MOUNT MORRIS, Pa. -- West Virginia and Pennsylvania residents of
the Dunkard Creek watershed took environmental officials to task
at a Dec. 3 community meeting about the death this fall of the
creek’s fish and mussels.
The kill on Dunkard Creek, an active smallmouth bass and
musky fishery and the most diverse breeding ground for mussels
in the Monongahela River drainage, first was reported to the
West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection on Sept. 1.
By the end of September, as many as 22,000 fish and all of
the mussels were dead on about 30 miles of the West Virginia
Fork and the mainstem of the creek, according to a preliminary
estimate from the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources.
A bloom of golden algae, Prymnesium parvum, unknown in this
region before September, has been identified as the secondary
cause of the kill.
The primary cause, agency investigators and university
researchers generally agree, was saline conditions from natural
resource extraction.
Coal and coalbed methane operations in the watershed produce
water high in salts, known in water quality lingo as Total
Dissolved Solids.
Because producers move their salty waste water from one
location to another in the watershed for partial treatment and
for disposal, it has been difficult to pinpoint the exact cause.
Resident Frustration
Participants in the Dec. 3 meeting identified lax
environmental enforcement as the cause.
Some questioned why the federal Environmental Protection
Agency permitted CNX Gas to inject brine into a mine void that
may be connected hydrologically with other abandoned mines.
Others pointed to WVDEP’s consent order allowing CONSOL
Energy to discharge water high in chlorides through Sept. 2013.
Chlorides are one component of TDS, and removing them is
expensive.
“Is it safe to say that that was a mistake, and wouldn’t you
say that that decision actually sealed the fate of Dunkard
Creek?” a meeting participant asked Patrick Campbell, assistant
director of WVDEP’s Division of Water and Waste Management.
DEP decided to overlook the fact that the creek’s streambed
organisms were suffering under the high-chloride discharge,
Campbell said, because the fishery seemed to be surviving.
“The golden algae was the kicker,” he said. “If treatment had
been installed a long time ago, this may not have happened, but
the agency was trying to let the situation play out with the
opportunities that were available to the company. … Nobody ever
could have imagined what could have happened.”
More Blooms Likely Without Protection
Golden algae typically are found in naturally salty coastal
and southern waters. Dunkard Creek was the first place they were
identified in the Mid-Atlantic region.
The algae are not always deadly. But when they outgrow their
food supply, they secrete toxins that kill gill-breathing
organisms.
Once present in a watershed, the algae are difficult if not
impossible to eradicate, biologists say. At the same time, they
may easily be spread to other locations by wildlife,
recreationists, industrial users and others.
And since September, WVDEP has found golden algae in five
other especially salty streams across the state: three in the
Monongahela River basin, one in the northern panhandle and one
near Charleston.
“It’s a huge threat,” said Margaret Janes of the Appalachian
Center for the Economy and the Environment, who is following the
issue closely, “both because it can kill everything in the
stream and because it’s likely to recur over years and years and
likely to expand throughout central Appalachia.”
A bill that failed in the state Legislature last March would
have required the state DEP to establish a water quality
standard for TDS at or below Pennsylvania’s standard of 500
milligrams/liter — a level surpassed many times over during the
fish kill.
Legislators are considering reintroducing the bill but making
it specific to the Monongahela River watershed.
Janes would like to see it passed for the entire state.
“I don’t think legislators can cherry-pick which streams
they’re going to protect,” she said.
Next Step for Dunkard?
Meanwhile, the situation on Dunkard Creek is reaching a
critical point.
CONSOL discontinued pumping salty water from its active
Blacksville #2 mine on Sept. 17, during the fish kill.
Three months later, the mine is filling up.
“We’ve got 500 people underground,” said Jonathan Pachter of
CONSOL. “We need to keep the mine safe. At some point in time
soon we’re going to have to figure out what to do.”
DEP still is considering waiting for Sept. 2013 for a
long-term strategy, according to Campbell, and is making no
requirement of CONSOL in the short-term.
“I think the company is evaluating lots of options: Can they
move the water somewhere else, augment flow — how can they take
steps themselves to reduce TDS?” he said.
Asked whether WVDEP has the authority to rescind the consent
decree and require CONSOL to treat its discharge to the state’s
existing water quality standard for chlorides, Campbell
indicated that he considered that futile.
“The authority would be there. The ability to appeal that
decision is also there,” he said.