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Let Them Eat Coal Ash: OSM Nominee Pizarchik Must Be Stopped Now
With so many qualified candidates for the directorship of the important Office of Surface Mining Reclamation and Enforcement, why is the Obama administration nominating a controversial advocate for coal ash dumping, who also admits he still needs to learn more about the even more controversial and huge issue of mountaintop removal?
After eight years of rogue mining operators and Bush-era administrators, and reckless mining regulatory oversights, and with the shipwrecked OSM agency in desperate need of a makeover, the OSM nomination of Joseph G. Pizarchik, the seemingly good-natured and well-meaning Pennsylvania Director of the Bureau of Mining and Reclamation, is a colossal error.
While invoking his hardworking southwestern PA family farm credentials in a touching manner at the US Senate nomination hearing today, Pizarchik made two extraordinary admissions:
--in the face of overwhelming scientific evidence to the contrary, and the continual fall out over last December's TVA coal ash tragedy, and against the current move by Lisa Jackson and the EPA for greater regulatory oversight, Pizarchik defiantly touted his state's dumping of coal ash at strip mine sites and openly denied scientific evidence of coal ash pollution
--in the face of 38 years of reports and studies on the devastating impact of mountaintop removal in his neighboring state of West Virginia, under mining policies that even his future Department of Interior boss Ken Salazar said have "failed to protect our communities, water, and wildlife in Appalachia," Pizarchik dodged the question of mountaintop removal questions THREE TIMES, and pitifully uttered that he needed to "learn more about the facts and details..what has transpired in the past," and that he didn't know the "nuances and details" of the Obama administration's move to "minimize the adverse environmental impacts" of mountaintop removal.
This was either a pitiful admission of ignorance on a complex issue of national importance, or a disingenuous pander to the rogue mountaintop removal elements of the coal industry.
As one fellow southwestern PA coal miner's granddaughter wrote to the local Washington, PA newspaper recently: "Citizens in the coalfields need to be heard regarding his qualifications. If Pizarchik leads the OSM, it will be a continuation of "the fox watching the hen house," where money rules and health in not an issue."
You can watch Pizarchik's hearing here:
http://energy.senate.gov/public/index.cfm?Fuseaction=Hearings.LiveStream...
As always, Charleston Gazette coalfield journalist Ken Ward has filed several in-depth stories on his Coal Tattoo blog:
http://blogs.wvgazette.com/coaltattoo/2009/08/05/what-will-obama-osmre-n...
http://blogs.wvgazette.com/coaltattoo/2009/08/05/what-i-would-ask-osmre-...
On the issue of coal ash dumping, Pizarchik has been in the forefront of coal ash pollution deniers, even after a 2007 study found that "Disposing of coal ash in mines is contaminating water supplies throughout Pennsylvania, according to a report released today by Clean Air Task Force (CATF) and Earthjustice. In 10 of 15 mines examined across the state, groundwater and streams near areas where coal ash, or coal combustion waste, was placed had levels of arsenic, lead, cadmium and selenium and other pollutants above safe standards."
The report is here: http://www.earthjustice.org/news/press/007/new-study-reports-pennsylvani...
An analysis of the report concluded: "Disposing of coal combustion waste in these mines is threatening water supplies all over the state," said Jeff Stant, director of the Pennsylvania Minefill Research Project at the Clean Air Task Force. "If the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection won't act now to stop these dangers, the US EPA should step in to protect the residents of Pennsylvania who live near coal ash mine fills."
And now the head of this PA disaster will be in charge of monitoring strip mining operations?
In a disturbing letter to the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources, which is overseeing the nomination of Pizarchik, Pennsylvania coalfield residents excoriated the nominee for his past work in the PA mining agency. They found:
--Mr. Pizarchik has promoted valley fills. In 2001, as primary regulatory counsel,
Pizarchik supervised the drafting of PA DEP regulations implementing Act 114
that weakened the state's stream buffer zone rule allowing the filling of stream
valleys in PA.
--Mr. Pizarchik advocates the law should allow surface coal mines to be used as
major dumping operations. An exhaustive three-year study of fifteen mines
receiving coal ash in Pennsylvania, Impacts on Water Quality from Placement of
Coal Combustion Waste in Pennsylvania Coal Mines (2007), by researchers and
groundwater scientists for the Clean Air Task Force found that the PA DEP's
monitoring data indicated the ash was contaminating nearby water supplies in ten
of the mines. Mr. Pizarchik has aggressively defended the PA DEP program
allowing power plant waste to be buried in unlined pits and old mines without
regulatory safeguards, despite the threat to groundwater and the 2006 findings by
the National Research Council. (NRC). The NRC concluded that this practice
should be regulated with isolation requirements, comprehensive monitoring and
cleanup standards.
--Pizarchik's PA DEP coal ash mine fill program found deficient by PA Law Judges
and the Interior Board of Land Appeals (IBLA). Both administrative law judges
for the state of PA (Hazleton decision, 2006) and more recently of the Interior
Board of Land Appeals (June 2009) have found the monitoring and safeguards
necessary to protect water supplies from coal ash are missing from permits issued
under Pizarchik's mine ash placement program. And in the latter case, the IBLA
found the public water supply of Tremont, PA is threatened by these deficiencies
- a fundamental violation of surface mining laws. SMCRA requires the issuance
of permits for surface mining to demonstrate, through effective monitoring and
safeguards, that such damage will be avoided.
--Mr. Pizarchik has been resistant to citizen input. PA DEP mining policies under
Mr. Pizarchik systematically removed the "public" from the federally required
public participation. In direct contradiction to the citizen provisions of SMCRA -
and the intent of Congress to encourage citizen participation - Mr. Pizarchik has
actively discouraged public testimony. For selected mining permits: While the
PA DEP and mine operators are given the opportunity to express their views in a
public forum; citizens are not permitted to speak publicly. Instead, citizens are
required to submit their questions or comments one-on-one, with no witnesses
allowed to hear their testimony or the state's response. For all mining permits:
PA DEP Bureau of Mining and Reclamation policies require public hearings to be
held during workday hours only - restricting access for working people. Evening
hearings are not held. Citizens have diligently opposed these procedures since
their adoption in 2006. And as recently as the winter of 2008, Mr. Pizarchik
continues to advocate for these exclusionary policies.
--Mr. Pizarchik has shown little regard for SMCRA's purpose to minimize harm.
During an "Act 54" meeting about long wall mining - a process immensely
destructive to homes, businesses, farms and surface water supplies - Mr. Pizarchik
stated that people willingly sold their coal 100 years ago, and people in the
coalfields should have known what they were getting into when they moved into
the coalfields. This is a rationale frequently used by the coal industry to justify
their most harmful practices. However, the focus of regulatory enforcement
should be compliance with SMCRA laws and minimizing harm, not defending
arrangements made 100 years ago.
The letter can be seen here: http://www.environmentalintegrity.org/pubs/FINAL_PA%20Citizen%20Letter%2...
On the coalfield residents' final point, given the importance Pizarchik gave to his farm family past, it is a shame that he has been criticized for his disregard of the impact of longwall mining on his fellow southwestern PA farmers, many of whom have seen their fields and wells and farms destroyed by this destructive mining practice.
Bottom line: Pizarchik's nomination for the directorship of OSMRE should be withdrawn immediately.




3 Comments so far
Show AllSioux Rose
CACTUS PIE: Here's the next item to add to your OBAMA wish-not list!
Another sell-out scum who can't tell the difference between the paper greenbacks in his wallet and what's truly of value and at stake.
Just as the Bush team (via Karl Rove) vetted attorneys to make sure they could count on the most narrow-minded authoritarian committed yes men & women to do their bidding under the appearance of law, looks like "Team Obama" hasn't found a pro-corporate profit shill yet that it doesn't have a cabinet position or similar high-status office in line to offer to him or her!
The "permanent shadow government" of the U.S. is ubiquitous in its control of the policies that favor corporations and the rich who profit from them, regardless of the consequences to everyone's future. To say that these people are profoundly ill would be an understatement. Further, it matters not who we "elect" as our president--a cop is a cop, whether we perceive them individually either to be "good" or "bad".
The most efficient way to kill a snake is to decapitate it. What I'm referring to, in this case, is to develop a cheaper method to produce electricity than by using coal, the most dangerous substance on earth, once its taken out if its original resting place.
During the carboniferous era, nature removed excess carbon dioxide and other toxins from the atmosphere, depositing it as coal, thus opening the door to a more temperate, rich and varied biosphere. Modern Man, in all his wisdom, has taken it upon himself to reverse that process. Even if we were able to stop it here, China, India and other countries would continue to poison the well, killing everything well before the end of this century.
Plan B, which I have proposed we implement here, makes electricity by harvesting residual solar energy energy stored short-term in the troposphere (as CAPE), and/or by harvesting waste heat, stored not only in large bodies of water, but from temporary storage sites we can create, and fill when heat is plentiful. It is not unlike "ground storage heat pumps" which are installed here by the thousands each year, yet much more efficient.
Plan B uses a technology that has been patented, but needs to be demonstrated on a larger scale. The next scale of development, which could be as small as 5-10 MW thermal, should be large enough and effective enough to generate the enthusiasm necessary to get it onto a "fast track".
I would encourage everybody to learn about it at http://vortexengine.ca and pass the information on to everyone you know. Any person or company can partner up with AVEtec to fund the next stage of development, while gaining a stake in its eventual success.
It would be a far less risky investment than any other I am aware of, unless you're in the business of simply "stealing from the future" as many seem to be, especially in the USA.
Ref: http://vortexengine.ca
IMO, time is running out on us, but it is possible to get this "Messiah" technology on track for widespread implementation within 3-5 years.
I vaguely remember a words from an elected Politician some years back. This was in response to a landslide that had taken out a few homes after a major rainfall.
A reporter had pointed out that the hillside in question had been denuded of all trees due to developemnt and logging and was asking if Policies would change to prevent this in the future.
This guy stated that there was NO SCIENTIFIC evidence that logging hillsides of trees and then developing them lead to higher soil erosion or the increased risk of landslides.
He suggested the Jury still out on the matter and that until evidence conclusive one should not rush into making changes that might hurt the economy and cost jobs.
These are the guys and gals WE elect or appoint elect to represent us.
Big Government is not the problem. Bad Government is.