In t
he second-ever posting on this blog, 8,595 items ago, I posed a simple question on Feb. 3, 2007 about approvals for and concerns over the We Energies controversial coal-fired Oak Creek Power Plant under construction - - where a bluff and coal ash landfill beneath some additional utility construction at the complex
fell into Lake Michigan earlier this week:
It turns out that the huge new coal-fired power plant that WE Energies
is building along Lake Michigan in Oak Creek is not yet free of the
legal and regulatory questions that had slowed its approval...
Wisconsin utilities operate with state-approved monopolies and
guaranteed rates of return. That's a pretty sweet deal in a free
enterprise economy, so is it asking too much of the utilities to meet
the highest legal and environmental standards?
Apparently,
the answer was from the DNR was, yes, that's asking too much, as
the Journal Sentinel's Don Behm and Thomas Content report in a shocker:
State environment regulators gave We Energies a pass in 2008 -
exempting it from certain rules so that construction work could be done
atop coal ash landfills on a bluff on the Lake Michigan shoreline at the
utility's Oak Creek Power Plant, officials said Tuesday.
Department of
Natural Resources officials determined in 2008 that construction
activities on an ash-filled ravine and other small landfills south of
the utility's two plants on the property would not increase the risk of
the ash or other contaminants getting into the lake, said Frank Schultz,
the department's waste supervisor in Milwaukee. We Energies is building
an air quality control facility for the older power plant at the site.
State
environmental and utility regulators at the time decided that the
construction activity would not significantly damage the environment, so
no impact studies were needed.
Can you believe it?
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