Here we have a pipe dream worthy of pursuit! dgn
https://record.umich.edu/articles/researchers-developing-wearable-pollution…
Researchers developing wearable pollution-measuring technology
By Nardy Baeza Bickel, University of Michigan News, November 18, 2021
A walk in the park could soon include getting real-time measurements of pollutants in the air and updated walking routes to avoid the most toxic ones, all while wearing a gadget the size of a smartwatch.
With the support of a $2.78 million grant from the National Institutes of Health, researchers at the University of Michigan, Michigan State University and Oakland University are teaming up to develop wearable technology able to identify particulate matter pollution such as soot and toxic metals generated by cars, trucks and industrial sources.
“When we look at the global burden of disease, particulate matter is by far the biggest driver of premature deaths from exposure to air pollution,” said Tim Dvonch, associate professor of environmental health sciences at U-M’s School of Public Health.
Until now, most research required big and expensive outdoor monitors or several-pound devices workers use in occupational settings, he said.
“Some of the most vulnerable people to adverse effects from air pollution exposure happen to be children, pregnant women and women of childbearing age,” he said. “Having an easily wearable device would help monitor the air they’re exposed to, and hopefully provide healthier alternatives in near real time.”
Dvonch said the team first started working in wearable technology in 2013 to detect pollutant gases but are now focusing on particulate matter, given that it’s responsible for an estimated 7 million premature deaths every year, according to new air quality guidelines published in September by the World Health Organization. That’s roughly one in nine deaths globally.
“Air pollution and, specifically, airborne particulate matter has a huge impact on health, on respiratory and cardiovascular illnesses, and it’s also associated with a number of other adverse health outcomes,” Dvonch said.
“Vulnerable populations include prenatal exposures, young children and the elderly, and we know it also disproportionately affects communities of lower socioeconomic status and communities of color who may live near air pollution sources like motor vehicle traffic, incinerators, refineries or power plants.”
Within the team, Andrew Mason, a professor at MSU’s College of Engineering, focuses on developing the microscale sampling device, while Xiangqun Zeng, professor of chemistry at Oakland University, is developing the chemical sensor technology.
Once the device is developed, Dvonch and the U-M team will oversee field-testing it in communities in metro Detroit, measuring it against existing monitors for accuracy and designing walking maps throughout neighborhoods that are known to have variable levels of air quality, to further evaluate the device.
Many of the pollutants that affect hearts, lungs and brains are invisible to human eyes. And many of the current technologies used to monitor air pollution take days or weeks to collect and process data.
“That’s helpful for epidemiological studies, but it doesn’t tell you what’s going on today,” Mason said.
Adding a network of wearable devices would provide unprecedented data about air quality over space and time, helping inform policies and interventions to help protect the most vulnerable, the researchers said.
But developing those devices is no small feat. The research team will need to build technology that can count particles, characterize what each particle is made of, and also determine particle size down to nanometer scale.
On top of all that, the team has challenged itself to become the first to fit such technology into something the size of a wristwatch.
“Currently, there is no personal monitoring device available because of the complexity,” Zeng said. “The most exciting aspect of this project is its significance and innovation.”
Dvonch said it will be a challenge to accomplish all of the project goals, but “the project team is very organized and efficient, and I expect this will allow us to overcome the challenges we may face.”
“Not only will the developed monitoring devices from our project be applicable to assessing air pollution exposures across many parts of the globe, importantly, our project will be able to test, evaluate and begin to address these particulate matter exposure issues right here in Michigan communities,” he said.
Tags:
National Institutes of Health
pollution
School of Public Health
wearable technology
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https://stateimpact.npr.org/pennsylvania/2021/11/22/coal-fired-power-plants…
Coal-fired power plants, including two in Penna., due to new wastewater rule
From an Article by Michael Rubinkam (Associated Press), State-Impact Penna., November 22, 2021
[AP] Climate change isn’t what’s driving some U.S. coal-fired power plants to shut down. It’s the expense of stricter pollution controls on their wastewater.
Dozens of plants nationwide plan to stop burning coal this decade to comply with more stringent federal wastewater guidelines, according to state regulatory filings, as the industry continues moving away from the planet-warming fossil fuel to make electricity.
The new wastewater rule requires power plants to clean coal ash and toxic heavy metals such as mercury, arsenic and selenium from plant wastewater before it is dumped into streams and rivers. The rule is expected to affect 75 coal-fired power plants nationwide, according to the Environmental Protection Agency.
Those plants had an October deadline to tell their state regulators how they planned to comply, with options that included upgrading their pollution-control equipment or retiring their coal-fired generating units by 2028.
The national impact of the wastewater rule is still coming into focus, but at least 26 plants in 14 states said they will stop burning coal, according to the Sierra Club, which has been tracking state regulatory filings.
Twenty-one of the plants intend to shut down, and five indicated they may switch to natural gas, the environmental group said.
“The free ride these plants have been getting is ending in a lot of ways,” said Zack Fabish, a Sierra Club lawyer. “And them choosing to retire by 2028 probably reflects the reality that a lot of the subsidies they have been getting in terms of being able to dump their wastewater into the commons, they are not going to be able to do that in the future.”
The rule will reduce the discharge of pollutants into the nation’s waterways by about 386 million pounds annually, according to EPA estimates. It’s expected to cost plant operators, collectively, nearly $200 million per year to implement.
Those that intend to close include two of Pennsylvania’s largest coal-fired power plants, Keystone and Conemaugh outside Pittsburgh, which said they will stop using coal and retire all of their generating units by Dec. 31, 2028, according to regulatory notices obtained separately by The Associated Press.
The plants opened more than 50 years ago and together employ about 320 full-time workers and 170 contractors. They generate enough power for perhaps 1.5 million homes, according to industry averages for coal plants of their size.
In addition to Pennsylvania, states with power plants that plan to stop using coal by 2028 are Arkansas, Georgia, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas and West Virginia, the Sierra Club data shows.
Power producers that say they will shutter coal-fired units as a result of the new rule include Atlanta-based Southern Co. and Houston-based NRG. Southern, which operates electric utilities in Georgia, Alabama and Mississippi, said it will shutter two-thirds of its coal fleet, including units at the nation’s two largest coal-fired power plants, Scherer and Bowen, both in Georgia. NRG said it plans to stop burning coal at its domestic plants outside Texas, and install new pollution controls at its two Texas plants.
The electric power sector has spent years transitioning from coal to cheaper, cleaner-burning natural gas and renewables like wind and solar. Nationwide, about 30% of generating capacity at coal plants has been retired since 2010, according to the Energy Information Administration. (Coal use at power plants is expected to surge more than 20% this year because of sharply higher natural gas prices — the first such increase since 2014 — but the energy agency said it expects that trend to be temporary.)
The long-term move away from coal has been pronounced in Pennsylvania, the nation’s No. 3 coal-producing state after Wyoming and West Virginia. Coal’s share of electrical power generation in the state declined from nearly half in 2010 to 10% last year, with operators taking advantage of a statewide boom in natural gas drilling in the Marcellus Shale, the nation’s largest gas field. Seventeen Pennsylvania coal plants have been retired since 2009.
“The smallest, oldest (coal) plants were generally the ones the economics killed first. They were too expensive and too small to be retrofitted to meet new EPA standards,” said Jean Reaves Rollins, president of The C Three Group, a market research firm focused on energy infrastructure and utilities.
She said coal plants in competitive electricity markets like Pennsylvania’s have also come under pressure. “It is clear in the case of the two Pennsylvania plants, the cost of compliance will put them out of the economic running,” she said.
Pennsylvania and neighboring Ohio have accounted for 20% of all coal-fueled power plant shutdowns in the U.S. in recent years, according to federal data.
The Keystone and Conemaugh plants are owned by a consortium of private investors, with Texas-based power producer Talen Energy also holding a stake. Talen referred questions to the plants’ chief operating officer, who did not return phone calls and emails.
Industry officials contend the mothballing of so many coal plants carries consequences for the nation’s electric grid. Michelle Bloodworth, president and CEO of America’s Power, a trade organization that advocates on behalf of coal-fueled electricity, cited recent blackouts in Texas and elsewhere as examples of “what happens when you go too far too fast.”
“We are monitoring the situation currently but we do remain concerned that overly aggressive policies that lead to the premature retirement of dispatchable generation like the coal fleet will jeopardize the reliability and resilience of the electricity grid,” Bloodworth said.
Experts have pointed out that in the case of last winter’s massive Texas blackout, most of the megawatts that went offline were generated by gas, coal and nuclear plants.
In Pennsylvania, the planned retirements of Keystone and Conemaugh come as building trade unions, industry groups and coal communities fight the state’s planned entry into the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, a multi-state consortium that imposes a price on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants that use coal, gas and oil. Pennsylvania would be the first major fossil fuel state to adopt such a carbon pricing policy.
David Masur, executive director of PennEnvironment, an environmental group, said the closures show that “with or without policies to reduce carbon pollution, the companies who own these antiquated power plants intend to shut them down or convert many of them anyway.”
The planned shutdowns could leave Homer City Generating Station as the last large, traditional coal-fired power plant in the state still operating by decade’s end. Homer City, which is east of Pittsburgh and is the largest coal plant in Pennsylvania, has told state regulators it plans to keep operating and abide by the new wastewater limits.
Owners of shuttering plants are responsible for environmental cleanup, according to the EPA.
StateImpact Pennsylvania is a collaboration among WITF, WHYY, and the Allegheny Front.
https://www.dailykos.com/stories/2021/11/20/2065377/-Getting-Joe-Manchin-s-…
Getting Joe Manchin's vote on BBB could come down to one of the weirdest situations of the century
Stitch that all together, and you get a Politico report on how the Grant Town power plant near Morgantown, West Virginia has put forward a proposal to turn itself into a giant, coal-powered, cryptocurrency “mine.” If that proposal moves forward, it could ensure that the lone contract that defines Manchin’s “coal brokerage firm” will continue to hand him over $500,000 a year for doing very close to nothing. Then maybe we can all have nice things. Or, if the crypto-plant proposal fails, Manchin could still hold the entire bill hostage to his personal interest in fossil fuels.
Cryptocurrency is a still a phenomenon that leaves many people scratching their heads. Whether it’s a Bitcoin or a Sol, cryptocurrency doesn’t exist as a block of gold in a vault, a physical coin in a drawer, or a promissory note backed by a government. It’s a series of numbers embedded in a blockchain, which is itself a kind of storage system for these numbers that makes it very difficult to falsify or alter information. The numbers can’t be guessed, and don’t follow a regular pattern. They can only be calculated using a laborious set of equations that can discover the next sequence in a process popularly called “mining.” Through mining, new “blocks” of verified transactions are added to the blockchain. Those blocks are owned by the miners.
In the early days, discovering these sequences was relatively easy and could even be done on generic desktop computers. But finding new crypto “coins” rapidly becomes more difficult, and the equations aren’t really optimized to work on the kind of generic microprocessors at the heart of most laptops and desktops. Systems expanded to allow many computers to work together in discovering a block. Then computer gamers and graphic artists found that the dedicated graphics cards they needed were simply unavailable, because cryptocurrency miners had discovered that the type of processors on these cards was much better suited to digging up that next coin. That’s still true today to some extent, but in large part, crypto mining has moved on to even more specialized hardware, designed expressly to deal with the particular equations involved in uncovering a new transaction. This dedicated hardware has taken crypto mining well beyond the limits of what many early adherents of Bitcoin or other currencies thought to be practical.
Over time, the real cost of mining a new block has become defined by one thing: power. Anyone trying to mine a Bitcoin at home these days is almost certain to spend more money on the power it costs to mine that coin than the coin is actually worth. At the other end of the mining spectrum, rooms full of specialized mining machines, all digging away at the blockchain, consume a lot of energy, but the cost of the power is still lower than the profit that can be returned—especially when the crypto market is surging.
Rather than the cost of power, the availability of power has become a constraint on these high-end mining operations. There are systems out there that need more power than a mid-sized town to handle their ongoing search for that next transaction. So where do they get it? They buy a power plant.
There are some rather ingenious alternatives being put forward—including solar-powered EV charging stations that would use all solar power to mine for cryptocurrency using any excess energy—but all too often, the easiest form of power for the crypto-hungry to find can be defined in one word: coal.
Across the nation and in many parts of the world, coal power plants are closing for the simplest reason: They cost too much. The cost of operating a coal-powered plant is now so far above adding new power in the form of solar or wind, that systems are finding it cheaper to overbuild renewables and close down the aging coal plants. Some plants are being converted to burn natural gas instead. Others are just being shuttered.
A plant that’s about to be written off and remaindered is a great target for a crypto operation. Using that dedicated hardware, they can afford the higher cost of the coal-based power. That’s led to crypto miners buying up multiple plants in Pennsylvania and in New York. That New York plant had been used as a “peaker” plant, filling in when there was high demand on the grid. Its continuous use in powering crypto mining has reportedly made a nearby glacial lake used to cool the plant “feel like a bathtub.”
In the case of the Grant Town plant in West Virginia, operating it for power no longer makes any sense. It’s a relatively small power plant, only 80 megawatts. It’s also the only plant in the state that still burns “waste coal.”
Coal mines often generate a spoil pile of mostly non-coal material that is picked off the conveyor belt, often by hand, and pitched aside. Before the coal is sent to the power plant, it is often sent through a “prep plant,” where the coal is crushed to a more uniform size and sent through a series of chemical baths in which the lighter coal floats, while heavier minerals—especially those rich in sulfur—sink. This leaves behind a second spoil pile of waste material.
Producing waste coal requires going back through the spoil piles for coal that was missed the first time. That coal is worse in almost every way than what was produced on the first pass. It contains more non-coal material, lowering the energy output and increasing the amount of ash. It also contains more sulfur and heavy metals, creating toxins that either go up the smokestack or into the coal slurry at the plant.
All coal is dirty, but waste coal is the dirtiest form of coal. Waste coal is what Joe Manchin sells.
Using waste coal made a tiny amount of sense in 2008, when the coal market was at its peak and supply was having a hard time keeping up with demand. It makes no sense now, when a majority of mines have been idled and there is still enormous overcapacity. But Manchin has a contract, and that contract has netted him over $5 million in the last decade.
The result of all this is that Grant Town isn’t just the dirtiest plant using the dirtiest fuel, it’s also the most expensive plant in the state, in terms of dollars per megawatt. That plant has lost $117 million in just the last five years while paying Manchin $500,000 a year—not even for the waste coal itself, but just to manage the contract that delivers the waste coal.
Joe Manchin is almost singularly responsible for removing $1.8 trillion in funding from the Build Back Better legislation. Thanks to Sen. Manchin’s refusal to support the bill as it was originally proposed, dozens of major programs have already been reduced in scope or eliminated completely. Some of the things that were removed—including two years of free community college—seemed like complete no-brainers which would have not only decreased the debt students now face upon emerging from college, but given the U.S. a competitive advantage by creating a more educated work force.
The funds for climate change included in the legislation that just passed the House are much smaller than those included in the original proposal that came from the White House. However, they do include over $500 billion in funds dedicated to expanding the use of renewable energy and electric vehicles. Funds for the creation of the Civilian Climate Corps are also still in there, which would create jobs dedicated to restoring and maintaining lost areas of forest and wetland.
Also still included is a program that will give utilities a bonus for the switching production to renewable power. As Popular Science explains, that program could be a massive game-changer when it comes to transitioning not just coal plants, but also natural gas-powered plants, to solar or wind. Manchin has specifically opposed that program, saying, “Why pay the utilities for something they're going to do anyway, because we're transitioning?”
This is why. Because the program supporting those increased payments is expected to speed the transition by 4% a year. And that adds up.
A 4 percent yearly increase would get the energy mix to about 70 to 80 percent in 2030, whereas business as usual would put Americans around 48 percent by the same date.
If the U.S. is even going to come close to meeting the goals that must be met to ward off the worst of the climate crisis, it needs Manchin to vote for inclusions of the Clean Energy Performance Program as part of Build Back Better.
And getting that vote may depend on whether or not the Grant Town plant gets turned into a dedicated crypto mining plant … all so that Joe Manchin can continue to sell the dirtiest coal, to the dirtiest plant, to line his pocket with the dirtiest money.
Sent from my iPad
https://www.wtrf.com/video/weirton-residents-are-against-a-potential-constr…
Weirton residents are against a potential construction of a gas well pad to be built in their neighborhood
Rebecca Little, WTRF News 7, Wheeling, WV, November 18, 2021
UPDATE: Southwestern Energy provided the following statement regarding the gas well pad in Weirton.
“Protecting the health and safety of our workers, community and the environment are core Southwestern values that guide our ongoing and future operations. We welcome constructive input and feedback from local residents as this important economic development project moves forward, and we are committed to responsibly developing natural gas in the region, as well as being a good neighbor and steward of the environment.”
Southwestern Energy
WEIRTON, W.Va.- (WTRF) One by one Weirton residents are starting to stand up to the potential construction of a gas well pad that is supposed to be built off of Park Drive.
It is proposed to be built on a 300-acre piece of property and on Wednesday night the small crowd showed up at the Weirton Milsop Community Center for a town hall meeting in hopes of putting a stop to the Southwestern Energy project from ever happening.
The meeting was spearheaded by former Weirton City Manager and Attorney Joe DiBartolomeo encouraged residents, who live in the area of Three Springs Drive, to write to the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection detailing their grievances.
14 residents have already written to the director of permitting for gas wells to voice their opposition to the proposed site that is within the city limits.
Among the concerns, according to residents, the close proximity of the gas well pad site to their homes, churches, schools, restaurants and hotels, not to mention the noise plus the danger of a potential accident at the site.
“I am concerned what it might do to the city aquifers as far as water contamination. There’s no question that there will be noise problems with all these heavy trucks. I am sure there will be accidents the damages to the road. There are all sorts of issues and the property values are going to go down and we’re trying to attract people to the city of Weirton. That isn’t going to get it done.”
Joe DiBartolomeo, Concerned Resident
DiBartolomeo says the Weirton Zoning Board voted twice against granting Southwestern Energy the permit to build the gas well pad. He says the energy company is appealing that decision along with another appeal in the Brooke County Circuit Court.
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https://wvrivers.org/2021/11/mvpscars/?fbclid=IwAR3T-UgEIcdAwxG4gXzlzwy4HEK…
Scars from the Mountain Valley Pipeline
As we rumble down the runway, my heart beats with anticipation as the plane picks up enough speed and the wheels lift off the ground to get that feeling of floating, airborne!
I glance back at Jenny Harnish, our videographer who films and edits our pipeline video series, smiles plastered on our faces. We look down as our familiar little town of Lewisburg passes by underneath our wings and we head toward the Greenbrier River Valley. Our first waypoint is near Pence Springs, where MVP proposes to drill under the Greenbrier River. But the river valley is still fogged in so we continue north.
Out of the fog appears a large swath denuded of trees going straight up the mountainside. Little trucks and heavy equipment can be seen moving dirt around below. The scar continues along the ridgeline until it cuts down into the valley and stream below.
The pilot slows the plane and does a few circles so Jenny can point her video camera out the window to attempt to capture the rugged terrain and steepness of the slopes. Seeing the construction from the air brings a different perspective. The pipeline scar continues along ridgetops as far as the eye can see in either direction dropping down into the valley and then appearing again on the next ridge.
Seeing the land from a plane really conveys the incredible impact humans have on the landscape. When flying in Alaska, there were great distances where I couldn’t see any human impact, so much of the landscape was wild and untouched. But flying over this region of WV, I was hard-pressed to find a spot that didn’t have an imprint of Man. At one point near Quinwood, we were seeing pipeline construction, coal mining, timbering and windmills all in the same viewshed.
From: Hansen for House <hansenforwv(a)hansenforhouse.emailnb.com>
> Date: November 8, 2021 at 8:48:07 AM EST
> To: Duane Nichols <Duane330(a)aol.com>
> Subject: Mon County Coal Communities Workgroup Listening Session - Nov 10
>
>
>
> Duane --
>
> The Mon County Coal Communities Workgroup Listening Session is this Wednesday, November 10. I hope you can join us! We kicked things off in Logan and Beckley recently, and the sessions went very well, with high attendance and lots of constructive ideas. Here's some news coverage in the Gazette-Mail and Metro News.
>
> The Workgroup's goal is to develop policy recommendations to help revitalize West Virginia’s coal communities. We're talking with local residents, as well as community and business leaders, to find out what our coal communities need to succeed and what tools are already available that we can build on. We aim to facilitate the flow of federal, state, and private foundation resources into communities to diversify economies.
>
> Everyone with ideas on how to make our community better is encouraged to attend.
>
> Monongalia County Coal Communities Workgroup Listening Session
> Wednesday, November 10, 6:30 pm
> The Shack, 537 Blue Horizon Dr, Pursglove, WV 26546
>
> If the Shack parking lot is full, then you can park along the road or across the road at the post office.
>
> Hope to see you there!
>
> Evan
> Hansen for House
> http://www.hansenforwv.com/
>
> Hansen for House · PO Box 139, Morgantown, WV 26507, United States
>
>
>
https://www.frackcheckwv.net/2021/11/01/army-corps-of-engineers-%e2%80%94-p…
ARMY CORPS OF ENGINEERS — Public Hearing(s) on “Mountain Valley Pipeline”
MOUNTAIN VALLEY PIPELINE in WV & VA
NOTICE OF VIRTUAL PUBLIC HEARINGS — Mountain Valley Pipeline in WV & VA
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that virtual public hearings will be conducted by the United States (U.S.) Army Corps of Engineers (Corps) to solicit the views of interested persons regarding the permit application submitted by Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP), LLC. The Corps is reviewing the application under the authority of Section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1899 and Section 404 of the Clean Water Act.
SUBJECT: The applicant has requested a Department of the Army (DA) permit from the Huntington District, the Pittsburgh District and the Norfolk District for the permanent discharge of dredged and/or fill material into 1,179 linear feet of streams (0.2527 acre) and 0.485 acre of wetlands, the temporary discharge of dredged and/or fill material into 38,083 linear feet of streams (8.0757 acres) and 17.57 acres of wetlands, and work in five (5) navigable waters of the U.S. (the Elk, Gauley and Greenbrier Rivers in West Virginia and the Roanoke and Blackwater Rivers in Virginia) associated with construction of the project known as the MVP Project[1]. The proposed pipeline project would be approximately 304 miles in length and begin at the existing Equitrans, L.P. transmission system near the Mobley processing facility in Wetzel County, West Virginia and end at the Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Company, LLC’s (Transco) Zone 5 Compressor Station 165 in Transco Village, Pittsylvania County, Virginia. The proposed project is contained within the states of West Virginia and Virginia. The proposed project crosses three (3) Corps Regulatory District boundaries including Huntington and Pittsburgh Districts in West Virginia and Norfolk District in Virginia. Details of the proposed project can be found at:
https://www.lrh.usace.army.mil/Missions/Regulatory/Public-Notices/Article/2…
Public Notice Nos. LRH-2015-00592-GBR, LRP-2015-798 and NAO-2015-0898 issued by the Corps on March 29, 2021 advertised the applicant’s proposal. The public notice comment period was subsequently extended for an additional 30 days. The public notice version of the DA permit application and appendices are available under the IP Applications tab for public download at:
http://www.mountainvalleypipeline.info/news-info/
PURPOSE: The purpose of the public hearings is to acquire information which will be considered in evaluating the permit application and to afford the public an opportunity to present their views, opinions, and information on the proposed permit action. Given the broad geographic scope of the proposed project and the extent of expressed public interest in the proposed project, it has been determined that two (2) public hearings, one (1) in West Virginia and one (1) in Virginia, will be held to better accommodate public participation. The Corps will hold these public hearings in the evening hours in order to accommodate maximum participation. Recognizing the health and safety concerns associated with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and the Health Protection Conditions that the limit occupancy of District office facilities in the permitting Districts, it has been determined that the public hearings will be held on the WebEx virtual platform. Participants may participate either by telephone and/or computer. The public hearings will be held in accordance with the procedures in 33 CFR Part 327.
Public Notice Attachment: LRH-2015-00592-GBR, LRP-2015-798, NAO-2015-0898 — Public Hearing Attendance Information
§— November 1: West Virginia Hearing Information — Attendee Instructions
The conference begins at 6:00 PM Eastern Time on November 01, 2021; you may join the conference 10 minutes prior.
To join the conference, click: https://ems8.intellor.com/login/840973
Join the Webex event and follow the prompts to connect audio by computer or telephone. Need to join via phone only? 888-251-2949 or 215-861-0694 – Need an international number?
Access Code: 8624273# .
§ — November 4: Virginia Hearing Information — Attendee Instructions
The conference begins at 6:00 PM Eastern Time on November 04, 2021; you may join the conference 10 minutes prior.
To join the conference, click: https://ems8.intellor.com/login/840982
Join the Webex event and follow the prompts to connect audio by computer or telephone. Need to join via phone only? 888-251-2949 or 215-861-0694 – Need an international number?
Access Code: 3683150# .
§ — November 9: Alternate Date Information (Only to be held in the event of technical issues with the primary hearing dates)
Attendee Instructions — The conference begins at 6:00 PM Eastern Time on November 09, 2021; you may join the conference 10 minutes prior. To join the conference, click: https://ems8.intellor.com/login/840995
Join the Webex event and follow the prompts to connect audio by computer or telephone.
Need to join via phone only? 888-251-2949 or 215-861-0694 – Need an international number?
Access Code: 9003633# . Participants are encouraged to log in several minutes early.
For additional assistance please contact Webex Support: 888-793-6118.
For additional information, including information related to attending on a mobile device, please visit:
https://help.webex.com/en-US/article/8l0y08/Join-a-Webinar-in-Webex-Events- (New)#Cisco_Generic_Topic.dita_fc78570c-5cf7-403a-a1a1-993a4fd36eb3
>>>>>……………>>>>>……………>>>>>
RSVP — If you wish to provide oral comments on the proposed project you are strongly encouraged to RSVP with your intent to speak at the public hearing to CELRP-MVP(a)usace.army.mil with the statement “RSVP to Speak at West Virginia Public Hearing” or “RSVP to Speak at Virginia Public Hearing” as appropriate and include your full name, email address, and contact phone number with area code. You may also request an advance copy of any visual presentation material by e-mail to CELRP-MVP(a)usace.army.mil. If time allows, unscheduled speakers may be allowed to provide oral public comments by following the directions of the moderator.
AGENDA: The public will be able to submit electronic statements through the webinar application beginning at 6 p.m. on the date of each scheduled hearing respectively. The audio and visual portions of the hearing will also begin at 6 p.m. Attendees may join the conference 10 minutes prior to the scheduled meeting time.
Introduction by Corps, Overview of Regulatory Program, Project Description, Oral Public Comments
>>>>>>>…………………>>>>>>>…………………>>>>>>>
CLOSE OF COMMENT PERIOD: The Huntington District has been designated as the lead Corps District, thus all written comments should be submitted electronically by email at CELRP-MVP(a)usace.army.mil by midnight Eastern Standard Time on November 19, 2021. If you are unable to submit comments via email, they may be sent by the United States Postal Service and postmarked on or no later than November 19, 2021 to the following address:
United States Army Corps of Engineers,
Huntington District, ATTN: CELRH-RD-E
Public Notice: LRH-2015-00592-GBR, LRP-2015-798, NAO-2015-0898
502 Eighth Street, Huntington, West Virginia 25701-2070.
Sent from my iPad
From: Bill Reger-Nash <billregernash(a)gmail.com>
> Date: November 1, 2021 at 1:36:35 PM EDT
> To: edward.s.andrews(a)wv.gov
> Cc: "Innes, Karen" <kinnes(a)hsc.wvu.edu>, Ken Hilsbos <info(a)hilsbosfamilycare.com>
> Subject: Mountain State Clean Energy Comments
>
> Dear Mr. Andrews:
>
> Following is an October 31 Charleston Gazette Mail Op Ed submitted by my colleagues Drs. Ken Hilsbos, Kim Innes, and me. This is most relevant to the Mountain State Clean Energy proposal:
>
> WV-FOSSIL FUELS-HEALTH-31OctY2K21
> CHARLESTON GAZETTE 31 OCTOBER 2021
> Hilsbos, Innes, Nash: Fossil fuels costing West Virginians their health
> • By Ken Hilsbos, Kim Innes, Bill Reger-Nash
>
> Recently, there has been an alarming uptick in the number of patients we see who suffer heart attacks, strokes, lung disease, neurological problems and other serious health conditions. With continuing poor air quality, we see more and more children and adults with poorly-controlled asthma. We who love the outdoors are more likely to get the dreaded Lyme disease, a tick-borne infection that has recently changed from rare to common in our state. Climate change and pollution from fossil fuels threaten not only our health, but our lives and livelihoods. Fossil fuels lead to hundreds of premature deaths every year in our state. In 2016, flooding killed 23 West Virginians and destroyed thousands of homes.
> Floods are increasing due to climate change, with heavy rainfall increasing 55% from 2005 to 2016. A new report puts West Virginia among the four states in greatest danger of flooding. We see areas that are not even in the flood plain flooding now. About 60,000 West Virginians are particularly vulnerable to extreme heat, which kills more people each year than any other natural disaster. By 2050, days with extreme heat are expected to increase tenfold in West Virginia unless we act. As health professionals dedicated to protecting the health of West Virginians, we are frightened that— without a rapid transition to clean renewable energy—our grandchildren will inherit a world with safety, security and good health unattainable for many. We cannot afford to allow inaction to keep worsening the climate crisis, fossil fuel pollution and related health damage. As West Virginians, we have proudly powered our nation. But we have borne very high costs – to our air and water, our forests and mountains, and our health and well-being. West Virginians no longer need to pay this high price. The continuing decline in coal jobs provides an opening to innovate using clean energy technology. Let’s urge Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., to seize this moment— this unique opportunity to continue our legacy as an energy leader. Transitioning to a clean energy economy promises the bright future that West Virginia so richly deserves. The Build Back Better Act and Clean Electricity Payment Program will provide essential support for this transition, enable us to continue powering the country in a way that benefits all, and ultimately position us as a global leader in renewable energy. Good health requires well-paying jobs.
> As Chairman of the Senate Energy Committee, Manchin can ensure that coal miners and their communities transition smoothly to a clean energy economy. The Build Back Better Act will bring us outsized benefits, including billions of investment dollars to improve our infrastructure and add thousands of permanent, good-paying jobs. Solar energy and wind turbines will save money on energy bills and boost tax revenues, allowing us to maintain roads and keep rural schools open and services running. These investments will reduce air and water pollution, revive our cherished communities, restore our beautiful natural environment where we hunt and fish, and promote growth of our tourism and other industries. This clean energy transition will save lives and improve our health. A 2020 study found that the closure of coal-fired power plants between 2005 and 2016 saved an estimated 26,610 lives due to reduction in air pollution, with 5,300 lives saved in the Ohio Valley alone. Nationwide, a clean energy transition would save at least 100,000 lives annually and provide $700 billion per year in reduced health care costs and improved productivity. These health benefits will more than pay for the cost of transition. Climate change is the greatest public health threat of our lifetime. The transition to clean energy is one of the greatest health opportunities of our lifetime. Nowhere is this truer than in West Virginia. Manchin should support the Clean Energy Payment Plan and Build Back Better Act so every West Virginian has the opportunity for a healthy and prosperous future.
> Recently, there has been an alarming uptick in the number of patients we see who suffer heart attacks, strokes, lung disease, neurological problems and other serious health conditions.
> With continuing poor air quality, we see more and more children and adults with poorly-controlled asthma. We who love the outdoors are more likely to get the dreaded Lyme disease, a tick-borne infection that has recently changed from rare to common in our state.
> Climate change and pollution from fossil fuels threaten not only our health, but our lives and livelihoods. Fossil fuels lead to hundreds of premature deaths every year in our state. In 2016, flooding killed 23 West Virginians and destroyed thousands of homes. Floods are increasing due to climate change, with heavy rainfall increasing 55% from 2005 to 2016. A new report puts West Virginia among the four states in greatest danger of flooding. We see areas that are not even in the flood plain flooding now.
> About 60,000 West Virginians are particularly vulnerable to extreme heat, which kills more people each year than any other natural disaster. By 2050, days with extreme heat are expected to increase tenfold in West Virginia unless we act.
> As health professionals dedicated to protecting the health of West Virginians, we are frightened that — without a rapid transition to clean renewable energy — our grandchildren will inherit a world with safety, security and good health unattainable for many. We cannot afford to allow inaction to keep worsening the climate crisis, fossil fuel pollution and related health damage.
> As West Virginians, we have proudly powered our nation. But we have borne very high costs – to our air and water, our forests and mountains, and our health and well-being. West Virginians no longer need to pay this high price. The continuing decline in coal jobs provides an opening to innovate using clean energy technology.
> Let’s urge Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., to seize this moment— this unique opportunity to continue our legacy as an energy leader. Transitioning to a clean energy economy promises the bright future that West Virginia so richly deserves. The Build Back Better Act and Clean Electricity Payment Program will provide essential support for this transition, enable us to continue powering the country in a way that benefits all, and ultimately position us as a global leader in renewable energy.
> Good health requires well-paying jobs. As Chairman of the Senate Energy Committee, Manchin can ensure that coal miners and their communities transition smoothly to a clean energy economy. The Build Back Better Act will bring us outsized benefits, including billions of investment dollars to improve our infrastructure and add thousands of permanent, good-paying jobs. Solar energy and wind turbines will save money on energy bills and boost tax revenues, allowing us to maintain roads and keep rural schools open and services running.
> These investments will reduce air and water pollution, revive our cherished communities, restore our beautiful natural environment where we hunt and fish, and promote growth of our tourism and other industries.
> This clean energy transition will save lives and improve our health. A 2020 study found that the closure of coal-fired power plants between 2005 and 2016 saved an estimated 26,610 lives due to reduction in air pollution, with 5,300 lives saved in the Ohio Valley alone. Nationwide, a clean energy transition would save at least 100,000 lives annually and provide $700 billion per year in reduced health care costs and improved productivity. These health benefits will more than pay for the cost of transition.
> Climate change is the greatest public health threat of our lifetime. The transition to clean energy is one of the greatest health opportunities of our lifetime. Nowhere is this truer than in West Virginia.
> Manchin should support the Clean Energy Payment Plan and Build Back Better Act so every West Virginian has the opportunity for a healthy and prosperous future.
> Dr. Ken Hilsbos is a long-standing Family Practice physician in Fairmont.
> Dr. Kim Innes is an internationally recognized epidemiologist and Emeritus Professor at the West Virginia University School of Public Health.
> Dr. Bill Reger-Nash is a nationally renowned expert in health and wellness, Emeritus Professor at the West Virginia University School of Public Health and a former West Virginia legislator.
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> URL:https://www.wvgazettemail.com/opinion/op_ed_commentaries/hilsbos-innes-…
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> Bill Reger-Nash
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> billregernash(a)gmail.com
> cell 304 685 6740
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> Walk 30 to 60 minutes daily
> Out The Door For 30 Or More!
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