NC
Division of Air Quality (DAQ) Denies Title V Public Hearings for Power
Plants
June 3, 2005
North Carolina's Division of Air Quality has informed the Canary Coalition
that it is denying requests for public hearings on Title V permits for
utility-owned coal-burning power plants. This is the second consecutive
year public hearings have been denied, reversing the policy set by former
DENR Secretary Bill Holman of opening the Title V process to public and
press scrutiny.
"This represents a serious breach of faith by the DAQ with the
environmental community and the people of North Carolina in general,"
notes Avram Friedman of the Canary Coalition. "This policy change
undermines public faith in the effectiveness of the State's principal air
quality enforcement agency. If they aren't willing to open the process to
the public it creates at least the appearance that there is something to
hide. The Title V process combines all local, state and federal air
quality regulations into one permitting process with the purpose of
simplification for industry, regulators and public input and monitoring.
But, the streamlining also limits opportunity for public involvement. This
is another example of why the State needs to seriously consider a major
overhaul of the DAQ. This agency has become little more than an inside
spokesman for the industries it's supposed to be regulating. That's not
supposed to be the way it works."
The Canary Coalition, during the past two years, has initiated a statewide
campaign to reform the Division of Air Quality siting a poor enforcement
record relative to agencies in other states. According to EPA statistics,
the DAQ has an 11% enforcement rate against industrial air quality
violations, ranking 47th in the nation.
For more details, review the short letter sent by the Canary Coalition to
DAQ Director Keith Overcash in response to the rejection of public
hearings. http://www.canarycoalition.org/DAQ/TitleV.doc
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