beautification projects in the works, just neighbors concerned about the filth and the pollution brought to us courtesy of LG&E. For those of us (all of us) that want instant gratification, I'm afraid it won't happen over night. But what's doing nothing got us?

Feel free to blog with us. We have an amazing opportunity for positive change
.
Catcha later.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Kentucky ranked 6th for worst mercury pollution in America, spurs new “coal justice” blog

Kentucky ranked 6th for worst mercury pollution in America, spurs new “coal justice” blog

A new report by Environment America reveals that Kentucky’s coal-fired power plants emitted 5,930 pounds of mercury in 2009, placing the commonwealth as the 6th worst emitter of toxic mercury in the nation right behind Indiana (ranked 5th), which spewed 6,046 pounds during the same year.
Titled “Dirty Energy’s Assault on Our Health: Mercury,” (Warning: PDF linkage) the report utilzed the Environmental Protection Agency’s Toxics Release Inventory (TRI), which only includes emissions that have been reported to the EPA, thus potentially rendering the numbers far lower than might actually be the case.
“Our dependence on oil and coal-fired power plants has broad detrimental impacts on our health and our environment,” reads the report’s executive summary. “Power plants represent America’s single biggest source of air pollution, affecting our waterways, destroying ecosystems, and polluting the air we breathe. Pollution from coal-fired power plants in particular contributes to four of the five leading causes of mortality in the United States: heart disease, cancer, stroke, and chronic respiratory diseases.”
In response to the news, the Sierra Club issued a press release, excerpts of which you can read after the jump …
(Bold emphasis mine)
Mercury is a potent neurotoxin that puts pregnant women at-risk for birth defects in their children including learning disabilities, developmental disorders, and lower IQs.   One in six American women has mercury levels in her blood high enough to put her baby at risk, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
“Powering our homes should not poison Kentucky’s and Indiana’s kids,” said Thomas Pearce, Sierra Club organizer. “This report shows that toxic mercury pollution from coal plants has reached unacceptable levels.”
The Environment America report found that 11 electric utilities in Kentucky and Indiana rank in the nation’s top 100 emitters of toxic mercury.  The worst offender in Indiana was the American Electric Power Rockport Plant in Rockport, which emitted 1,226 pounds of mercury in 2009; while the worst offender in Kentucky was the Spurlock Power Station in Maysville, which emitted 921 pounds of mercury in 2009.  Other plants in the worst 100 included the LG&E Mill Creek Station in Louisville, KY; IPL Petersburg station in Petersburg, IN; Big Rivers II in Robarbs, KY; Merom Generating Station in Sullivan, IN; Nipso RMShahfer Generating Station in Wheatfield, IN; AEP Big Sandy in Louisa, KY; Kentucky Utilities Co. Station in Ghent, KY; Clifty Creek Station in Madison, IN; and Duke Energy Gibson Generating Station in Owensville, IN.
“Toxic mercury from the Mill Creek and Cane Run power plants are making us sick,” said Kathy Little of Louisville, KY.  “Kentuckiana parents need the Environmental Protection Agency to do its job,  and protect our children’s health.
Mercury pollution is emitted into the air from coal-fired power plants, then falls into waterways from rain or snow.  Mercury is then known to build up in fish then the animals—and people—that consume the fish, putting them at risk for reproductive failure and mortality.  Studies suggest that even a gram-sized drop of mercury can contaminate an entire 20 acre lake.  On the border of Kentucky and Indiana, the Ohio River is threatened with mercury pollution.
In other coal-related news, a new blog, Louisville Residents for Coal Plant Justice, was started this week in advance of the mercury study in an effort to educate the public about LG&E’s plans for a new coal ash landfill in the alreadt-polluted/f$$$$d-over Rubbertown neighborhood. Add it to your RSS reader to keep abreast of the latest in Louisville environmental justice goings-onLEO WEEKLY Blog Story

New Report: Indiana, Kentucky Power Plants Emit 5th and 6th Most Toxic Mercury Pollution in the Nation



New Report: Indiana, Kentucky Power Plants Emit 5th and 6th Most Toxic Mercury Pollution in the Nation




Louisville, KY –  Kentucky and Indiana are the 5th and 6th most mercury-polluted states in the nation, according to a new Environment America report released today, “Dirty Energy’s Assault on our Health: Mercury.” The analysis shows that coal-fired power plants in Indiana emitted 6,048 pounds of toxic mercury pollution in the year 2009, while coal-fired plants in Kentucky emitted 5,930 pounds of mercury in 2009. 

Mercury is a potent neurotoxin that puts pregnant women at-risk for birth defects in their children including learning disabilities, developmental disorders, and lower IQs.   One in six American women has mercury levels in her blood high enough to put her baby at risk, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. 

“Powering our homes should not poison Kentucky’s and Indiana’s kids,” said Thomas Pearce, Sierra Club organizer. “This report shows that toxic mercury pollution from coal plants has reached unacceptable levels.” 

The Environment America report found that 11 electric utilities in Kentucky and Indiana rank in the nation’s top 100 emitters of toxic mercury.  The worst offender in Indiana was the American Electric Power Rockport Plant in Rockport, which emitted 1,226 pounds of mercury in 2009; while the worst offender in Kentucky was the Spurlock Power Station in Maysville, which emitted 921 pounds of mercury in 2009.  Other plants in the worst 100 included the LG&E Mill Creek Station in Louisville, KY; IPL Petersburg station in Petersburg, IN; Big Rivers II in Robarbs, KY; Merom Generating Station in Sullivan, IN; Nipso RMShahfer Generating Station in Wheatfield, IN; AEP Big Sandy in Louisa, KY; Kentucky Utilities Co. Station in Ghent, KY; Clifty Creek Station in Madison, IN; and Duke Energy Gibson Generating Station in Owensville, IN. 

“Toxic mercury from the Mill Creek and Cane Run power plants are making us sick,” said Kathy Little of Louisville, KY.  “Kentuckiana parents need the Environmental Protection Agency to do its job,  and protect our children’s health. 

Mercury pollution is emitted into the air from coal-fired power plants, then falls into waterways from rain or snow.  Mercury is then known to build up in fish then the animals—and people—that consume the fish, putting them at risk for reproductive failure and mortality.  Studies suggest that even a gram-sized drop of mercury can contaminate an entire 20 acre lake.  On the border of Kentucky and Indiana, the Ohio River is threatened with mercury pollution. 
The report comes as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency is set to propose a new standard to limit mercury and other toxic air pollution from power plants, in March.  Grassroots environmental groups including Environment America and the Sierra Club are calling on the EPA to issue strong health protections that will reduce toxic mercury emissions from power plants by more than 90%.  

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Facts about coal ash





Toxic Coal Ash -- Simple Facts 
  • Coal ash is dangerous to kids.  Living near a toxic coal ash site is worse for your health than smoking a pack of cigarettes a day.

  • In Jefferson County we have 2 power plants (Mill Creek and Cane Run) that have containments the EPA has already deemed as possible hazards

  • Both the Mill Creek and Cane Run plants are currently leaking harmful substances into our groundwater.

  • People living with 1 mile of these toxic coal ash sites have cancer rates 2,000 times higher than what EPA considers acceptable.

  • 1.54 million children live near coal sites. 

  • Here in Kentucky, there are 44 coal ash disposal ponds, including seven ponds rated “high hazard” and five rated as “significant hazard.” In the Louisville area, coal ash from the LG&E Cane Run and Mill Creek power plants may be contaminating our groundwater.

  • Kentucky families are speaking out about this to say, “stop putting our kids’ health at risk.”

  • We can stop the proposed expansion of the Cane Run Coal Ash Containment. It has not won final approval and the world is watching!


Kentucky is buried under coal ash-Our concerns

Our Concerns

Our concerns:

·       The Division of Waste Management should not grant the permit until after EPA finalizes the new coal ash rules; and the permit should incorporate provisions of the new regulations.
·       LG&E needs to phase out burning coal as soon as possible, and to start transitioning to solar and hydropower soon.
·       LG&E should move the location of the ash dump site out of the flood plain,
·       LG&E must use state of the art liners wherever they dump coal combustion waste to avoid groundwater contamination
·       This landfill should not be permitted until LG&E has stopped all leakage from the existing landfill and remediated the contamination there.
·       Good monitoring wells must be required with enforceable monitoring and reporting requirements so we have scientific groundwater monitoring that is enforceable around the coal ash dump.
·       LG&E must redesign the landfill to minimize the destruction of streams and wetlands.