Water Near Tenn. Ash Spill May Be Unsafe
Some Water Samples Showing High Levels Of Arsenic After Major Coal Ash Slide
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Play CBS Video Video Tenn.'s Toxic Sludge Spill The Tenn. Valley Authority is working to contain a spill of 2.6 million cubic yards of potentially toxic pollutants after a breach at a local power plant. Mark Strassmann has more.
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Video Tennessee Toxic Spill Woes In Tennessee, as the clean-up continues from a massive spill of coal-ash, new warnings have been issued about possible water contamination. Mark Strassmann reports.
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An aerial view shows homes that were destroyed when a retention pond wall collapsed at the Tennessee Valley Authorities Kingston Fossil Plant, Monday, Dec. 22, 2008 in Harriman, Tenn. The Tennessee Valley Authority says the 40-acre pond held a slurry of ash generated by the coal-burning Kingston Steam Plant. (AP Photo/Wade Payne)
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Samples taken near the spill slightly exceed drinking water standards for toxic substances, and arsenic in one sample was higher than the maximum level allowed for drinking water, according to a news release from the Tennessee Valley Authority, which operates the power plant where the spill occurred, the Environmental Protection Agency and other officials.
TVA spokesman Jim Allen said there are four private drinking water wells in the area affected by the spill and the agency should have tests from them this week.
The spill was three times greater than what the TVA first reported, reports CBS News correspondent Mark Strassmann.
"I think they were beyond the actual slide point of the material," EPA spokeswoman Laura Niles said of the wells. "There shouldn't be direct impact, but that's why they are sampling."
Crystell Flinn lost her home - but worries about saving her health.
"It's devastating. It's unbelievable. You just can't imagine," she told Strassmann.
Arsenic occurs naturally in the environment, but elevated levels can cause ailments ranging from nausea to partial paralysis, and long-term exposure has been linked to several types of cancer, according to the EPA.
Authorities have said the municipal water supply is safe to drink.
The warning came a week after a retention pond burst at the Kingston Steam Plant, spreading more than a billion gallons of fly ash mixed with water over roughly 300 acres of Roane County and into a river. The deluge destroyed three homes and damaged 42 parcels of land, but there were no serious injuries.
However, environmental concerns could grow when the sludge containing the fly ash, a fine powdery material, dries out. The federal Environmental Protection agency and the TVA have begun air monitoring and on Monday advised people to avoid activities that could stir up dust, such as children or pets playing outside.
The dust can contain metals, including arsenic, that irritate the skin and can aggravate pre-existing condition such as asthma, Niles said.
The EPA recommends that anyone exposed to the dust should wash thoroughly with soap and water and wash the affected clothes separately from other garments.
The spill could change the way the nation's largest government-owned utility stores coal waste. On Monday, officials in Roane County said they are pushing the TVA to quit using large retention ponds filled with a mix of water and fly ash, a byproduct of coal-fired power plants.
Roane County Executive Mike Farmer said that he has talked with TVA officials and doesn't expect to see that type of holding pond on the TVA property in the future.
"I don't think Roane County would be happy to see that type of storage facility ... long-term," Farmer said.
TVA Chief Executive and President Tom Kilgore also told residents at a public meeting Sunday that his agency is looking at disposal options at the plant roughly 35 miles west of Knoxville.
Farmer said county officials are reviewing documents from TVA about the pond failure and will also get an independent engineering firm to evaluate them. The utility is still investigating what caused the dike to burst but officials have speculated that cold weather and above-normal rains were contributing factors.
TVA Inspector General Richard Moore said Monday that his office will investigate the spill and TVA's response to it. The inspector general's office is independent from TVA but will coordinate its work with EPA and Tennessee environmental regulators.
Knoxville-based TVA supplies electricity to Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Kentucky, Georgia, North Carolina and Virginia.
© MMVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
- Raise your glass of heavy metal water to clean coal power plants!
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- Man it is getting better and better all in the name of their god the almighty dollar.
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- If Bush has his way:
* The EPA will be banned from this site.
* OSHA will be told that this was a safe accident.
* Home Owners insurance companies involved will be allowed to forfeit payment because they don''t have to cover floods.
* The Power Plant will be given the green light to build a much bigger plant since all this land has become available.
* FEMA will provide some Toxic Trailers
* Victims will be informed that Jesus Saves. - Reply to this comment
- This is front page material.
especially if you were to bother realizing the earth''s small amount of actual fresh water.
But instead, let''s focus all our attention half-way around the world instead of the disasters next door. - Reply to this comment
- Coal has its ash and nuclear is spent fuel rods. What is also unappreciated, because of the focus on the mercury emissions from coal, is that coal is also a major source of radiation releases into the atmosphere because (no surprise considering its geology) many types of coal contain large amounts of radionuclides. The ease with which nuclear powerplants can be destroyed by terrorist acts, at least to the point of generating a uranimum chemical explosion (with its attendant spread of radiation), is also completely unappreciated. These are not insignificant issues. Oil, of course, poses major security issues. Now, why should we not give serious consideration and support to alternative energy resources? What blinders are you wearing?
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- Yet another ecological failure by a Bush political appointee... Warned that the levee was suspect and did nothing.
Need to do water samples every 30 days for the next year. Takes time for all the poisons to seep in to the water table, but the TVA, EPA and Bush already know this. - Reply to this comment
- "Officials at the utility have said the water is safe to drink "
"the poison was not detected in samples taken near the intake for the Kingston Water Treatment Plant"
For one small town. Not for those who have well water, and not for the hundreds of towns downstream, including Chattanooga.
The intake for the town of Kingston is on the Clinch River before it joins with the Emory.
But again, the EPA and TVA are being extremely careful with their wording here. They imply things are under control, but the scope of the problem is far larger. - Reply to this comment
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