Orange County NC Website
allow the coal ash to remain in an unlined pit in the center of town. <br />Here is topqagr tj�ca l rnap showing the location of the coal deposit. <br />The Town hired a consultant Falcon Engineering to make tests and <br />to report to the North Carolina Department of the Environmental <br />Quality (DEQ). Soil samples taken on the site by Falcon in early <br />2014 identified elevated levels of coal ash metals in the ground <br />water such as arsenic, mercury, chromium, lead, thallium, and <br />other dangerous pollutants. Well test results have been mixed at a <br />new set of well locations, where the consultant used filtered <br />samples without finding high levels of dissolved coal ash <br />pollutants. <br />Friends of Bolin Creek has raised questions about the procedures <br />used and the choice of location for the tests, and we have <br />communicated our concerns to the Town and Department of <br />Environmental Quality. <br />The Town has posted a Web page called "Chapel Hill Coal Ash <br />Disposal Site Remediation Project" containing relevant documents <br />b.e-r-e-, In mid 2015, Friends of Bolin Creek requested help from the <br />Southern Environmental Law Center for legal and support services. <br />Clean up makes a difference. According to a January 29, 2016 <br />report, groundwater contamination dramatically declined along the <br />Catawba-Wateree River after a South Carolina utility removed the <br />coal ash under a settlement negotiated by the Southern <br />Environmental Law Center. See article. <br />"These results confirm that when you remove the polluting coal <br />ash, you also eliminate pollution of groundwater," said Frank <br />Holleman, senior attorney for the Southern Environmental Law <br />Center. "Duke Energy and North Carolina's Department of <br />Environmental Quality must wake up to this reality, learn from <br />South Carolina, and move all of Duke Energy's polluting coal ash <br />from unlined waterfront pits to safe dry lined storage. Otherwise, <br />North Carolina's groundwater will be polluted for years to come." <br />North Carolina has more than 30 such sites in 14 different <br />locations across the state. A pipe running under one of the ponds <br />run by Duke Energy in Eden NC ruptured in February of 2014. The <br />coal ash spilled, largely affecting the Dan River which flows into <br />Virginia. The spill is the third largest of its kind in U.S. history. <br />