CHAPEL HILL, N.C.-Downstream users and river advocates
today challenged a North Carolina Division of Water Quality wastewater permit
that fails to require adequate reductions in color and thermal pollutants being
discharged by the Blue Ridge Paper Products mill into the Pigeon River in
Haywood County, N.C., about 40 miles from the Tennessee border.
The North Carolina permit allows the paper mill to
discharge wastewater into the Pigeon River that raises the temperature of the
river beyond the limits allowed by state water quality standards. In 2007, the death of at least 8,000
fish near the paper mill was attributed to high water temperatures. Despite the threat that heated plant
wastewater poses to fish and other aquatic life in the river, the permit only
sets a monthly average temperature limit as measured nearly half a mile
downstream, but sets no limits on daily fluctuations, and thus allows
temperature spikes that can significantly exceed state temperature
standards.
The coalition also challenged the adequacy of
improvements to the discoloration of the river allowed by the permit. They argue that the discoloration of
the Pigeon River and pollutants from the plant harm other enterprises that rely
on a healthy river, including recreational fishing, boating, and related
tourism.
The Southern Environmental Law Center filed the challenge
today in the North Carolina Office of Administrative Hearings in Raleigh on
behalf of Clean Water Expected for East Tennessee, Clean Water for North
Carolina, Cocke County, the Tennessee Chapter of the Sierra Club, Tennessee
Conservation Voters, Tennessee Scenic Rivers Association and Western North
Carolina Alliance.
Comments from these groups follow.
"North Carolina failed to require real progress in
restoring the river's health and downstream recreational uses," said Hope
Taylor, executive director of Clean Water for North Carolina, which led a 2001
joint study for process improvements at the mill. Instead of requiring water
improvements "at the quickest possible pace," as required by a
historic 1997 Settlement Agreement with the mill, Taylor points out, "this
permit prolongs a 102-year injustice by failing to mandate feasible steps towards
restoring the river."
"The discoloration of the river as well as the
levels of pollutants make the river less desirable for recreational fishermen
and boaters than other, less polluted rivers nearby," Iliff McMahan, Jr.,
Mayor of Cocke County, Tennessee explains.
"Citizens downstream from the plant are being
deprived of high quality recreational experiences, as well as a healthy
environment to develop their businesses and raise their families, because the
paper mill refuses to take steps to clean up the Pigeon River. We feel the permit's terms do not
represent meaningful progress under the 1997 settlement agreement or the Clean
Water Act of 1972. And for us,
after 102 years of continuous pollution from this paper mill, that is not
acceptable."
"The high temperatures and temperature fluctuations
allowed under the new permit will not ensure safeguards are in place to prevent
future fish kills," said Hartwell Carson, French Broad RiverKeeper with
WNCA.
"Additional improvement could be achieved with
existing technology and without serious consequences to the local
economy," said Amelia Taylor of Clean Water Expected in East Tennessee.
"We know that process changes to improve the paper
mill's discharges are feasible and affordable. The EPA and the mill's own
consultants have studied them, and the resistance to implementing them is
unjustified."
"By
permitting excessive pollution to be discharged into the Pigeon River, North
Carolina failed to adequately protect public waters in the best interest of its
people," said DJ Gerken, a senior attorney with Southern Environmental Law
Center. "The citizens
of both North Carolina and Tennessee deserve better."