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This news story originally provided by
The Charleston Gazette
Complaints of proximity to school
ignored, boundary advances overlooked, Raleigh residents say
By Ken Ward Jr.
Staff writer
Permit files for Massey Energy’s Goals Coal preparation
plant contain dozens of detailed topographic maps. There are
color drawings, engineering diagrams and lengthy technical
data sheets.
These documents once filled thick three-ring binders or
were stuffed into accordion-style folders. Today, they are
neatly stored on computer discs.
Files for the Goals Coal site near Sundial date back to
1982, when the operation obtained its first permit under the
federal strip mine law.
But when Department of Environmental Protection officials
approved two new Massey coal silos, they compared the
company’s plans only to the most recent site map submitted
by a company engineer.
“We don’t go back to earlier versions,” said Randy
Huffman, director of the DEP’s Division of Mining and
Reclamation.
If they had, the DEP might not have approved construction
of two 168-foot-tall coal silos less than 300 feet from
Marsh Fork Elementary School, agency officials now say.
Earlier maps submitted to the DEP by Massey indicate that
the silos are not within the original, 122-acre permit
boundary. Instead, the silos appear to be located on land
that was added to the permit boundary over an eight-year
period, without the DEP approving or even noticing the
changes.
The boundary first appeared adjusted in a map submitted
by Massey in 1997. Further changes, pushing it closer to the
school, showed up on maps filed with the DEP by Massey in
1998 and 2003 and in two different maps earlier this year.
In all, the permit boundary line appears to have moved
more than 125 feet west, toward the Raleigh County school,
maps show.
“This area has gotten bigger,” Huffman said Friday,
pointing to large permit maps spread out on a conference
table at the DEP’s Charleston headquarters. “We don’t have
an explanation for that yet.”
Today, one of Massey’s silos already towers over Marsh
Fork Elementary, just 220 feet from the school’s property
line. It has a 70-foot diameter, is about as tall as the
Charleston Marriott and holds up to 10,000 tons of coal. The
foundation for the second silo is complete, having been
built before the DEP issued permits required for the
project.
Under federal and state mining laws, no new surface coal
mining operations are allowed within 300 feet of a school.
Operations that existed or had approved permits prior to
passage of the federal Surface Mining Control and
Reclamation Act on Aug. 3, 1977, are exempt from the
prohibition.
On Friday, DEP officials ordered Massey to immediately
halt work on its second silo “pending a determination by
this agency as to where the [silo] lies in relation to the
approved permit boundaries.”
The DEP hired a survey crew to help try to sort out the
issue. Preliminary results might be ready later this week.
Huffman said DEP inspectors interviewed Paul McCombs, the
Massey engineer who certified the company’s maps, on
Thursday, but got no answers about the permit boundary
changes.
“We’re not at the point of knowing whether anything was
done intentionally,” Huffman said.
McCombs did not return a phone call last week. Other
officials from Massey have not returned repeated phone
calls. A company spokesman told The Associated Press that he
had not seen the DEP’s order and could not comment on it.
The DEP took its actions Friday as the Saturday
Gazette-Mail was preparing to publish a story based on a
review of dozens of maps and other permit documents. As part
of its review, the newspaper had several maps from various
years converted to color transparencies so changes in the
permit boundary over time could be more easily compared.
“Once again, the coalfield residents were left to fend
for their communities,” said Bo Webb, a spokesman for the
group Coal River Mountain Watch. “We were abandoned by the
DEP long ago.”
In a formal notice of intent to sue, Joe Lovett, a lawyer
for the group, alleged that the silo approval “is part of a
pattern and practice” by DEP Secretary Stephanie Timmermeyer
of “promoting the interests of coal operators at the expense
of the state’s citizens and natural environment.
“Secretary Timmermeyer jeopardized the public health,
safety and welfare, by unlawfully subjecting the children of
Marsh Fork Elementary School to increased levels of coal
dust, coal processing chemicals, noise and increased traffic
in very close proximity to the school building,” wrote
Lovett, who runs the Appalachian Center for the Economy and
the Environment.
Lovett noted that residents and activists repeatedly
complained about the silo and other parts of the Goals Coal
operation.
“If the Secretary will not take citizen concerns
seriously in such a highly charged situation, when will
she?” Lovett wrote. “The Secretary’s unwillingness to look
carefully at an operation that will be built so close to an
elementary school, when Congress intended to protect
children in just such situations, is indicative of her
general disregard of community interests when those
interests conflict with the desires of powerful coal
operators.”
Frequent complaints
More than a year ago, Webb complained to the DEP that the
first of Massey’s two silos — built in 2003 — was within the
300-foot buffer zone around Marsh Fork Elementary.
In a May 14, 2004, investigation report, DEP inspector
Manuel Seijo wrote, “This site has been permitted since 1982
and was operated prior to this date. This is why [the]
permit is close to [the] school.”
Later that year, Webb called the DEP’s Division of Air
Quality with a similar complaint and visited then-Gov. Bob
Wise’s mobile office with the same objection.
In a Sept. 27, 2004, response, Timmermeyer, a Wise
appointee who kept her post after Gov. Joe Manchin took
office, told Webb that the Goals plant “has been in
operation since prior to 1977.”
Earlier this year, members of Coal River Mountain Watch
and the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition made a surprise
visit to the DEP’s Kanawha City office and demanded to meet
with Timmermeyer.
Organizers carried anti-mountaintop removal signs and
posters critical of Timmermeyer and the DEP. Among other
complaints, the citizens objected to the location of the
silos so close to Marsh Fork Elementary. Timmermeyer
promised to investigate.
In a Feb. 28 letter to the two groups, Timmermeyer
recited the permit numbers and approval dates for the Massey
operation, and told the citizens that she was “disappointed
... in the deceitful and dishonest method in which you set
up this meeting.
“Further, I was insulted by the personal attacks
including some sign messages and accusations by your members
during the meeting,” she wrote.
“In the future, if you expect to meet with me concerning
an environmental issue, I welcome you to schedule a meeting,
as do the other citizens of this state, and to act in a
professional manner.”
Last week, Massey Energy sent its own letter to Coal
River Mountain Watch.
Massey demanded that the organization “immediately
provide ... any information you have to support the claims
that you have made regarding the safety of the [Goals Coal]
facility.”
Taking it to the steps
On June 21, Webb, Judy Bonds and other Coal River
activists met with Manchin about the Goals Coal operation.
The governor promised to look into their complaints.
Nine days later, the DEP approved permits for the new
silo and for continued operation of the slurry impoundment.
“The proposed coal silo is to be constructed on
previously bonded area of the permit,” DEP permit supervisor
Ed Wojtowicz wrote in a memo recommending the approval.
On July 5, Ed Wiley of Rock Creek, whose granddaughter
attends Marsh Fork Elementary, took a seat on the state
Capitol steps. Wiley said he would not leave until the
governor promised to do something about the Massey
operation.
Manchin sent his in-house lawyer, Carte Goodwin, out to
talk to Wiley, and Wiley agreed to meet with the governor in
his office.
Eventually, Manchin and Wiley appeared together in front
of assembled television cameras. The governor promised to
try to relocate Marsh Fork Elementary.
Manchin insisted that he did not want to second-guess
decisions by the DEP, but also pledged to find out if the
agency had done its job properly.
As late as last Tuesday, Goodwin said, “The governor
trusts DEP and trusts the experts.” By Friday, though,
Goodwin was saying the DEP clearly had made a mistake.
“There has been an oversight, and the permit was approved
when it probably should not have been,” Goodwin said.
Goodwin said Friday’s actions by the DEP were “good
government,” and that the governor could rightly take credit
for them.
“An agency made its decision,” Goodwin said. “Concerns
were raised by the residents, and the governor asked the
agency to go back and make sure they were right. They found
a discrepancy, and they are correcting it.”
A second look by the DEP
During a meeting Friday, DEP officials said their Manchin-ordered
re-examination of the Goals permit did not include a look at
the original permit maps. Instead, DEP staffers were focused
on looking again at residents’ concerns that dust and
chemicals from the Massey facility were making students
sick.
Keith Porterfield, a deputy director at the DEP’s mining
field office in Oak Hill, said his staff never thought to go
back and compare the silo maps to the original permit maps.
“We do our best to minimize these things,” Porterfield
said. “But people are going to make mistakes.
“DEP is made up of human beings,” he said. “And as long
as we are on this side of eternity, no matter how honest and
how sincere people are, they are just going to make
mistakes.”
How could it happen?
How could the DEP miss the fact that the Massey permit
boundary had crept closer to an elementary school?
First of all, the technology for making permit maps has
changed dramatically. This makes it hard to compare earlier
drawings — especially 23-year-old ones — to newer,
computer-generated diagrams.
Second, the DEP does not require actual surveys of permit
boundaries when it issues permits or permit changes.
Third, DEP staffers do not prepare mine permit maps.
Instead, they rely on maps that companies submit. Each map
must be signed by a licensed engineer. Engineers also stamp
maps with their seal, swearing that the permit boundaries
and other details are accurate.
Finally, DEP permit reviewers do not go back and compare
every proposed boundary change to original drawings in older
permit files. Instead, they look to the most recent
certified maps.
On Friday, Huffman ended that. He ordered two changes he
said should keep such a problem from occurring again:
Every permit revision that includes activity within 300
feet of an existing permit boundary “must be thoroughly
investigated to ensure no boundary encroachments will take
place,” Huffman said in a memo to permit supervisors. This
investigation must “include a review of all previous maps of
record to ensure no incidental boundary changes have
occurred,” Huffman said.
Whenever a proposed permit activity falls within 300
feet of a protected area such as a school, “a written
statement must be made indicating all activity is contained
within the existing permit boundaries” from the original
permit.
“Due to the fact that permit boundaries are not always
exact in the same manner as property boundaries, it is
possible for a proposed activity close to an existing permit
boundary to extend beyond the boundary, depending upon where
the boundary is interpreted to be located,” Huffman wrote.
“It is also possible for subsequent permit maps to have
unintentional but unapproved boundary changes that could
impact future permit revisions, especially in cases where
the proposed activity will be close to the boundary.”
Huffman said he hopes these changes will begin to satisfy
agency critics.
“We determined that we made a mistake on a small area of
a permit boundary, but we’re headed in the direction of
correcting that mistake,” Huffman said. “I would hope that
would develop some trust that we want to do the right
thing.”
To contact staff writer Ken Ward Jr., use e-mail or call
348-1702.
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