NEWPORT-After years of controversy, the Pigeon River's
future water quality will be determined by the upcoming renewal permit for the
Blue Ridge Paper Products mill in Canton, N.C., according to a press release
from Clean Water Expected in East Tennessee (CWEET).
An official notice for public comment was announced late
last week by the North Carolina Division of Water Quality (DWQ). The public has
been awaiting release of the upcoming permit since the mill's previous permit
expired in 2006, according to CWEET.
Since the expiration of the previous permit, Blue Ridge
has been allowed to continue their operations under a three-year administrative
extension.
A copy of the draft permit and what DWQ characterizes as
a "fact sheet" are available at:
http://h2o.enr.state.nc.us/NPDES/PublicNotices.html
Established in 1908, the Canton paper mill has discharged
pollution to the waters of the Pigeon River for 101 years, according to CWEET.
During the 1980's, efforts by citizens groups helped to raise awareness about
the "deplorable water quality" in the Pigeon River, the press release
stated.
These efforts led to a challenge from the State of
Tennessee, Newport, and Cocke County officials, who called for enforcement of
environmental laws that had been ignored by the weak permits. The permit
challenge resulted in significant improvements being made to the Pigeon's
waters, reducing color pollution by more than 50 percent in four years. The
cleanup of the Pigeon led to the booming rafting industry in Cocke County,
which is currently the county's major source of revenue, according to CWEET.
Concerned citizens groups that have been following this
permit for years take issue with several items in the draft permit's fact
sheet.
The mill is referred to in the fact sheet as "the
cleanest mill in the world." With no context or further information, this
is completely misleading. While the Mill discharges a smaller concentration of
some pollutants per ton of production, it is a huge mill with thousands of tons
of production each day, on a tiny mountain river, so the total amount of
pollution released is not one of the lowest in the world, the release stated.
The industrial measurement of pollutants per ton is not a measure of its impact
on the river or actual in-stream water quality.
During summer low river flow periods, which are likely to
occur more frequently under climate change scenarios, the mill almost always
exceeds the 50 color unit standard that the Environmental Protection Agency was
aiming for over 20 years ago, sometimes by very large percentages. The weak
limits in this permit are therefore far from protecting acceptable water
quality in the Pigeon River.
In addition, the permit would call for removal of the
color variance, which could lead to any additional improvements to water
quality being halted completely. Amelia Taylor with CWEET, a Newport-based
group, stated in the release that "the variance gives the mill permission
to pollute the water until a certain standard has been met. Once the standard
has been met then the variance can be removed, but over the last few years the
mill has not even been meeting the standard that was set by the Environmental
Protection Agency. Once the variance is removed then the mill won't have to make
any further improvements. It's basically saying that they've done everything
they needed to do."
CWEET states that while major improvements were made to
the Pigeon's water quality during the 1990's, significant progress has not been
made in nearly a decade.
"The purpose of a wastewater discharge permit is to
eliminate pollution through every 5 year permit cycle. Since the 2001 permit
was issued we have not seen water quality on the Pigeon improve," said
Taylor.
The group is calling for the citizens of Cocke County and
East Tennessee to be involved in the upcoming permitting process.
"This is about the future and health of our
community and children. The quality of our water directly affects the quality
of our lives. If we want to see a strong and enforceable permit that would
restart the cleanup of the river, we need our citizens to stand up for this.
Right now the permit as it's written could stop the clean up altogether,"
commented Angel Moore of CWEET.
A public meeting on the permit will be held in Cocke
County on Jan. 25 at Cocke County High School. Another public hearing is
planned for the following day, Jan. 26, in Waynesville, N.C. Residents and
organizations can make comments now concerning the condition of the river and
permit to the N.C. Division of Water Quality at DWQ/NPDES Unit, 1617 Mail
Service Center Raleigh, NC 27699.
For more information contact Clean Water Expected
in East TN (CWEET) at (423) 237-5187 or visit
cweet.org.