In particular, groups expressed concern that the EPA’s rules do not address ash storage sites at plants that have been closed and essentially rely on the industry to police itself without much government oversight.

“[T]here are glaring flaws in the EPA’s approach,” said attorney Frank Holleman of the Southern Environmental Law Center. “Most problematically, the absence of federal oversight and enforcement means that any meaningful protective action will continue to fall to our states and local communities. In recent years our states have failed to adequately address the widespread threat of coal ash, and we are concerned that state decision-makers will not do their part in protecting waterways and the health of citizens. We have seen how this issue plays out in North Carolina, where the state has not done enough to address Duke Energy’s irresponsible handling of coal ash, despite the disastrous Dan River spill earlier this year.”

Public health advocates were also outraged that the EPA failed to classify coal ash as hazardous waste, despite the fact that it can contain contain substances like chromium, arsenic, mercury, and lead.

“For the thousands of citizens whose groundwater is no longer safe for consumption due to leaching ponds or whose air is contaminated by fugitive dust, failing to regulate coal ash as hazardous is a slap in the face,” said Amy Adams, North Carolina campaign coordinator for Appalachian Voices.

“Today’s rule doesn’t prevent more tragic spills like the ones we are still trying to clean up in North Carolina and Tennessee,” echoed Lisa Evans, an attorney with Earthjustice, which sued the EPA over coal ash in 2012 on behalf of about a dozen environmental and public health groups as well as a Native American tribe. “And it won’t stop the slower moving disaster that is unfolding for communities around the country, as leaky coal ash ponds and dumps poison water.”

Esther Calhoun, who lives near a coal ash dump in Uniontown, Alabama, put it even more starkly: “It seems like the EPA doesn’t give a damn about people.”

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