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Press Release |
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June 19, 2007
Contact: Jennifer Chavez,
Earthjustice (202) 667-4500
Joe Lovett, Appalachian Center for the
Economy & the Environment (304) 645-9066
Dianne Bady, Ohio Valley Environmental
Coalition, (304) 522-0246, x9
Vernon Haltom, Coal River Mountain Watch (304) 854-2182
Cindy Rank, West Virginia Highlands
Conservancy (304) 924-5802
Massey Coal Should Pay for Clean Water Violations
Groups support clean water
enforcement case against company for violating the law
Huntington, WV – A coalition of environmental groups will move
today to support a Clean Water Act enforcement action by the federal
government against Massey Energy Company. Last month, the government
filed suit against Massey, stating that the coal company committed
thousands of violations of federal environmental law during the past
several years, a move that could result in billions of dollars in
fines for the scofflaw company, potentially the largest such fine in
Clean Water Act history.
Earthjustice and the Appalachian Center for the Economy & the
Environment are representing the West Virginia Highlands
Conservancy, the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, and Coal River
Mountain Watch in federal court asking to join the enforcement
action as citizen intervenors in the case.
“Unlike the Corps of Engineers, the EPA is finally doing the
right thing by enforcing the Clean Water Act and holding Massey
accountable for the environmental degradation their operations have
wrought in Appalachia,” said Earthjustice attorney Jennifer Chavez.
“Protecting water quality is important, and the government should
not allow coal companies and other industrial polluters to run
roughshod over the law.”
These groups recently won a dramatic decision in a separate case
challenging four mountaintop removal mining permits illegally
approved by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. A federal judge found
that the Corps had violated the Clean Water Act by issuing the
permits, which would have allowed thousands of tons of waste rock
and debris to permanently bury headwaters and streams in West
Virginia.
“It seems ironic that on one hand, the EPA is taking action to
require this mining company to comply with the Clean Water Act,
while on the other hand, the Corps of Engineers is permitting mining
practices that result in complete stream destruction,” said Cindy
Rank, longtime member and chair of the mining committee at West
Virginia Highlands Conservancy. “It sure would be nice if the Corps
followed suit and actually protected our streams instead of allowing
them to be permanently destroyed.”
On May 12, EPA filed a civil suit against Massey, alleging the
coal company had illegally dumped pollution into waters in West
Virginia and Kentucky over 4,600 times over the past six years. This
disregard for clean water protections – about 69,000 days of Clean
Water Act violations – carries up to $2.4 billion in fines. The
environmental groups are intervening to support enforcement of
Massey’s obligations under the Clean Water Act to protect streams
and drinking water supplies in the communities where it operates.
“The government has documented over 69,000 days of Clean Water
Act violations by Massey,” said Vernon Haltom, with Coal River
Mountain Watch. “It’s as if this company has been breaking the law
every single day since 1818. Back then, the U.S. flag had only 20
stars and Mary Shelley just published Frankenstein.”
“Massey seems to be operating in the dark ages, leaving behind a
legacy of polluted water, environmental destruction, and a disregard
for the law. None
of this is good for the future economy of West Virginia,” said
Dianne Bady, with the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, based in
Huntington, W.Va .
Massey Energy is one of the largest coal mining companies in the
world, and has a long history of environmental destruction. The
company, through various subsidiaries, operates dozens of
mountaintop removal and other large-scale surface mines in
Appalachia. Mountaintop removal mining is one of the most
environmentally destructive practices in the United States. Already
more than 1,200 miles of streams have been buried or
otherwise impacted and 500,000 acres of
mountains have been flattened.
“The Corps of Engineers could certainly follow the lead of the
EPA and begin protecting our streams rather than permitting their
destruction,” said Joe Lovett, attorney for the Appalachian Center
for the Economy & the Environment.
All of the Army Corps of Engineers permits successfully
challenged by the groups in the separate litigation were for mines
owned and operated by Massey subsidiaries.
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