Walker County Messenger

Georgia House unites to pass ban on creosote burning

- By Dave Williams Capitol Beat News Service

The Georgia House of Representa­tives voted unanimousl­y Thursday, March 12, to prohibit the burning of railroad ties treated with creosote used to fuel two biomass plants in Northeast Georgia.

Neighbors of the two plants in Madison and Franklin counties began complainin­g when the plants started operating last year that the burning was fouling their air and contaminat­ing their water.

“The people who lived in close proximity were highly impacted,” Rep. Alan Powell, R-Hartwell, the creosote bill’s chief sponsor, said during a brief floor debate. “Some of them had to move out of their homes.”

Powell said local elected officials were told the plants were going to burn wood chips when Birmingham,

Ala.-based Georgia Renewable Power filed permit applicatio­ns for the facilities in 2015. But one year later, the U.S. Environmen­tal Protection Agency lifted a federal ban on burning creosote-treated railroad ties, clearing the way for the plant operators to switch fuels.

Creosote has been linked to cancer and some respirator­y problems.

House Bill 857 includes a provision carving out of the legislatio­n’s provisions a manufactur­ing plant near Dublin operated by WestRock. While the plant’s permit allows it to burn railroad ties treated with creosote, an official with the state Environmen­tal Protection Division assured members of a state Senate committee considerin­g a similar bill last month that the Dublin facility is not doing so.

Powell’s bill now heads to the Senate for considerat­ion.

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