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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
October 16, 2001
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jeff Sanders, 859-491-3000
Jonathan Hutson, TLPJ, 202-797-8600 x 246
Kentucky
Citizens Win Major Victory in Air Pollution Suit Against
Gallatin Steel Mill
Four Gallatin County, Kentucky, residents won a major victory on
October 15, 2001, in their efforts to stop Gallatin Steel Company and Harsco
Corporation from dumping and processing slag near their homes without any air
pollution controls. Vernon Ellis, his two sons, Richard and Tom, and LaVerne
Brashear claim that these two companies have evaded their obligations under the
federal Clean Air Act. The Secretary of Kentucky’s Natural Resources and
Environmental Protection Cabinet agreed with the Ellises and Brashear yesterday,
ruling that the two companies are under common control and are a single major
source of pollution. As a result, the companies must obtain a federal air
pollution control permit and install pollution controls based on the best
available pollution control technology.
"The Commonwealth of Kentucky upheld our position that,
because Gallatin controls Harsco’s emissions, the two companies’ emissions
must be added together, and their emissions are large enough to require a
federal permit and air pollution controls,"said plaintiffs’ co-counsel
Jeffrey Sanders of Covington, Kentucky. "That’s what the law requires.
Clearly, Gallatin controls Harsco’s emissions, because Gallatin cannot make
steel without making slag, and Gallatin controls when and where the slag is
dumped and processed."
"The Secretary’s ruling sets an important precedent under
the Clean Air Act," said co-counsel Jim Hecker, Environmental Enforcement
Director for Trial Lawyers for Public Justice, a national, public interest law
firm headquartered in Washington, D.C. "This victory means that polluters
cannot artificially separate their polluting activities to evade state and
federal permitting requirements."
Gallatin produces steel in an electric arc furnace at a large
facility near the Ohio River on U.S. Highway 42 in western Gallatin County. In
producing steel, Gallatin also produces over a hundred million pounds of molten
slag per year. Gallatin decides when to pour the slag into slag pots. However,
by contract, Gallatin farmed out the job of moving and dumping the pots to
Harsco. Harsco dumps the slag pots onto the ground without any pollution
controls, generating huge clouds of dust that drift over the community.
Sometimes the hot slag explodes when it contacts water on the ground, sending
pieces of slag flying onto adjoining property.
The Ellis family has lived on a farm just east of the mill for
more than 100 years, and Brashear also lives near the mill. They are suffering
the effects of this pollution.
"The molten slag looks like lava coming out of volcano, and
lights up the sky at night with an eerie red glow," said Vernon Ellis.
"Mushroom clouds of slag dust rise up hundreds of feet and drift over our
farm, leaving a gray dust on everything. The slag explosions sound like sonic
booms and rattle my house."
In addition to Sanders and Hecker, the Ellises are represented
by Jon Conte, an attorney in Cincinnati, Ohio. The citizens’ environmental
enforcement lawsuit, Ellis v. Gallatin Steel, was filed in July 1999 in
the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky.
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Trial Lawyers for Public Justice is the only
national public interest law firm dedicated to using trial
lawyers’ skills and resources to advance the public good.
Founded in 1982, TLPJ utilizes a nationwide network of more
than 2,500 outstanding trial lawyers to pursue
precedent-setting and socially significant litigation. It
has a wide-ranging litigation docket in the areas of
consumer rights, environmental protection, toxic torts,
worker safety, civil rights and liberties, and access to the
courts. TLPJ is the principal project of The TLPJ
Foundation, a not-for-profit membership organization. It has
offices in Washington, DC, and Oakland, CA. TLPJ’s State
Coordinators for Kentucky are Kevin George, tel. (502)
569-2727, and Robert E. Sanders, tel. (859) 491-3000.
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