|

For a PDF version of this article click
here.
Ruling on Dumping of Mine Waste
Stuns Coal Industry
By Eric Pianin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Friday, May 10, 2002; Page A04
The coal industry was reeling yesterday from a federal
court ruling that would end a long-standing practice of filling
rivers and streams with waste rock and dirt from mountaintop mining
operations.
The ruling, issued Wednesday by Chief U.S. District Judge Charles
H. Haden II in West Virginia, immediately blocked the Army Corps of
Engineers from issuing new permits to mining companies that dump
waste in Appalachian waterways and valleys. Mining officials warned
that if the ruling stands, it will seriously harm the region's
economy, forcing utility costs up and possibly eliminating 15,000
mining jobs in the next five years.
"It has the potential impact to shut down the majority of
coal mining operations in Appalachia," said Bill K. Caylor of
the Kentucky Coal Association, an industry group that intervened in
the suit in Haden's court. "It applies to all surface and
underground operations, and it stops them from having [valley] fills
-- and you can't mine without putting that fill somewhere."
The 47-page ruling also rebuked the Bush administration, which
last week issued rules removing a legal impediment to mining
companies dumping dirt and rock waste into waterways. Officials of
the Environmental Protection Agency and the Army Corps of Engineers,
who jointly regulate the dumping of dredge spoil and other materials
into waterways, had characterized the rule changes as largely a
technical matter that would not significantly alter current
practices.
However, since 1977, the Army Corps' own regulations have
prohibited mining companies from disposing of materials considered
waste, including rock and dirt, in nearby waterways. Haden described
the government rule change as a special favor to the mining industry
that effectively would codify what he characterized as nearly 20
years of illegal dumping condoned by the Army Corps of Engineers.
"The final rule for 'discharge of fill material' highlights
that the rule change was designed simply for the benefit of the
mining industry and its employees," Haden wrote. "The
agencies' attempt to legalize their long-standing illegal regulatory
practice must fail. . . . The regulators' practice is illegal
because it is contrary to the spirit and the letter of the Clean
Water Act."
A Justice Department spokesman said yesterday the government
would petition the court for a stay of the injunction pending an
appeal of Haden's ruling.
"We are surprised at the judge's ruling . . . and believe
the court misinterpreted the Corps of Engineers' authority to issue
permits under the Clean Water Act," Charles Miller, the
spokesman, said. "We also believe the court erred when it
seemingly invalidated -- without briefing by the parties -- a new
Clean Water Act rule . . . to address the definition of fill
material."
Jack Gerard, president of the National Mining Association, said
that "we are startled by the scope of this decision, which
appears to call into question" the Army Corps' permitting
activities under the Clean Water Act.
Haden
ruled in 1999 in a similar case that dumping mine waste in
streams violated federal law. But the 4th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals overturned that ruling, saying Haden lacked jurisdiction
because the underlying lawsuit involved a state agency.
This time, Kentuckians
for the Commonwealth, a group of environmentalists and community
activists, sued the
Army Corps' Huntington, W.Va., district office, which has been
responsible for approving the vast majority of the nation's
"valley fills" in West Virginia and portions of Ohio,
eastern Kentucky and western Virginia.
Modern mining techniques make it possible to shear off the tops
of mountains to reach veins of valuable, low-sulfur coal and
bulldoze the leftover rock and dirt into nearby valleys. It is a
profitable, if ecologically controversial, venture.
In the past decade, mining companies have obtained permits
resulting in the leveling of hundreds of square miles of Appalachia
and the covering of more than 1,000 miles of streams, according to
environmental groups. Caylor said most of the waterways covered were
dry drainage channels, not free-flowing streams.
Environmentalists hailed Haden's ruling as a lethal blow to
mountaintop mining. "This is a great victory for citizens
living in the shadow of these huge mines," said Joseph M.
Lovett, a lawyer in Lewisburg, W.Va., and executive director of the
Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment.
According to detailed March
5 EPA briefing material obtained by Lovett and James M. Hecker
of Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, the administration has been
considering further steps to expedite mountaintop mining --
including shifting all permitting responsibility to the states --
despite clear evidence of environmental damage.
The EPA documents and consultant analyses showed, for example,
that 1 percent of all streams in the four-state Appalachian region
studied have been eliminated by valley fill; that mining operations
have harmed downstream aquatic life and boosted the levels of
sulfates and other pollutants; and that land restoration activities
promised by the mining companies were "not occurring as
envisioned."
An EPA consultant's report also concluded that the economic
effects of restricting mining would not be as severe as claimed by
industry.
The Huntington office issued 257 of the 306 valley fill permits
issued nationwide in 2000. Ten federal permit applications are
pending in the Appalachian region. The West Virginia Department of
Environmental Protection also has put on hold 87 state-issued
permits that require federal approval.
© 2002
The Washington Post Company
|