Governor On Coal Ash Spill: "Massive Disaster"

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BETH RUCKER | 12/31/08 08:19 PM | AP

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KINGSTON, Tenn. — Tennessee's governor promised greater oversight of coal ash retention ponds Wednesday after viewing damage from a spill that released more than a billion gallons of ashy sludge.

Gov. Phil Bredesen said he had no complaints with the cleanup process by Tennessee Valley Authority, which operates the Kingston power plant where a pond burst last week and poured a mix of fly ash and water over 300 acres and into a river.

But Bredesen vowed state environmental regulators will be "looking over their shoulder."

"Burning fossil fuel for electricity is a dirty business," he said. "Everywhere this happens there are huge ash piles, there are environmental issues. My dream out of all of this is maybe this is an epiphany for TVA and for the country that some things have got to change."

Congress will hold a hearing on the spill next week. The Senate Environment Committee is scheduled to hear testimony Thursday from TVA President and CEO Tom Kilgore, environmental advocates and local officials who responded to the disaster.

Bredesen said the state is launching immediate inspections of all other TVA retention ponds and a review of state regulations for the ponds.

"The regulations we operate under now were written in the '70s; 2009 is a different world in terms of environmental regulation than the 1970s," he said.

The state will conduct daily tests of water sources for the cities of Kingston and Rockwood until the threat of contamination from arsenic and heavy metals in the sludge has passed.

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Bredesen spoke briefly to the media Wednesday after flying over the site of the spill, taking a short walking tour in the affected area and visiting with some of the families displaced by the incident.

Also Wednesday, the Roane County school system announced that schools will resume as scheduled Monday following a two-week winter break.

Though authorities have said municipal water sources are safe, school cafeteria workers will use bottled water to prepare meals and bottled water will be offered for sale at schools, according to a news release on the school system's web site.

Only three out of the county's 18 schools were directly affected by the spill. Bus routes for students at those schools have been adjusted.

The Kingston Steam Plant sits on the confluence of two rivers, about 35 miles west of Knoxville.

The deluge destroyed three houses, displaced a dozen families and damaged 42 parcels of land, but there were no serious injuries.

No one at TVA can say how long the cleanup will take and how thorough the restoration can be.

"This obviously is a massive disaster," Bredesen said. "We don't know what the long-term environmental effects of something this size are. We can speculate all we want or like, but to my knowledge there's not been one this large in the past in this country."

Bredesen said he chose to wait more than a week before touring the area because there was no loss of life and he's found in past disasters politicians sometimes hindered the clean-up process.

On Monday, federal officials cautioned residents who use private wells or springs to stop drinking the water because some tests in the area had found elevated levels of arsenic, which can be toxic.

On Tuesday, a group of land owners sued the TVA for $165 million, claiming their property values had been damaged by the spill.

Knoxville-based TVA supplies electricity to Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Kentucky, Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia.

(This version CORRECTS Corrects date of Senate hearing to Thursday; ADDS info about schools using bottled water; ADDS photo)

KINGSTON, Tenn. — Tennessee's governor promised greater oversight of coal ash retention ponds Wednesday after viewing damage from a spill that released more than a billion gallons of ashy sludge...
KINGSTON, Tenn. — Tennessee's governor promised greater oversight of coal ash retention ponds Wednesday after viewing damage from a spill that released more than a billion gallons of ashy sludge...
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- Telemachus I'm a Fan of Telemachus 122 fans permalink

Smaller government! Lower taxes!
Smaller government! Lower taxes!
Smaller government! Lower taxes!
Smaller government! Lower taxes!
Smaller government! Lower taxes!
Smaller government! Lower taxes!
Smaller government! Lower taxes!
Smaller government! Lower taxes!

Oh, yes. And death.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:37 PM on 01/02/2009
- emily00011 I'm a Fan of emily00011 33 fans permalink

Tennessee is one of the most red states there is. These are the guys that have fought regulations that protect the environment, workers, the financial system, food and dr.ugs, and on. Now they wake up and realize this isn't such a smart deal - when they are affected? The right is up in arms over Obama's choices, why? because they want regulation. The repubs will continue to fight it, and "massive disasters" like this will continue to happen. Putting the economy over the environment will only last until the resources are gone and the environment is trashed, then what?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:52 AM on 01/02/2009
- jcollell I'm a Fan of jcollell 4 fans permalink

"Burning fossil fuel for electricity is a dirty business". No kidding. Someone give this guy the Nobel Prize for stating the obvious. So much for clean coal technology.

http://www.youspar.com/

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 PM on 01/01/2009
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If Obama talks about clean coal again, I'm going to reverse fly-kick him in the arms.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:29 PM on 01/01/2009
- cplKlyde I'm a Fan of cplKlyde 15 fans permalink

Though authorities have said municipal water sources are safe,

No doubt the same people who told us the air around the WTC was safe to breath.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:35 PM on 01/01/2009
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I lived in Tn in 2006. I drank bottled water. They always claimed the water was good but at least ten communities turned up bad water while I was there. The Gov. knew the electric CEO's were getting outragous bonuses while the rates went up. The whole state is crooked. I couldn't wait to leave. You can bet more than one person knew this was waiting to happen. They don't care.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:09 PM on 01/01/2009

BIG bonuses (for "meeting certain performance goals"):
http://www.wsmv.com/news/18363165/detail.html#-

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 07:12 PM on 01/05/2009
- rivrgrrl I'm a Fan of rivrgrrl 123 fans permalink
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"The state will conduct daily tests of water sources for the cities of Kingston and Rockwood until the threat of contamination from arsenic and heavy metals in the sludge has passed."

Until the threat has passed?

I hope they're ready for the long haul.

The governor of the state seems to be on the right track, let's hope he is speaking with conviction and not just sound bites.

And yes, 'clean coal' is one of the most flagrant misnomers of all times.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:41 PM on 01/01/2009
- helonias I'm a Fan of helonias 248 fans permalink
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Wait until it dries out in the summer and turns to dust.

The poor folks that live there need to be relocated by the gov and rich coal companies

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 01/01/2009

In an ideal world (one to come, I believe), people - be they really rich or not - would assist. What a participatory democracy that would be!

The reality in this moment, however, is that all you have to do is look around to see how little the corporate/global elite care about anyone/thing other than controlling the bewildered herd so we stay put and feel we're helpless, so they can continue to rack in the profit over people. Just talk with the folks in Anniston, Alabama, where the "old" Monsanto destroyed their lives and split (by the way, if you go to Monsanto's website now, they've re-invented themselves as the "new" Monsanto - to the point of even talking about the "old" Monsanto - whom they are not. What a pile of genetically engineered dog doo-doo!!

Going back further, Three Mile Island...o­r up to the present...­the 9th ward in New Orleans. But at the end of the day, it's about us standing up...findi­ng others from your neighborhood out - and learning about how to articulate the Truth so that people who don't know can understand, and realize how greatly they're impacted.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 01/01/2009
- Bernique I'm a Fan of Bernique 41 fans permalink

Hear, hear, bluesvues!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:19 PM on 01/01/2009

Your anti safety regulation party (Republicans) had better not come asking for any of my tax dollars for you lack of regulation mess.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 PM on 01/01/2009

Have you noticed, as GrayOwl says, that there is virtually no reporting on this disaster, other than the cursory glance given it as the presenters (they're not really reporters) whisk from one story to the other right past this? Here's my take: 'Clean Coal' is part of a huge corporate enterprise­...TVA/EPA­...who heads them? Corporate ex's (ex-junk scientists, ex-attornies, ex-executives) run the show. If it gets out to the mainstream that these huge mountains of cadium, heavy metal, arsenic, and other lovely things-filled ash even exist (how many people even knew that before now?), what happens to the "Clean Coal" push by the big corporations? So, the controlled Media (you know, the Media we're told over and over again is "liberal" so the vast majority of folks who don't do the research just believe it) just can't report it...lest they come up against their own bosses and their cronies.

If we don't do the research and find a way to speak it to the everyday (what the global elite call "the bewildered herd"), make them understand the ways they are really being impacted without even knowing it...aware­ness is difficult.

Let's not stop working on it, though. Peace. Stand up.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 01/01/2009
- MikeyG I'm a Fan of MikeyG 7 fans permalink
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Hooray for "clean coal"! Voted the most deceptive marketing-speak buzzphrase for 2008.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 01/01/2009

Lax regulations lead to these environmental disasters in the first place. But then, why be stringent on regulating . It's only our drinking water and air that are being damaged.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:15 PM on 01/01/2009
- instarx I'm a Fan of instarx 21 fans permalink
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Bredesen has no complaints with the TVA's clean-up process. Well how about the TVA's spill and environmental destruction process - any complaints about that?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:54 AM on 01/01/2009

Keep up the excellent reporting on this outrage. For some reason, it isn't getting the attention it deserves elsewhere.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:37 AM on 01/01/2009
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Oh Phil Bredesen! You make me proud to be a Tennessean!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:17 AM on 01/01/2009
- Bernique I'm a Fan of Bernique 41 fans permalink

Let me guess. Is the Governor a Republican? This story deserves MUCH MORE attention than it's been getting. I sure hope one of President Obama's first order of business will be reform at the FCC so that citizens can get real news for a change.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 08:22 PM on 01/01/2009
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