The city of Kingston, Tenn. plans to hold its annual July 4 “Smokin’ the Water” celebration tomorrow at a public park near Watts Bar Reservoir. The event is
expected to draw as many as 25,000 people with festivities including
raft races, boating and swimming.
But the park is only a short distance downstream from the site of the
massive coal ash spill from the Tennessee Valley Authority’s Kingston
power plant—and test results released this week show dangerous
levels of heavy metal contamination that could endanger the health of
people who come in contact with the water. (Click here for a Google Earth image showing the proximity of the plant, address above and to the left, and the park, below and to the right.)
Among
the toxic contaminants found at levels exceeding basic water safety
standards were antimony, arsenic, barium, beryllium, cadmium, chromium,
lead, mercury, nickel, selenium and thallium—metals that have been
linked to cancer and other health problems. For details on the
chemicals’ health effects, visit the U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances
and Disease Registry’s ToxFAQs page.
The tests were conducted by consultants hired by an environmental law firm that’s suing TVA over last December’s disaster, which released a
billion gallons of toxic coal ash into a nearby community and
waterways. The attorneys released the results to regulatory authorities
this week. A June 30 letter sent by the firm to the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency and Tennessee Department of Environment and
Conservation stated:
Although these samples have been taken for litigation purposes, we believe that the agencies with the responsibility to protect public health and the environment should have the results in order to make informed decisions about protecting downstream water users, particularly given the upcoming July 4th weekend, which will surely include significant public contact with the waterways as part of the holiday festivities and recreation.
The
samples were taken recently by qualified consultants using methods
approved by EPA and TDEC and analyzed by a certified in-state
laboratory. To view the law firm’s water testing data, click here.
For the United Mountain Defense press release about the findings, which
includes an excerpt of the law firm’s letter to environmental
regulators, click here.
Last month, EPA, TDEC and TVA jointly issued a recreational advisory for upper sections of the Watts Bar Reservoir. But the law firm warns
that its data show unsafe concentrations of metals much further
downstream than stated in the advisory. In fact, it found high levels
of arsenic, lead and mercury 27 miles into the reservoir.
To
date, TVA has spent more than $100 million on the cleanup of the Dec.
22, 2008 ash spill. The final cost of the project—excluding fines
and litigation—is estimated at as much as $975 million.
(This story originally appeared at Facing South.)
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