NY Times, Mar. 1 2014
Ash Spill Shows How Watchdog Was Defanged
By TRIP GABRIEL

RALEIGH, N.C. — Last June, state employees in charge of stopping water 
pollution were given updated marching orders on behalf of North 
Carolina’s new Republican governor and conservative lawmakers.

“The General Assembly doesn’t like you,” an official in the Department 
of Environment and Natural Resources told supervisors called to a drab 
meeting room here. “They cut your budget, but you didn’t get the 
message. And they cut your budget again, and you still didn’t get the 
message.”

 From now on, regulators were told, they must focus on customer service, 
meaning issuing environmental permits for businesses as quickly as 
possible. Big changes are coming, the official said, according to three 
people in the meeting, two of whom took notes. “If you don’t like 
change, you’ll be gone.”

But when the nation’s largest utility, Duke Energy, spilled 39,000 tons 
of coal ash into the Dan River in early February, those big changes were 
suddenly playing out in a different light. Federal prosecutors have 
begun a criminal investigation into the spill and the relations between 
Duke and regulators at the environmental agency.

The spill, which coated the river bottom 70 miles downstream and 
threatened drinking water and aquatic life, drew attention to a deal 
that the environmental department’s new leadership reached with Duke 
last year over pollution from coal ash ponds. It included a minimal fine 
but no order that Duke remove the ash — the waste from burning coal to 
generate electricity — from its leaky, unlined ponds. Environmental 
groups said the arrangement protected a powerful utility rather than the 
environment or the public.

Facing increasing scrutiny and criticism, the department said late 
Friday that the company would be cited for two formal notices of 
violating environmental standards in connection with the spill. It is 
not clear what fines or other penalties could result.

"These are violations of state and federal law, and we are holding the 
utility accountable,” said the state environmental secretary, John E. 
Skvarla III.

Asked for comment, a spokeswoman said Duke will respond to the state.

Current and former state regulators said the watchdog agency, once among 
the most aggressive in the Southeast, has been transformed under Gov. 
Pat McCrory into a weak sentry that plays down science, has abandoned 
its regulatory role and suffers from politicized decision-making.

The episode is a huge embarrassment for Mr. McCrory, who worked at Duke 
Energy for 28 years and is a former mayor of Charlotte, where the 
company is based. And it has become another point of contention in North 
Carolina, where Republicans who took control of the General Assembly in 
2011 and the governor’s mansion last year have passed sweeping laws in 
line with conservative principles. They have affected voting rights and 
unemployment benefits, as well as what Republicans called “job-killing” 
environmental regulations, which have received less notice.

Critics say the accident, the third-largest coal ash spill on record, is 
inextricably linked to the state’s new environmental politics and 
reflects an enforcement agency led by a secretary who suggested that oil 
was a renewable resource and an assistant secretary who, as a state 
lawmaker, drew a bull’s-eye on a window in his office framing the 
environmental agency’s headquarters.

“They’re terrified,” said John Dorney, a retired supervisor who keeps in 
touch with many current employees. “Now these people have to take a deep 
breath and say, ‘I know what the rules require, but what does the 
political process want me to do?’ ”

Duke has apologized for the spill and says it is now committed to 
cleaning up some of its 32 coal ash ponds across the state. The company 
has also been subpoenaed in the federal investigation.

A spokesman for Mr. McCrory said the governor had no role in the state’s 
proposed settlement with Duke. On Tuesday, amid continuing concerns 
about the threat of future spills, he took a tougher stance than in the 
past, writing to Duke’s chief executive that he wanted the waste ponds, 
some sprawling over many acres, to be moved away from the state’s waterways.

The environmental agency’s embattled secretary, Mr. Skvarla, a McCrory 
appointee, pushed back last week on criticism of last year’s deal, under 
which the $50 billion company was fined only $99,111 for leaks from 
ponds at two power plants. The accusation that his department “and Duke 
Energy got together and made some smoky back-room deal with a nominal 
fine is simply not true,” Mr. Skvarla told reporters.

The fine was determined by a formula in the law, he said. The agency 
reached a settlement that allowed Duke to study its coal ash ponds, 
rather than immediately remove the slurry of ash and water, because it 
wanted to avoid being tied up in court for years, he said. “Our goal is 
to clean up coal ash,” Mr. Skvarla added. “Our goal is to protect the 
environment.”

But current and former agency employees said the treatment of Duke was 
typical of the pro-industry bias now in place under Governor McCrory, 
Mr. Skvarla and the General Assembly.

An animated graphic by the Center for Energy, Environment and 
Sustainability at Wake Forest University shows the aftermath of the coal 
ash pond rupture at Duke Energy’s Dan River Steam Station.

Last year, the environment agency’s budget for water pollution programs 
was cut by 10.2 percent, a bipartisan commission that approves 
regulations was reorganized to include only Republican appointees, and 
the governor vastly expanded the number of agency employees exempt from 
civil service protections, to 179 from 24.

The effect, said midlevel supervisors who now serve at the pleasure of 
the governor, is that they are hesitant to crack down on polluters who 
might complain to Mr. Skvarla or a lawmaker, at the risk of their jobs. 
Several spoke anonymously out of fear of being fired.

“They want to have a hammer to come down on anybody who hinders 
developers by enforcing regulations,” said a supervisor whose department 
is supposed to regulate businesses under laws devised to protect water 
quality. “We’re scared to death to say no to anyone anymore.”

A second supervisor, also speaking on the condition of anonymity, said: 
“A lot of us never considered ourselves political creatures. What’s 
happened here has really blown us out of the water. People speak in 
hushed tones in the hallway to each other. We go offsite to talk. It’s 
totally changed the culture of this organization.”

Mr. Skvarla said in an interview that he was “speechless” to hear such a 
sentiment, adding, “I think we have taken politics out of this agency.”

He added: “When I was hired by Governor McCrory, he said, ‘I want you to 
do two things: I want you to protect the environment, and I want you to 
help us grow this economy. We have to help people through the regulatory 
maze.’ ”

Susan Wilson, an environmental engineer who inspected storm-water runoff 
at factories and subdivisions, quit last year after her duties were 
transferred to another department with little expertise in the subject. 
She said the bureaucratic shuffle was meant to satisfy developers.

“Business is important, but there should be a balance between the 
regulated community and the environment,” Ms. Wilson said. “It’s all out 
of balance here.”

Despite deep cuts from the state budget, the agency’s new leadership 
turned back $582,000 in grants from the federal Environmental Protection 
Agency to monitor wetlands and study the impact of hydraulic fracturing 
for natural gas on waterways.

Amy Adams, a former supervisor who left the agency last year, said that 
the mantra of the current leadership was about “customer service,” but 
that did not include citizens who might live downstream from a polluter.

She and others said they were told to stop writing Notices of Violation 
to polluters, which can prompt fines, and instead to issue a Notice of 
Deficiency, which she likened to a state trooper giving a warning 
instead of a speeding ticket.

“I was asked directly by members of my staff, ‘Do we even do 
enforcements anymore?’ ” said Ms. Adams, who wrote an opinion column 
about the agency’s “soul-crushing takeover” for The News & Observer of 
Raleigh after she resigned.

Ms. Adams, who now works for Appalachian Voices, an environmental group 
in Boone, N.C., said that since the Dan River spill, the state agency 
has engaged in “revisionist history” about its regulation of Duke Energy.

The agency took action against Duke only after environmental groups 
filed notice that they intended to sue the utility to clean up the ash 
waste at power plants near Asheville and Mount Holly, N.C. The longtime 
practice of dumping ash waste in ponds became a major concern after a 
catastrophic failure of one in Tennessee in 2008, which is costing $1.2 
billion to clean up.

Under the federal Clean Water Act, citizen groups may sue polluters if 
state regulators do not do their job. But the law also allows states to 
intervene and take over the lawsuits, which is what the Department of 
Environment and Natural Resources did last year. Environmentalists say 
the state offered a favorable deal to Duke and blocked their lawsuits, 
which could have forced Duke to relocate the ash to lined pits away from 
drinking water.

“They did a behind-closed-doors settlement with the lawbreaker, and it 
requires no cleanup of one ounce of pollution or movement of one ounce 
of ash,” said Frank Holleman, a senior lawyer with the Southern 
Environmental Law Center, which sued on behalf of environmental groups. 
“The state has been a barrier at every turn.”

Mr. Skvarla, the agency secretary, said the deal the state reached with 
Duke in July was a more practical fix to the leaky ash ponds than what 
environmentalists sought. “Their only acceptable remedy was, dig ’em up, 
move them to lined landfills and cover them,” he said. “We’re talking 14 
facilities and 32 coal ash ponds. I can assure you it’s not that simple.”

The size of the Feb. 2 spill has been revised down from early estimates. 
As the federal Fish and Wildlife Service monitors the river water for 
long-term harm to fish and mollusks, attention is turning to a federal 
court in Raleigh, where employees of Duke and the environmental agency 
are to appear before a grand jury on March 18.

Meanwhile, the agency has reversed its earlier positions on Duke and 
coal ash cleanup. On Feb. 10, eight days after the spill, the agency 
withdrew its deal with Duke. This week, it said it might order the 
remaining ash at the Dan River site, in Eden, N.C., to be moved and 
stored in a lined landfill — what environmentalists had sought all along.

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