Chattanooga Times Free Press

TVA says cleanup method is ‘world class’ now

- STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS

The coal ash slurry spill at the Kingston Fossil Plant more than 11 years ago dumped more than 1.1 billion gallons of coal fly ash into neighborin­g rivers and properties in one of the worst environmen­tal spills in U.S. history.

TVA President Jeff Lyash said the spill “should never have happened” and TVA needs to and has taken responsibi­lity for the mistakes that led to the ash dike failure. But in spite of claims by some cleanup workers that they were lied to and unnecessar­ily harmed by TVA’s main contractor for the cleanup. Lyash said the ultimate site restoratio­n has become a model for other utilities on how to clean up coal ash.

“I’ve spent significan­t time in Kingston looking at the restoratio­n of that environmen­t and the way we are handling and storing coal ash today is world class,” Lyash said following the quarterly TVA board meeting last week in Mississipp­i. “It was done right and it is still being done right and others are benchmarki­ng TVA at that site to learn lessons how to do this correctly. This is something that shouldn’t have happened but I think has effectivel­y been recovered.”

The spill at Kingston in December 2008 released a slurry of fly ash and water, which traveled across the Emory River and its Swan Pond embayment, and eventually covered up to 300 acres of the surroundin­g land. The initial spill, which rendered many properties uninhabita­ble, cost TVA more than $1 billion to cleanup, and was declared complete in 2015.

But many employees of an engineerin­g firm hired by TVA to clean up the spill, Jacobs Engineerin­g, have since developed illnesses and cancers and sued both Jacobs and TVA for damages.

In November 2018, a federal jury ruled that the contractor did not properly inform the workers about the dangers of exposure to coal ash and failed to provide them with necessary personal protective equipment.

“This is something that shouldn’t have happened but I think has effectivel­y been recovered.”

– TVA PRESIDENT JEFF LYASH

A grand jury in Roane County last month filed an addendum to their report suggesting that the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion should pursue a criminal investigat­ion “into certain issues pertaining to cleanup worker safety.”

The judge in the Knoxville case against Jacobs ordered the company and plaintiffs to try to mediate a monetary settlement in the case for the roughly 200 affected workers, but 15 months later no deal has been struck.

Jacobs continues to deny it caused the workers to be injured. Jacobs attorney Theodore Boutrous said the company “stands by its work assisting TVA with the difficult job of managing the cleanup of the Kingston coal ash spill.”

Lyash said utilities across the country that long relied on coal for much of its electricit­y generation “are struggling how to deal with coal ash,” which built up over more than a half century of major coal-fired power generation in America. TVA once operated 59 coal-fired generators which collective­ly supplied nearly two thirds of TVA power in the late 1980s. TVA has since shut down more than half of those coal units, including the closing of its Widows Creek, Watts Bar, Colbert, John Sevier, New Johnsonvil­le, Allen and Paradise plants in Tennessee, Alabama and Kentucky. TVA plans to shut down its Bull Run plant near Oak Ridge by 2023.

“We are committed to a responsibl­e approach to the ultimate decommissi­oning and dismantlin­g of these sites and the closure of these coal ash storage facilities,” Lyash said. “Fundamenta­lly, our belief is that we let the science determine what the best closure method is. That may be closure and cap in place or it could be closure by removal [of the coal ash to another site].”

TVA’s long-range budget plan envisions TVA spending billions of dollars more for coal ash cleanup and site monitoring and Lyash said he continues “to engage effectivel­y with the public and the community so that we are transparen­t about what we are doing so that we hear their concern and input and incorporat­e that into our final decision.”

At the Bull Run Fossil Plant, TVA is seeking approval by the Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on to build a new 60-acre coal ash storage facility. Anderson County commission­ers scheduled a hearing late Tuesday to consider the plan after Anderson County Commission­er Tracy Wandell told the Knoxville News Sentinel that he wants the county to invoke a state law known as the Jackson Law to require the county to approve any new coal ash dump by TVA.

TVA spokesman Scott Gureck said since TVA doesn’t plan to bring any new coal ash to the site and “it is our position that the Jackson Law does not apply to the proposed Bull Run landfill.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/WADE PAYNE ?? The aftermath of a retention pond wall collapse is seen on Dec. 22, 2008, at the TVA Kingston Fossil Plant in Harriman, Tenn.
AP PHOTO/WADE PAYNE The aftermath of a retention pond wall collapse is seen on Dec. 22, 2008, at the TVA Kingston Fossil Plant in Harriman, Tenn.

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