June 9, 2009
Board adds conditions to Fayette mine permit
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- The state Surface Mine Board on Tuesday upheld the renewal of a CONSOL Energy strip mine permit where company officials had not fixed reclamation problems and water quality violations.

Board members added two conditions to the Powellton Coal permit. One includes a new reclamation plan as a permit condition and the other prohibits additional coal removal without a firm plan for ending water pollution violations, said Derek Teaney, a lawyer for two citizen groups that challenged the permit renewal.

During a daylong hearing Tuesday, Teaney had urged board members to overturn the state Department of Environmental Protection's renewal of the permit for CONSOL subsidiary Powellton's Bridge Fork West Surface Mine.

"It really is this simple -- not a day has gone by since it applied to renew its permit when Powellton has been in compliance," Teaney told board members during the hearing in Charleston.

Teaney represents the Sierra Club and the Ansted Historical Preservation Association, both of which appealed DEP's March 16 renewal of the nearly 465-acre permit, located between the Gauley and New rivers north of Ansted.

The groups argue that DEP could not legally renew the permit because agency inspectors had not yet lifted two notices of violation.

In one notice, DEP cited Powellton when the company altered its mining plan without agency permission, a move that left mining and reclamation activities so illegally out of sequence that it would take a year for reclamation to catch up, Teaney said.

In the other notice, state inspectors had cited Powellton for landslides that sent rocks, dirt and debris outside of the mine's legal permit area.

Teaney also argued that DEP was wrong to approve the permit when Powellton continues to have problems complying with its water pollution permit limits for iron and suspended solids.

A.M. "Fenway" Pollack, a lawyer for DEP, told board members if his agency did not renew permits for companies with outstanding water pollution violations, no mining permits would ever be renewed.

"Taken to its logical conclusion, that would mean no one gets renewal," Pollack said. "We'll just shut down mining."

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Posted By: jimscon (8:29am 06-10-2009)
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I believe the message is: It's illegal to pollute our water (wink wink), but go ahead - we don't mind!

Posted By: jkotcon (6:17am 06-10-2009)
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Is this coal company testifying that it is not physuically possible to comply with the law, that mining companies sign off on permit applications knowing they will fail? Is not this fraud on the part of the mining engineers who prepare and submit the applications and state therein that these mning plans will comply with regulatory requirements?

Posted By: Radical (7:25pm 06-09-2009)
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To renew with violations, "taken to its logical conclusion", means if everyone violates the law, then no one needs to comply.

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