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Forest fracas: Activists and lawyers continue pipeline fight in western Virginia

In July, the 600-mile Atlantic Coast Pipeline was canceled, sending shock waves through the energy industry and sparking jubilant celebrations from activists who had spent years fighting the project. 

There’s no rest for the weary, though. Further west, a little deeper into the Appalachian hills, another fight rages on. The Mountain Valley Pipeline, if completed, would pull natural gas from the prehistoric Marcellus Shale deposits underneath West Virginia and carry the fuel 300 miles to southern Virginia. 

After six years of opposition from grass­roots groups and professional environmental advocacy organizations, the fight over the MVP is entering a definitive stretch.

On October 9, a long-standing stop-work order for the pipeline was lifted, allowing construction to resume along most of the pipeline’s length. Then, on November 9, federal judges once again halted work to allow for further examination of a key stream-crossing permit.

The pipeline’s opponents say the regulatory agencies charged with making sure construction unfolds lawfully have been asleep at the wheel. They’re making their case in both the forest and the courtroom. 

EQT, the energy corporation spearheading the project, says the MVP is 92 percent complete. Activists who oppose the project say that’s an overstatement, and that the real figure is closer to 78 percent. 

Either way, “it’s over $3 billion over budget and three years behind schedule,” says Joan Walker, senior campaign representative for the Sierra Club’s Beyond Dirty Fuels Campaign. “And that’s an optimistic outlook.”

“It’s been a long, long opposition,” says Kirk Bowers, co-founder of the Mountain Valley Watch, a volunteer pipe­line oversight organization. The group monitors pipeline construction and submits reports of violations to the various state and federal agencies that are supposed to be overseeing the project, hoping the agencies will then slap the project with sanctions. This monitoring plays an important role in the ongoing pipeline legal debates.

“Over 350 instances have been charged,” says Walker. “There have been many more water quality violations, permit violations that have been found by volunteers in the field, like Kirk Bowers and Mountain Valley Watch, that didn’t result in formal charges.”

These activists, years into this conflict and staring down a huge corporation, still have energy to spare. Bowers, a retired engineer and Charlottesville resident, began his career in local activism arguing against the Route 29 bypass, the proposed highway detour through Albemarle County that was eventually canceled after years of heated discussion and opposition from environ­mental groups. Since then, he’s been all in on pipeline opposition.

For Bowers, the MVP fight is personal, but it’s also about the environment at large. “The pipeline runs through my home county, Roanoke County, just a few miles from where I grew up,” he says. “People need to know about it. It’s larger, it carries more gas than the ACP, which results in much larger greenhouse gas emissions.”

The MVP, if completed, would produce around 90 million metric tons of greenhouse gases each year, reports Oil Change International. For reference, the entire state of Virginia produced 105 million metric tons of carbon emissions in 2016, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

Bowers is emblematic of the grassroots organizers who have banded together to oppose the project for the last half decade and counting. Walker says the activism has been “awe-inspiring.” 

“A lot of these people that are in the fight, they’re not advocates, they’re just trying to live their life,” says Walker. “A lot of folks are retirees, they’ve retired to these mountains.”

Occasionally, the anti-pipeline activists have an informal charm. In a powerpoint detailing the pipeline’s progress, a selection of photos of clear-cut forest is accompanied with the caption, “The Owls Cried For a Week!”

Underestimate these organizers at your own peril, however. The Mountain Valley Watch has built an efficient and high-tech pipeline oversight system, making use of drones and manned aircraft. And other act­ivists have put their bodies on the line to demonstrate their opposition to the project, camping out in trees in the pipeline’s path for weeks at a time.

“Time is money, and delays are costs for the project,” Bowers says. “Its still up in the air whether they’re going to finish it or not.”

Pipeline opponents sense that the corporation’s commitment to the project is waning. On EQT’s latest quarterly earnings call in July, the company’s CEO suggested that he was looking to offload its portion of the project “at cost.” 

Meanwhile, lawyers from a variety of organizations continue to fight the project in court. At the center of the litigation is a disagreement over whether or not the pipeline should be able to pass through the Jefferson National Forest, part of a 2,700 square-mile tract of protected wilderness in Appalachia. In late 2017, the Forest Service signed off on the crossing. The next year, a coalition of environmental groups challenged the Forest Service’s permit and won. Now, an amended permit is back on the table.

Nathan Matthews, senior attorney for the Sierra Club, says the coalition isn’t trying to drag this out, just get an accurate ruling.

“Our concern is that, as proposed, the pipeline just cannot comply with a wide range of environmental laws,” Matthews says. “It’s not that we want to slow down the Forest Service. We want the Forest Service to make a decision, and that decision should be no.”

Matthews and the Sierra Club say the Forest Service overstated the efficacy of the pipeline’s erosion control measures when it granted the permit.

“Building a pipeline involves clearing a swathe of land and digging a trench up and down steep slopes,” Matthews says. “If you wanted to cause a lot of erosion, the thing you would do would be dig a trench straight up a slope.”

The sediment runoff from that con­struction would spell doom for endangered species like the Roanoke logperch, a venerable muddy-colored little fish found only in Virginia and North Carolina, and the candy darter, a shimmering green and orange four-inch-long fish that has as much panache as the most glamorous coral reef dweller.

Matthews says the Forest Service also “failed to comply with its own planning rules” and cut corners when it drew the pipeline’s route through the woods. 

For the last month and half, the Forest Service has been accepting public comment on its latest environmental impact analysis, an important element of the permitting process. The Sierra Club has coordinated the submission of more than 3,000 com­ments, says Walker; thousands more have been turned in by individuals and other groups. (Bowers has submitted his own comments, which he describes as “extremely long.”) The Forest Service will review those comments before issuing another environmental impact statement and making a final decision.

“It’s been a roller coaster ride the last several months,” Bowers says, citing the back and forth over these permits. “We still have a lot of high hopes and spirit, and we’re definitely not giving up fighting this.”

For the time being, EQT continues to move forward with the project, pushing its pipeline through the area’s ancient hills. 

“The portions that they have left to go, it’s the steepest, most difficult terrain,” says Walker. “They literally have an uphill battle.”

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Head to head: Feds approve controversial pipelines

Though the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission approved the Atlantic Coast Pipeline October 13, those opposing the $6 billion and 600-mile gas fracking project say they’re not going down without a fight.

“It’s not over by any means,” says Kirk Bowers, a program coordinator with the local chapter of the Sierra Club. Though he’s not showing his hand, he says his organization recently changed its policy against participating in civil disobedience and training sessions have been popping up across the commonwealth.

FERC also just approved the Mountain Valley Pipeline in southwest Virginia, where Bowers says opponents have blocked roads with their bodies, vehicles and gates to prevent surveyors from entering their properties.

In the case of the Atlantic Coast Pipeline, he says environmental groups and their attorneys have 30 days to file appeals. And they will.

Dominion Energy sent out a press release late Friday night that the ACP had been issued a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity from FERC—the most significant milestone for the project yet, it said.

“Our public utility customers are depending on this infrastructure to generate cleaner electricity, heat homes and power local businesses,” says Leslie Hartz, Dominion’s vice president of engineering and construction, who says the project will result in lower energy costs and a cleaner environment, because the ACP will replace coal-burning power plants.

FERC chair Cheryl LaFleur dissented in the approval, and said the project isn’t in the public’s best interest, but noted that utility customers in Virginia and North Carolina have already subscribed to 90 percent of the pipeline’s natural gas capacity.

To proceed with construction, Dominion still needs water permits from the states in which the pipeline will run—West Virginia, Virginia and North Carolina.

In West Virginia, where Dominion first asked the Department of Environmental Quality for the water permit, which it was granted, legal group Appalachian Mountain Advocates filed suit—and won—this summer. Now, the energy giant has to go back to the drawing board, according to Bowers, who says Virginia water permit hearings are slated to take place in Richmond in December.

Last week, the Sierra Club filed an appeal with the State Corporation Commission, Bowers says, because Dominion has allegedly contracted the ACP’s gas to its own affiliates without the SCC’s permission, which is required in Virginia.

In early September, anti-pipeline group Bold Alliance filed a property rights lawsuit against FERC, alleging the abuse of eminent domain for private gain.

Dominion has maintained it would only use eminent domain as a last resort. It also asserts that the ACP has undergone 300 route adjustments and one of the most thorough environmental reviews for a project of its scope.

“This unprecedented scrutiny should give assurance to all communities that their voices have been heard and that the project will be built in a way that protects public safety and the environment,” Hartz says.

Nelson County resident and affected landowner Richard Averitt is among 50 plaintiffs in the Bold Alliance suit.

“Hundreds of landowners have stood strong and have refused to negotiate with the pipeline companies,” he says. “We have vowed to fight to protect and defend what is constitutionally ours, and we will win.”

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It’s a madhouse

Michael Mann, a former UVA professor and climate scientist whose work resulted in a lawsuit from former attorney general Ken Cuccinelli, will speak about his book, The Madhouse Effect, at 7pm September 15 at City Council Chambers.

“Through satire, The Madhouse Effect portrays the intellectual pretzels into which denialists must twist logic to explain away the clear evidence that man-made activity has changed our climate,” Mann says.

In April 2010, when Mann was an assistant professor at the university, Cuccinelli sued UVA in an attempt to discredit Mann’s research. A judge dismissed Cuccinelli’s suit, and when the AG appealed to the Virginia Supreme Court, the court ruled in the university’s favor. The Washington Post described the litigation as “a climate change witch hunt.”

Pulitzer-winning political cartoonist Tom Toles, who illustrated the book, will accompany Mann at the event sponsored by the Sierra Club Virginia Chapter and Virginia Organizing.

Calling themselves “commonsense crusaders,” Mann says their book “enlivens the gloom and doom of so many climate-themed books—and may even convert a few of the faithful to the right side of science.”

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In brief: Bears having fun, legislators get graded and more

Another national story on rape at UVA

“He said it was consensual. She said she blacked out. U-Va. had to decide: Was it assault?” The Washington Post reports on a bathroom sexual encounter between two athletes at an August 2015 party. Rising third-year volleyball player Haley Lind agreed to speak on the record about her quest for justice after police and UVA said she could have given consent even though blackout drunk.

VDOT recently released a detailed rendering of the proposed grade-separated interchange of Rio Road and Route 29. Image courtesy VDOT
Courtesy VDOT

Quick construction

The U.S. 29/Rio Road intersection reopened July 18, 46 days before its scheduled completion date of September 2. Work began May 23 and the rapid road work will earn the builders a $7.3 million bonus, according to VDOT spokesman Lou Hatter.

Sierra Club scorecard

The Virginia chapter of the environmental org graded members of the General Assembly, and, not too surprisingly, their grades split along party lines. State Senator Creigh Deeds and Delegate David Toscano—Dems—get an A+, while our Republican reps—Senator Bryce Reeves and delegates Rob Bell, Matt Fariss and Steve Landes—each get an F.

DP seeks new editor

Seems like it was only a year or so ago that former Houston Chronicle sports editor Nick Mathews took the helm of the Daily Progress. Now publisher Rob Jiranek, who formerly was publisher and an owner of C-VILLE Weekly and has been on the job at the Progress since February, is looking for a new editor.

‘Terrifying numbers’

Dr. Rebecca Dillingham, who works in UVA Medical Center’s Ryan White HIV Clinic, tells the hospital’s blog, Healthy Balance, that one in two gay African-American men are now expected to become HIV positive in their lifetime. She also said one in five people with HIV don’t know they have it.

Good chance to plug Trump wine

Trump Winery general manager Kerry Woolard was a speaker July 19 at the GOP convention in Cleveland.

Ground breaks on William Taylor Plaza

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Photo by Matteus Frankovich/SkycladAP

Construction of the controversial 117-room Fairfield Inn and Suites on the corner of Ridge and Cherry is underway. Virginia Hotel Partners bought 2.4 acres from Southern Development aka Cherry Avenue Investments LLC for $1.45 million. The hotel is expected to be completed in 2017. Meanwhile, the developer of the mixed-use portion of the plaza, Management Services Corporation, had a Board of Architectural Review work session July 18 and is seeking approval for 27 one- and two-bedroom apartments.

Bears gone wild

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Photos Helga Hiss

A cabin near the Shenandoah National Park has become an ursine hot spot, with frequent visits from the local black bears.

Quote of the week

“Because he had just met her, and because she was capable of carrying on a conversation, walking upstairs and performing ‘fine motor tasks, such as unwrapping a condom,’ he was unaware of her ‘possible incapacitation.’”

—The Washington Post on UVA investigators’ determination that a drunk student could have consented to what she considered a sexual assault.

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Closer to home: Could pipeline run through Albemarle?

In May, members of a Wintergreen nonprofit organization submitted four requests to the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to reroute the Atlantic Coast Pipeline out of their town. One of their ideas? Run it through Albemarle County, instead.

The 600-mile, 42-inch natural gas line is currently proposed to slice through the outskirts of the Wintergreen community on its way from Lyndhurst to an area just north of Farmville. The group, called Friends of Wintergreen, has attempted to get around Dominion by submitting the new route proposals directly to FERC, which will ultimately rule on whether the pipeline will be approved and where it will run.

Friends of Wintergreen has publicly stated that it does not oppose the ACP, generally. “Their primary purpose is to try to get it away from their businesses in the Wintergreen community,” says Kirk Bowers, the Virginia chapter of the Sierra Club’s pipelines campaign manager.

“Dominion’s proposed route will cut through the main street of one of Virginia’s largest tourism [areas], shutting down two new hotel developments and killing hundreds of new planned tourism jobs,” says Jonathan Ansell, chairman of Friends of Wintergreen. “There are examples of better and possible alternatives,” he says, such as running a pipeline alongside an existing one.

PIPELINE MAP
Friends of Wintergreen has proposed a new Atlantic Coast Pipeline route that would send it through Albemarle County.

The proposed route would divert the pipeline through Fluvanna and then North Garden, instead of through Wintergreen, but Ansell says the entire route, including what Friends of Wintergreen has drafted to run through Nelson County, would be located in existing rights of way, including railroads, highways and electric transmission lines, causing less damage than the route proposed by Dominion, according to Ansell.

“It’s standard operating procedure for Dominion to dismiss any solutions other than their own,” Ansell says. “In our case, they claim our routes are unbuildable for land use [or] constructability reasons. Our engineers and environmental teams, who have closely evaluated their claims, disagree.”

But Dominion spokesperson Aaron Ruby says the construction challenges, as well as laws protecting federally managed land, make the nonprofit’s requests infeasible.

“We’ve looked very carefully at each of these routes and we’ve given them the careful consideration that they deserve,” Ruby says. “They’re well-intentioned, but it does not appear that all of the various factors that you have to weigh when developing a proposed route were carefully considered.”

He says Dominion has made more than 300 adjustments to the proposed pipeline’s path to limit impacts on the environment, individual landowners and cultural and historic resources.

While the decision is in FERC’s hand, the commission does not have a deadline to which it must respond to Friends of Wintergreen, according to Ansell.

“Fortunately for Albemarle, we’re already well-organized here,” says Bowers, who nods to local pipeline-opposing groups, such as 350.org, Appalachian Voices and Appalachian Mountain Advocates. He calls Friends of Wintergreen’s plan to locate the ACP in Albemarle, “just a pipe dream.”

Bowers says no matter where the pipeline is located it will contribute significantly to climate change across the state.

There are currently 49.7 million tons of carbon dioxide in Virginia, according to measurements taken from 177 stationary points by the Sierra Club, which calculated that the 300-foot Mountain Valley Pipeline—slated to run from northwestern West Virginia in Bradshaw to Pittsylvania County in southern Virginia—and ACP, if approved, would contribute another 95 million tons of greenhouse gas emissions per year.

“So, if you are concerned about climate change and the heating effect,” Bowers says, “it is tremendous when you triple the amount of greenhouse gases you put into the atmosphere.”

Additionally, Ansell says Virginians need to understand that the approval of the ACP will prolong dependence on fracking and fossil fuels by a generation.

“This is especially troubling as the $45 billion energy company was recently ranked as one of the lowest users of renewable energy in America,” Ansell says, referring to a recent benchmark by Clean Edge—a group of clean energy researchers in Portland and San Francisco—which ranked Dominion dead last out of the top 30 U.S. investor-owned utilities in the category of incremental energy efficiency.

“Dominion is the largest corporate contributor to politicians in the commonwealth, effectively immunizing itself from contrary political pressure,” he says. “When’s the last time you heard a politician publicly criticize Dominion for being irresponsible?”

Updated July 13 at 10:19am to clarify that the pipeline’s proposed route runs through the outskirts of the Wintergreen community and not through Wintergreen Resort. It also stops just north of Farmville.

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Poison control: Some say no to chemical weed killers

The Piedmont Group of the Sierra Club is urging the community to speak out against the usage of synthetic chemical pesticides in parks and on school grounds. Though city staff has taken steps to reduce the overall use of toxic chemicals in those areas, environmentalists hope to make 2016 the year in which they are nixed for good.

On April 20, 2015, City Council passed a resolution stating that it is “committed to reducing overall pesticide use and eliminating pesticide use where feasible” in as many sites as possible, especially those called on by the Sierra Club.

“They should only be used if there was some serious threat to human health or to the environment,” John Cruickshank of the Piedmont Sierra Club says, adding that he would not object to the use of synthetic chemical pesticides in emergency situations, such as a beehive on a playground or poison ivy “running rampant,” but even then, safer options, such as biopesticides, could be tried first.

At a May 2 council meeting, Cruickshank said 1,205 people had signed the club’s petition that supports pesticide-free parks and schools, and many people were surprised to learn that city groundskeepers still use products such as Snapshot, Oryzalin, ProStar and Roundup QuikPro.

In mid-April, the European Parliament voted to ban most usages of glyphosate, the active ingredient in Roundup, which the World Health Organization has declared a probable carcinogen.

Jackie Lombardo, who is on the Sierra Club’s pesticides committee, says there are several negative health effects associated with glyphosate, including blurred vision, nausea and asthma.

She also cites studies that have shown that farmers’ exposure to glyphosate-based herbicides is linked to increased risks of non-Hodgkin lymphoma, miscarriages and attention deficit disorder.

Doug Ehman, the parks division manager, says most pesticides the city uses have a lower toxicity than aspirin, and the main one it uses is glyphosate. It’s mainly used for weed suppression, and he says it’s more effective than a biopesticide because it’s a metabolic inhibitor—it poisons the root of a weed, keeps it from creating its own food through photosynthesis and causes a weed to eventually starve to death.

“We’re not out there spraying willy-nilly,” Ehman says. “We’re very conservative.”

According to Ehman, the city only uses two or three gallons of glyphosate each year, and each spot where it’s used is marked clearly with a sign. Over the past decade, his department has gone above and beyond state regulations, including implementing an integrated pest management policy that requires sprayers to be prudent in their use of pesticides.

“Every year we have managed to reduce our pesticides a little more,” Ehman says. “We are kind of at the point where we have done about every creative thing we know.” To eliminate chemical synthetic pesticides, Ehman says the costs could double or triple and the city would have to hire several new positions.

At the May 16 City Council meeting, landscape manager John Mann will present an annual pest management report. Cruickshank, who frequently speaks at meetings, urges concerned citizens to come hear this year’s findings and speak out about the dangers of toxic chemicals.

“They’re making progress, but it wouldn’t take much to completely end the regular use of those pesticides,” Cruickshank says. “I don’t feel like the City Council has really made the commitment that they should.”

Cruickshank adds, “They’re tired of me. They need to hear from more people.”