Similar Stories to Community Fights Plans To Move Coal Ash To Clay Mines on Bing News

Holland knows the property adjoining his 37-acre farm could soon be filled with dozens of workers getting ready to bury millions of tons of coal ash from Duke Energy waste pits spread across North Carolina. State regulators have issued several permits to Charah Inc., and its subsidiary Green Meadow LLC to dispose the waste in the old clay mine behind Holland's property in Lee County, and another one in nearby Chatham County. [...] a coalition of community leaders and environmental groups is fighting the plan. The battle in Lee and Chatham counties is one that could play out in other North Carolina communities as the nation's largest electricity company complies with the state's new coal ash law passed last year after the spill. Duke stores more than 150 million tons of coal ash in 32 dumps at 14 power plants in North Carolina, all of which are leaching toxic contaminants into groundwater. The ash — waste left behind when coal is burned to generate electricity — contains such toxic heavy metals as arsenic, selenium, chromium and mercury. [...] the electricity company turned to Charah, a Louisville, Kentucky-based company that handles coal ash. The state environmental department in June approved modified mining permits for both sites, and two months later, approved water quality permits near the portion of the mines with wetlands. Charah still needs a permit to build a rail spur on the Chatham County site, as well as a federal water quality permit from the Army Corps of Engineers. In one, opponents say the project would have a disproportionate impact on black and low-income families who live near the sites — something regulators should have taken into account.

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