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Fallout from the Kingston Ash Spill

Last December 22, a retaining wall at the Kingston Fossil Plant (run by the TVA) gave way and dumped over a billion gallons of coal ash slurry across a great swath of Roane County, Tennessee. It was one of the worst, if not the worst, man-made environmental disasters in our country’s history.  People’s homes were swept away. Nearby rivers and streams were poisoned.  I don’t know if you’ve heard about it, or what you’ve heard about it.

The experience, even over here in Nashville, was that it was just a little something that happened, not that bad. It’s only been in the ensuing months, as the TVA’s obfuscations have become clearer that the scope of the disaster is coming into focus.

All along the way, it seems, we have made deals with the Devil.

Oh, the TVA. Yes, it brought electricity to the South and with it, air conditioning, and with that, modern civilization (I over-simplify some, but only a little).  In exchange, though, there are towns sitting at the bottom of vast lakes, ‘lost’ cemeteries filled with loved ones. And we haven’t even touched on coal itself, a devil’s bargain if ever there was one. Yes, it brings money into regions that otherwise would be dirt poor, but at the cost of people’s health and their lives. They sometimes blow the tops off of mountains to get to it. And, in order to burn it for electricity, the TVA has to have somewhere to put the fly ash that’s a byproduct of the process.

And then the TVA gets a couple of decades of lax oversight and the ability to be a private enterprise when they need to be and a government enterprise when it suits them and before long you have 5.4 million cubic yards of muck spilling out of a pond the TVA claimed only held 2.6 million cubic yards.

And now, the TVA is shipping the coal ash they’re cleaning up from the site to Perry County, Alabama. The New York Times article is interesting and heart-breaking.

To county leaders, the train’s loads, which will total three million cubic yards of coal ash from a massive spill at a power plant in east Tennessee last December, are a tremendous financial windfall. A per-ton “host fee” that the landfill operators pay the county will add more than $3 million to the county’s budget of about $4.5 million.

The ash has created more than 30 jobs for local residents in a county where the unemployment rate is 17 percent and a third of all households are below the poverty line. A sign on the door of the landfill’s scale house says job applications are no longer being accepted — 1,000 were more than enough.

But some residents worry that their leaders are taking a short-term view, and that their community has been too easily persuaded to take on a wealthier, whiter community’s problem. “Money ain’t worth everything,” said Mary Gibson Holley, 74, a black retired teacher in Uniontown. “In the long run, they ain’t looking about what this could do to the community if something goes wrong.”

It’s true that Roane County, Tennessee, is whiter than Perry Country, Alabama, but I was a bit taken aback by the claim that Roane County was richer.

And then I remembered that Oak Ridge is in Roane County, which does indeed mean that the residents of Roane County are, on average, richer than the residents of Perry County. But I don’t think I have to spell out for you what the citizens of Roane County had to accept in order to get that higher income. Another devil’s deal.

So, when it comes to putting this fly ash someplace, the charges of racism have been flying–environmentalists are claiming environmental racism because the fly ash is going to a predominately black community; some folks in the community are claiming that it would be racist to deny them the fly ash, like “Here come the white folks to protect the black folks from themselves.”

And, frankly, from where I sit, both claims seem to be oversimplified but also probably true. Isn’t that the pernicious thing about how we do racism in America?  There can be racism on both sides and probably is.

Still, I like how Southern Beale puts it: there is something really fucked up about asking anyone to choose between poverty and poison.

(Cross-posted at Tiny Cat Pants)


7 thoughts on Fallout from the Kingston Ash Spill

  1. If Roane County is richer than Perry county… it might be but Roane county is rather poor. It’s not like we’re talking Long Island v. Perry County. It is messed up that someone needs to chose between poverty and poison. But more than that it seems like they’re just trying to move it to a more disadvantaged group (based on what you said about race)… from “white trash” to a “blacker” community.

    There’s a reason why so many people haven’t been able to move out of their houses even though they suffered rashes and chemical burns from showering (pollutants making their way to the ground water from the ash spill [http://dirtycoaltva.blogspot.com/2009/02/eva-hewitts-story.html]) or a severe increase in asthma attacks/diagnoses (increased amount of particulates that TVA denies [http://dirtycoaltva.blogspot.com/2009/04/feb-3-2009-tva-coal-ash-dust-storm.html but the health department acknowledges http://dirtycoaltva.blogspot.com/2009/03/ash-spill-linked-to-breathing-problems.html ]). Keep in mind that TVA totally closed down this residential area and arrested any “outsider” who showed up, including a United Mountain Defense advocate who drove an old woman, unable to drive herself, home from a community advocacy meeting [http://dirtycoaltva.blogspot.com/2009/03/umd-volunteer-arrested-for-helping.html].

    Heck, the TVA even prevented private individuals from setting up their own air monitering stations [http://dirtycoaltva.blogspot.com/2009/03/tva-police-delay-start-of-air.html]

    I am not trying to deny the legitimacy of Perry County’s complaint. Just pointing out that TVA is getting really good at marginalizing typically unempowered races and classes.

    The only good thing is that Roane County was able to get Erin Brockovich [ http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/01/08/tennessee.sludge/index.html%5D. Maybe Perry county can contact her too, as this is just a continuation of TVA’s bullsh*t.

  2. I’m sorry, I meant to go back and correct myself, but I hit submit too quickly/excitedly. Please, when you read it, replace “white trash” with “an Appalachian, who many people classify as “white trash” “.

  3. For me, one of the most awful parts of this story was that 1,000 people were competing for 30 jobs processing toxic sludge. I guess it comes back to having to choose poverty or poison.

  4. Yeah, especially when you realize that that means every 4th house in Perry County had someone applying for those jobs. It just goes to show you what dire straits these folks are in. It’s impossible for me to begrudge them wanting jobs and money. But damn, what a terrible choice.

  5. Gexx, you raise some really good points (though I can’t for the life of me figure out how to fix it so that all of your links are hyperlinked. Sorry about that.), but the dynamic that you’re talking about, playing marginalized groups against each other is, I think, exactly on target.

    Even the way the New York Times article frames it, like this is something the people of Roane County are doing to the people of Perry County, reinforces that and lets slide right by the fact that the TVA is doing this in both communities, to both communities.

  6. I am in east TN, and lately have seen nothing about TVA in the paper besides the plan to lower rates per kilowatt/hr — over, and over, and over…all throughout the summer. It reminds me of what the media is avoiding. I’ve watched Youtube videos to try to comprehend the damage of the spill, but it’s so overwhelming.

    At my campus, there have been several mountaintop-removal lectures and photography exhibits since I’ve been attending, but the paper and general public here seem to be really oblivious to the massive destruction that has happened somewhere relatively nearby — halfway between your city and mine.

    Earlier this year, a bunch of students from my school (East TN State) became involved in some activism concerning the TVA spill…

    http://www.johnsoncitypress.com/News/article.php?ID=68080
    (From April 3, 2009)

    Unfortunately the article is from TVA’s standpoint, so you don’t get any clear picture of what happened. What I got from it is that when people who were able and had the resources to approach the subject, they were silenced by the TVA, the university, and the city newspaper. I lost what little respect I had left for all three after this happened. I have no idea how relatively poorer, more isolated, perhaps less resourceful people would handle this situation and create change in their community. We are up against a monster.

    Thank you so much for posting this…I had no idea the ash was being exported to Alabama. That the local officials are telling the people that the ash is not harmful is sickening.

  7. Is at least some of this coal ash the same kind of coal ash that the Guardian and Observer recently reported is causing terrible health problems in the Punjab?

    an Observer investigation has now uncovered disturbing evidence to suggest a link between the contamination and the region’s coal-fired power stations. It is already known that the fine fly ash produced when coal is burned contains concentrated levels of uranium and a new report published by Russia’s leading nuclear research institution warns of an increased radiation hazard to people living near coal-fired thermal power stations.

    The test results for children born and living in areas around the state’s power stations show high levels of uranium in their bodies. Tests on ground water show that levels of uranium around the plants are up to 15 times the World Health Organisation’s maximum safe limits. Tests also show that it extends across large parts of the state, which is home to 24 million people.

    The findings have implications not only for the rest of India – Punjab produces two-thirds of the wheat in the country’s central reserves and 40% of its rice – but for many other countries planning to build new power plants, including China, Russia, India, Germany and the US. […]

    A previous report in the magazine Scientific American, citing various sources, claimed that fly ash emitted by power plants “carries into the surrounding environment 100 times more radiation than a nuclear power plant producing the same amount of energy”, adding: “When coal is burned into fly ash, uranium and thorium are concentrated at up to 10 times their original levels.”

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