Posts Tagged ‘Coal Slurry’

In Commemoration of the Anniversary of the Buffalo Creek Disaster

Thursday, February 25th, 2010
posted by ambernitch

The Buffalo Creek Disaster of February 26, 1972, occurred when Pittston Coal Company’s coal slurry impoundment dam #3 in Logan County, West Virginia, burst forth after heavy rains, unleashing 132 million gallons of black wastewater.  The burst in dam #3 subsequently caused dams #1 and #2 to fail. The disaster left 118 dead, 7 missing, 1,121 injured, and over 4,000 homeless. Property damages exceeded $50 million. According to Pittston Coal, the dam failure had been an ‘Act of God’. This ‘Act of God’ occurred only four days after the impoundment had been inspected and declared ‘satisfactory‘.

The Governor of West Virginia at the time, Arch Moore, formed an investigative commission, which consisted solely of coal industry supporters. After the commission denied a request that a coal miner be added to the commission, a Citizen’s Commission formed to perform their own independent investigation of the disaster. The citizen’s report concluded that Pittston Coal was guilty of the murder of at least 124 people.

Previously in 1966, after a coal-waste dump in South Aberfan, Wales gave way killing 147 people, a geologist from the U.S. Geological Survey and the Bureau of Mines conducted a survey of potentially dangerous slag heaps in the coal-mining regions of the U.S. In that survey the Buffalo Creek dam was reported to be ‘unstable’. Later, the U.S. Interior Department gave a report on 38 West Virginia Coal Waste Dams to the Governor. Those in need of immediate repair were fixed, but no other corrections or inspections were done. In February of 1968, concerned residents of Buffalo Creek wrote the Governor expressing their fears that the dams were in danger of collapsing, but the dams were merely looked at and no corrections were made. Dam 3 collapsed in February 1971 causing black water to bubble up in the impoundments behind the dam. More coal refuse was dumped in to fill the break in the dam.

Due to the negligence on the part of Pittston Coal, some 625 survivors sued the Pittston Coal Company for $64 million in damages. They settled for $13.5 million. A second suit by 348 child survivors sought $225 million and settled for $4.8 million. The State of West Virginia also sued the company seeking $100 million, but Governor Moore settled for a mere $1 million. Gerald M. Stern, an attorney with Arnold & Porter, the law firm that had represented the case, wrote a book dedicated to the victims of the flood, entitled, “The Buffalo Creek Disaster.” The West Virginia Division of Culture and History has also compiled information concerning the event on their website.


Buffalo Creek by T. Paige

Bookmark and Share

Heavy sediment pouring into Coal River at Pettus

Friday, February 5th, 2010
posted by charles

4:15 p.m.

Note: pictures are on the way.

PETTUS, W.Va.–A heavy sediment spill is ongoing at the mouth of the Little Marsh Fork in the Coal River Valley, coming from Massey Energy’s subsidiary Marfork Mining Co.  Marfork’s operations include several deep mines, the Brushy Fork Sludge Impoundment and the Bee Tree Surface Mine.

Mathew Louis-Rosenberg of the Sludge Safety Project called it in to the state Department of Environmental Protection’s Spill Hotline.

Recall last month that a spill into the Gauley River was called in, and continued well past DEP’s visual confirmation of the spill.  DEP changed the reasoning a few times, but eventually conceded that in fact, Appalachian Fuels was responsible for two water violations (WVDEP: here and here) from the pond that was shown in our posts about that spill, here and here.

Louis-Rosenberg spoke with Keith Porterfield of the DEP, “He said he’s going to try to make it out there tonight but it depends on road conditions.”

The only thing above the mouth of the Little Marsh Fork are Massey-controlled mining operations and roads, such as the Bee Tree Surface Mine, all surrounded by forested mountain.

“If it’s from Bee Tree then their sediment ditches aren’t working and they’re in violation of their permit,” Coal River Mountain Watch’s Vernon Haltom said.  “DEP has let Massey violate with impunity for so long that we have no confidence that they will take any effective action to protect our streams and communities.”

The Sierra Club, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, Coal River Mountain Watch and the West Virginia Highlands Conservancy gave Massey a 60-day notice in January of their intent to sue, alleging the company’s water violations increased after it settled a lawsuit brought by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

“This just goes to show that the many people around here who’re concerned with Massey’s dangerous operations were correct in being concerned about the people who live downstream or near Massey’s operations,” Coal River Mountain Watch’s Judy Bonds said.  “It also shows that the tree sitters were right in their concerns.”

View Larger Map

Bookmark and Share

Windmills Not Toxic Spills

Friday, February 6th, 2009
posted by antrim

Marfork, West Virginia — On the heels of the TVA coal ash sludge disaster in Harriman, Tennessee, where 1.1 billion gallons of toxic coal ash sludge collapsed into the Clinch and Emory Riveres, concerned citizens in southern West Virginia have been fighting to stop the coal mining of Coal River Mountain and to build instead the Coal River Wind project, which would create clean jobs in perpetuity.


Five activists chained themselves down to heavy mining equipment inside the Massey Energy-owned mountaintop removal (MTR) coal operation. Two banners reading: "Windmills Not Toxic Spills" and "Save Coal River Mountain" were hung. Proesters were completely non-violent and were taken off the mine company property without incident, cited for tresspassing and released.

Five activists chained themselves down to heavy mining equipment inside the Massey Energy-owned mountaintop removal (MTR) coal operation. Two banners reading: "Windmills Not Toxic Spills" and "Save Coal River Mountain" were hung. Proesters were completely non-violent and were taken off the mine company property without incident, cited for tresspassing and released. photograph by Antrim Caskey


Bookmark and Share