CONTACTS: Cat McCue, Appalachian Voices, cat@appvoices.org, and Roberta Bondurant, Protect Our Water, Heritage, Rights, bondurantlaw@aol.com
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE – December 7, 2017
Today the Virginia Water Control Board approved the permit for the proposed fracked-gas Mountain Valley Pipeline that would run 300 miles from West Virginia through six counties of Virginia. The 5-2 vote came after a full day of public comment yesterday from about 85 people, almost all of them of landowners and experts arguing against the pipeline based on its unprecedented impacts on streams, rivers, drinking water supplies, wetlands and groundwater. Communities and organizations have been fighting the controversial project since it first was proposed in 2014.
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Tom Cormons, Executive Director of Appalachian Voices, a leading nonprofit advocate for healthy communities and just economies in Appalachia.
“We are thoroughly disappointed by the board’s decision. Thousands voiced their opposition to this pipeline based on evidence that it cannot be built without violating the federal Clean Water Act and the board’s obligation under Virginia law. DEQ created a rushed, haphazard process, limited the scope of the board’s review, and abdicated the state’s authority to the Corps of Engineers for oversight of pipeline construction at almost 400 water crossings.
“We applaud the efforts of several members who expressed concern that the draft permit would not provide reasonable assurance, as required by law, that water quality would be protected, and particularly we applaud members Nissa Dean and Roberta Kellam who cast the two dissenting votes.
“The board should have rejected the permit today because they lacked enough information to make a reasoned decision. Instead, it approved an utterly deficient permit.
“The record demonstrates this project would ultimately violate the law. We are considering all options and expect the outcome will be determined in the courts.
If the company breaks ground on the project, citizens along the entire route are prepared to watchdog every action, along every mile, every day of construction and afterwards, and compel agencies to act when violations inevitably occur.
“Next week, the board will be presented with an equally deficient permit for the proposed Atlantic Coast Pipeline, and should exercise its full authority to reject the permit.”
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Roberta Bondurant, steering council of Protect Our Water, Heritage, Rights, a coalition of grassroots groups along the route of the proposed Mountain Valley Pipeline:
“The board failed in declining to exercise its authority of review and supervision in pumping the brakes on this process, so as to allow ample time to gather more information on which to make a decision. The board’s inquiries today highlight the massive chasm of information and understanding lacking in its review process– which reaffirmed the imperative to deny the project or opt for further inquiry. Grave concerns persist regarding water sources and geography implicated by proposed construction, of the proper use, benefit and details of water monitoring programs, and of the shocking lack of financial protection and bonding options for communities and individuals in this proposed project.
“The people of Virginia will continue to fight what amounts to a huge experiment of industrial development and the impacts on land, water and people. No doubt the challenge to natural gas in Virginia is a marathon–there are other permits, legal challenges– a multitude of hurdles ahead for the MVP. For our great places, our clean water, our children and for generations after them–we will carry on.”
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VA-DEQ statement on SWCB approval of Mountain Valley Pipeline
Press Release, VA Department of Environmental Quality, December 8, 2017
On December 7, 2017, the State Water Control Board approved certification covering upland areas for the Mountain Valley Pipeline on a 5-2 vote.
This certification is part of the most rigorous regulatory process to which a proposed pipeline ever has been subjected in Virginia.
DEQ’s technical staff has been diligent to ensure that all appropriate practices are in place to meet all water quality challenges identified.
DEQ has worked closely with its attorneys to make sure the agency has met all the requirements of state and federal law for which DEQ is responsible.
If this project proceeds, DEQ will hold the developers to the highest standards for which they are accountable.
Document: http://www.deq.virginia.gov/Portals/0/DEQ/Water/Pipelines/MVP_Certification_Final.pdf