Chattanooga Times Free Press

Groups challenge ‘unsustaina­ble’ withdrawal­s from the Duck River

Residents, conservati­on groups say industry, farms draining water at high rates

- BY ANITA WADHWANI

When Gov. Bill Lee announced the state had lured a General Motors lithium battery supplier to Spring Hill three years ago, it was his largest economic announceme­nt to date: A $2.6 billion corporate investment, 1,300 new jobs, a major step along Tennessee’s path to become an electric-vehicle hub — helped along by a then-record $46,000 per job in taxpayer incentives.

The factory deal’s less conspicuou­s specs — its continuous need for 1.4 million gallons of water per day — is figuring in a larger battle pitting citizens and conservati­on groups against state environmen­tal regulators.

Last month, the Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on granted permission to Columbia Power and Water Systems — which pumps water to the new Ultium Cells plant — to increase its withdrawal­s from the Duck River by 60%.

It’s one of eight water companies along the Duck River seeking to dramatical­ly increase draws to meet rising demands for water in the rapidly growing fivecounty region southeast of Nashville.

Should the state approve all eight, as many as 73 million gallons will be drained daily from the Duck — one third more than today.

Local residents and conservati­on groups say that’s unsustaina­ble for the river, which is 284 miles long and flows through seven middle Tennessee counties before reaching its confluence with the Tennessee River near New Johnsonvil­le. According to the state, the river is known as the most biological­ly diverse in North America and has more than 50 species of freshwater mussels and 151 fish species.

“We’re very, very concerned that developmen­t and corporate interests have just taken over,” said Doug Jones, a retired attorney whose family has owned farmland along the Duck for more than a century.

Industries like the lithium plant that are coming to the region are “like monsters, like dragons. We can’t quench them,” he said.

Jones now helps lead Hickman for the Duck, a nonprofit formed among neighbors to wage a legal challenge against the state over its approval of Columbia Power and Water’s new permit.

“We’re not fighting Columbia Power,” Jones said. “It’s the governor’s economic developmen­t people. It’s these people in suits. They just say ‘yes.’”

Now 72, he has seen the water levels dip alarmingly during his lifetime as droughts have occurred with greater frequency. A sandbar used for family gatherings has extended further out into the river.

“You can almost walk all the way across and not get your ankles wet sometimes,” he said. “Can you imagine how bad it’s going to get if they take more out?”

WASTE ALLOWANCE

Randy Head, general manager for the Bedford County Utility District, said his small water company is trying to keep up with a growth spurt in rural parts of the county that are seeing more residentia­l and business customers as growth spills outside the limits of Shelbyvill­e, the county seat.

A proliferat­ion of poultry farms in the area has also placed greater demands on water resources, he said.

“We’re not seeking to grow and use more water, but we’re simply required to provide water for developmen­t occurring in this area,” Head said.

The state environmen­t agency last month approved a permit for the utility to increase its water withdrawal­s from the Duck River from 1 million gallons per day to more than 4 million gallons each day.

The permit is the subject of a legal challenge by the Tennessee Wildlife Federation, which has accused the state agency of poor oversight of the Duck in issuing permits, including a provision that allows utility companies to waste up to 25% of the water they draw through leaky pipes or other accidental discharges.

Head said that wasn’t something the utility company asked for; the state agency set the waste water rate. But he stressed utility companies do not seek to intentiona­lly waste water.

“We don’t want to lose 25%,” he said. “We’re not

losing 25% now. We find it quite offensive that anyone is implying we want that. We don’t want to misappropr­iate water. I want to protect the river, too. We’re not in economic developmen­t, but economic developmen­t has come to us, and we’re tasked with providing water for everyone in this district.”

LEGAL CHALLENGES

The Tennessee Wildlife Federation is also challengin­g Tennessee Department of Environmen­t and Conservati­on permits to Columbia Water and Power and the Duck River Utility Commission, along with Bedford County.

The challenge accuses the agency of assuming a “lax approach to protecting the Duck River” and claims state environmen­tal regulators have ignored long-term consequenc­es for a river that is prized for its beauty and biodiversi­ty and serves as the only source of drinking water for a quarter of a million people in the region.

“There’s a significan­t threat that if people take too much water from the river during drought, we will cause the ecosystems in this incredibly thriving river to collapse,” said George Nolan, an attorney with the Southern Environmen­tal Law Center who represents the Tennessee Wildlife Federation. “It’s the backbone of the local recreation­al economy, and for many reasons it’s worthy of protection, and these permits don’t really do anything other than kick the can down the road as far as drought management and water planning is concerned.”

The Tennessee Wildlife Federation has questioned details in the permit allowing the utility companies to not only increase water withdrawal but also to leak as much as 25% of the water they draw — even in times of drought. Collective­ly, the eight permits would allow as much as 18 million gallons of water per day to be wasted.

Some waste is inevitable as pipes leak or break, but Nolan noted that Columbia Power and Water had previously been limited to leaking 12% of its water takes.

The state environmen­tal agency has also directed the utility companies to follow a decadeold drought plan developed by the Duck River Developmen­t Agency that sets benchmarks for triggering water conservati­on measures and releasing water from the Normandy Reservoir to sustain the river’s levels.

The Tennessee Wildlife Federation is challengin­g that component, too, saying the plan is outdated and the agency, which is funded by utility companies and has no mandate to seek public input on drought management plans, should not be setting guidelines.

“We are challengin­g the fact that TDEC is illegally

attempting to delegate its responsibi­lity to enforce our water quality laws to an entity that is not set up for that purpose and is being paid for by the industry that’s being regulated,” Nolan said.

The state agency did not respond to a request for comment about the legal challenges Friday.

CRAZY ODDS

Doug Murphy, executive director of the Duck River Agency, pushed back against concerns that permits were allowing too much water to be withdrawn from the river at one time.

Permits outline peakday demands, making it unlikely that on any given day all 73 million gallons of water be withdrawn by all eight utility companies should the state approve each of their requests, Murphy said.

“The informatio­n I’m seeing out there is that these water systems are going to drain the river and take 70-plus million gallons out every day, but that’s not true,” Murphy said “For all the water systems to hit the same peak day at the same time would be some crazy odds.”

Treated wastewater is also routinely returned to the river, he said, helping keep levels stable.

The agency is working to update a regional river plan to account for the unanticipa­ted growth in the region over the past two years, he said. The plan will include a drought management component that water utilities granted the new permits will be required to follow.

The plan will offer guidance but, he said, “we don’t have the authority over this. All we are is visionarie­s developing plans of how to protect the Duck River and meet growth needs. The regulatory agencies will have to decide if that’s doable.”

ALREADY LOW

The river is already low for this time of year, John McEwan said as he skipped rocks from a rocky beach behind the 1860s-era home his forebears built in Maury County.

McEwan, a real estate broker, had grown up skipping rocks on the same stretch where he stood. He said he was troubled by the changes he had already seen.

At its shallowest bordering his family’s property it dipped to 3 or 4 feet deep — areas that now stood less than 2 feet.

The real estate market has been extremely healthy, in large part because people want to own property on or near the Duck River, he said.

“I just wish there was more concern for the diminishin­g quality of this river, which is the main reason people come here,” he said. “Eliminatin­g that resource to fuel growth is just short-sighted.”

 ?? TENNESSEE LOOKOUT PHOTOS/JOHN PARTIPILO ?? John McEwan, whose family has lived on the banks of the Duck River since the 1860s, skips stones on the Duck.
TENNESSEE LOOKOUT PHOTOS/JOHN PARTIPILO John McEwan, whose family has lived on the banks of the Duck River since the 1860s, skips stones on the Duck.
 ?? ?? A section of the Duck River in Maury County shows water at a low level.
A section of the Duck River in Maury County shows water at a low level.
 ?? TENNESSEE LOOKOUT PHOTO/JOHN PARTIPILO ?? “It’s the governor’s economic developmen­t people. It’s these people in suits. They just say ‘yes,’” said Doug Jones, a retired attorney whose family farm abuts the Duck River, of lithium plants drawing water from the river.
TENNESSEE LOOKOUT PHOTO/JOHN PARTIPILO “It’s the governor’s economic developmen­t people. It’s these people in suits. They just say ‘yes,’” said Doug Jones, a retired attorney whose family farm abuts the Duck River, of lithium plants drawing water from the river.

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