Husband-Wife Team Admit Illegally Selling Paddlefish Caviar

Environment News Service

CINCINNATI, Ohio (ENS) – Two Kentuckians and their caviar companies pleaded guilty today in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio to trafficking in and falsely labeling illegally harvested paddlefish, Polydon spathula.

Steve Kinder, along with his wife, Cornelia Joyce Kinder, both of Owenton, Kentucky, owned and operated Kinder Caviar Inc. and Black Star Caviar Company. Those companies were in the business of exporting paddlefish eggs as caviar to customers in foreign countries.

Paddlefish, whose eggs are marketed as caviar, are protected by both federal and Ohio law. Ohio law prohibits commercial fishing for paddlefish. Ohio law also prohibits the possession or use of gill nets.

The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species, CITES, which is codified in United States law through the Endangered Species Act, regulates international trade in species listed on one of three Appendices.

Paddlefish are listed on Appendix II of CITES. Appendix II species, or their parts, which were harvested in the United States, may be exported only if they are accompanied by a valid export permit issued by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The Lacey Act makes it a crime to transport or sell fish, or their parts, knowing that the fish were harvested in violation of any state’s law. The Lacey Act also makes it a crime to make or submit a false record, account or label for, or false identification of, fish or fish parts which were, or were intended to be, exported, transported or sold.

According to the plea agreement filed in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati, Cornelia Joyce Kinder admitted to making false statements on behalf of Kinder Caviar in a CITES Export Registration Form for paddlefish eggs on or about March 15, 2007.

Kinder misrepresented the amount of legally-harvested paddlefish eggs that she could provide documentation for, as well as misidentified the fishermen who harvested the paddlefish and the location of harvest.

As part of the plea agreement, she also admitted to making false statements on behalf of Black Star Caviar Company in a CITES Export Registration Form for paddlefish eggs on or about December 18, 2010. She used the name of a subordinate employee and forged that employee’s signature on the form in order to give the impression that she was not the applicant.

The plea agreement shows that both Kinders admitted to aiding and abetting one another in harvesting paddlefish in Ohio waters, using gill nets attached to the Ohio shoreline, on or about May 5, 2007, and transporting the paddlefish to Kentucky with the intent to sell them when, “in the exercise of due care,” said the Justice Department, they should have known that the fish were harvested in violation of Ohio law.

As part of a plea agreement, both Kinder Caviar and Black Star Caviar Company have each agreed to pay a $5,000 fine and serve a three-year term of probation, during which time those companies will be prohibited from applying for or receiving a CITES Export Permit.

In addition, both Steve Kinder and Cornelia Joyce Kinder have agreed to serve a three-year term of probation, during which time they will each perform 100 hours of community service, be prohibited from fishing anywhere in the Ohio River where that river forms the border between Ohio and Kentucky, and be prohibited from applying for or receiving a CITES Export Permit, either on behalf of themselves or anyone else.

The boat and truck that were used in furtherance of the Lacey Act crimes have been forfeited. In accordance with Kentucky law, both defendents face possible suspension of their Kentucky commercial fishing licenses.

Paddlefish can be distinguished from all other North American freshwater fishes by the presence of a large, paddle-shaped protrusion – up to one-third total body length – on the snout. The paddlefish is found throughout the Mississippi and Missouri river systems.

In recent years, paddlefish numbers have been reduced by over-exploitation and the habitat destruction by stream channelization, levee construction, impoundment, pollution and drainage of streams and bottomland lakes.

Source

Visit the Environment News Service

Posted in biodiversity, conservation, fish, flora and fauna, heritage, The Ohio River | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Army Corps of Engineers welcomes new leader

Mark Curnutte for Cincinnati.com

DOWNTOWN – An organization that’s one of Cincinnati’s best-kept secrets welcomed a new leader Monday.

Col. Margaret W. Burcham received command of the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers during a formal ceremony at the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center. The museum is just a few blocks from the division’s headquarters in the 500 block of Main Street.

Burcham, a 1982 West Point graduate who spent part of her childhood in Dayton, faces no small task.

The division has 4,800 employees working in seven engineer districts in all or part of 17 states. It is charged with directing federal water resource development in the Great Lakes and Ohio River basins with infrastructure valued at more than $80 billion.

The division’s annual budget is more than $2 billion for hydropower plants, dams, flood rehabilitation and water conservation. In addition, the division is responsible for military construction in Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinois and Michigan.

“To director stakeholders here today,” Burcham said to an audience of about 250 people with the Ohio River as a backdrop, “I express my sincere commitment to all of you. I’ll listen as we serve our nation’s engineering needs.”

Burcham, who served most recently as the Chief of the Joint Capabilities Division of the Resources, Assessments and Force Management Directorate, is the eighth commander of the Great Lakes and Ohio River Division and the first female.

She replaces Maj. Gen. John Peabody, who served the division for three years and participated in a ceremonial passing of the division colors to Burcham.

The division’s territory runs south from the Great Lakes to Alabama and east from the Mississippi River to Virginia. It is responsible for 96 locks on the Great Lakes, 79 dams and flood protection projects, 10 hydro-electric power plants and 868 recreational areas.

Its districts are in Buffalo, Chicago, Detroit, Huntington, W.Va., Louisville, Nashville and Pittsburgh.

More than 300 of its active duty members have deployed to Afghanistan and Iraq since 2001. Burcham served in Iraq as commander of the Gulf Region North District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers in Iraq. She also has served overseas in Germany and South Korea.

Overall, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has about 37,000 soldiers and civilians serving in 90 countries. The U.S. Army established the Corps of Engineers as a separate and permanent branch in 1802.

Between 2006 and 2013, the Corps of Engineers will manage an Army construction program worth $44.6 billion, the largest construction effort since World War II. Nationally, it is steward of 12 million acres of lands and waters.

Source

Visit Cincinnati.com

Posted in agriculture, conservation, dams, erosion, farmers, finance, flood, flora and fauna, fresh water, habitat, hydropower, invasive species, irrigation, rivers, The Ohio River, water security, watershed | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

EPA: Plant’s hot water may hurt river life

By Spencer Hunt for The Columbus Dispatch

The J.M. Stuart plant produces enough electricity to power hundreds of thousands of houses and enough hot water to raise the water temperature in a section of the Ohio River to nearly 108 degrees.

How hot is that? The Ohio Department of Health sets a maximum 104-degree safety limit for public hot tubs. And state and federal water-quality standards set an 89-degree limit to protect fish and wildlife.

Since 1990, the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency has given Dayton Power & Light permission to ignore the limit and dump as much as 600 million gallons of hot water a day into Little Three Mile Creek, a stream that runs past the plant – which is in Adams County, near the Brown County line – to the Ohio River.

The water is used to cool boilers and pipes at the coal-fired power plant. In September, U.S. EPA officials filed a formal objection and are threatening to rewrite a state-proposed water-pollution-control permit to make the dumping stop.

U.S. EPA officials said the company hasn’t provided enough evidence to show that the hot water won’t harm fish and wildlife. They said they hope to see it during a public hearing the company requested, tentatively set for March.

“We have information that is part of Ohio’s record that indicates that there are impacts from the discharge,” said Sean Ramach, a U.S. EPA water-pollution specialist in Chicago.

Ohio EPA officials, who proposed approving the hot-water variance in November 2008, would not say whether they still support it.

“We’ll be discussing this issue with the company,” said George Elmaraghy, the agency’s surface-water chief.

In an e-mail, Dayton Power & Light officials said surveys conducted in 2005 and 2007 support their argument that fish and wildlife in Little Three Mile Creek and the Ohio River are not harmed by the hot water.

Permit-renewal records that the Ohio EPA posted on its website on Nov. 7, 2008, call the hot-water issue a “primary continuing concern.”

And EPA records say that studies performed by the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission in 1999 and 2000 “found much lower numbers of fish and fish species” at the confluence of the creek and the Ohio River.

On June 28, 2007, commission officials recorded a water temperature of 107.8degrees in the Ohio River downstream from the plant.

“Dead fish were observed in the area as well,” the records state.

Despite noting these issues, the Ohio EPA proposed reapproving the variance in November 2008. Records show the company performed a study on alternate hot-water disposal methods and found that none were cost-effective.

But a Jan. 26, 2000, memo that surface-water officials sent to then-agency director Chris Jones offers this explanation:

“DP&L will probably need to install additional cooling towers and/or reduce power production,” the memo states. “DP&L has previously stated that plant layout would make direct discharge to the Ohio River very costly.

“Requiring DP&L to meet a maximum temperature limit will be very controversial with the power industry as a whole since no power plant now has max temperature limits and they may consider this as setting a precedent.”

Nachy Kanfer, Midwest coordinator for the Sierra Club’s coal-to-clean-energy campaign, said the Ohio EPA won’t challenge power companies.

“When it comes to a decision that might actually cost a polluting corporation some money, Ohio EPA backs down,” Kanfer said.

The U.S. EPA will make a final decision on the hot-water issue after the March public hearing.

Tinka Hyde, U.S. EPA’s regional water-division director in Chicago, said it’s also possible an agreement could be reached before a hearing is held.

Source.

Visit the Columbus Dispatch.

Posted in biodiversity, communication, conflict, conservation, fish, flora and fauna, fresh water, habitat, health, pollution, rivers, The Ohio River, tributary of the ohio river | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Mediation in Coal Slurry Case Begins

Metro News staff reporter.

Hundreds of Mingo County residents gathered at the Charleston Civic Center Monday to begin a three-day process during which they hope to mediate their claims that they developed health problems from polluted mine run-off water.

Residents from Rawl, Lick Creek, Merrimac and Sprigg say they have suffered adverse health effects after drinking water was polluted by a coal slurry plant owned by Massey Energy.

Fifty-four-year-old James Scott, of Rawl, says he and other residents didn’t know the water had been polluted since the mid-1980s.

“We didn’t know this for many years, is what we didn’t know,” Scott said. ”The wells that we had for many years that we thought was safe drinking water, we had been poisoned all along by the slurry and the sludge that was being pumped underground.”

Hundreds of plaintiffs have filed a lawsuit against Rawl Sales and Processing, which is a Massey subsidiary.

The lawsuit claims that more than 1.4 billion gallons of toxic slurry went into underground mine shafts, which poisoned residents.

The area no longer is dependent on the wells. Water now comes from Williamson.

Scott says residents constantly face new health problems.

“Each and every day is life-threatening for us,” Scott said. ”We do not know what disease is going to hit us next. We don’t know if we’re going to be able to walk. We don’t know if our hair is going to come out. We do not know what kind of medical problems we’re going to face.”

A litigation panel will hear the case at the Civic Center.

The West Virginia Supreme Court created the panel, which consists of five circuit court judges.

Scott says the whole problem could have been avoided.

“If the company had come out and done the right thing and told us that, you know, we’re doing this, we could have took other alternatives,” Scott said. ”But we were always left in the dark.”

Scott says at this point, residents need help to stop the problem.

“We need the help of the legislative people here today to help ban this coal slurry, because what it’s doing today, it’s not only destroying lives, it’s talking lives,” Scott said.

Massey Energy officials are scheduled to be at the negotiations.

The mediation is set to run through Wednesday.

Source.

Visit MetroNews.

Posted in aquifer, community rights, conflict, drinking water, fresh water, health, livelihood, pollution, The Ohio River, watershed | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Paddlefish partners restoring prehistoric fish to rivers

By John Hayes for the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Wildlife management and conservation agencies routinely partner to save money and other resources, and to make things happen in a sometimes complicated bureaucratic environment.

But in its ongoing effort to restore a non-game prehistoric fish to the Ohio River watershed, the Pennsylvania Fish and Boat Commission is partnering with the Pittsburgh Zoo and PPG Aquarium.

Prior small-scale interactions have linked the zoo and PFBC, but Mike Stephan, a native species specialist at the zoo, said their paddlefish partnership could spearhead new levels of cooperation.

“Fish and Boat isn’t built to show off what they’re doing as well as the Pittsburgh Zoo. We’re in a better position to show off the animals,” he said. “One of my goals was to get involved with Fish and Boat, establish this partnership to kind of help each other out.”

With distinctive paddle-like snouts that make up about a third of an adult length that can reach 7 feet, paddlefish are found in fossil records from millions of years ago. A huge mouth under the long snout is filled with many gill rakers that strain tiny food organisms — plankton and small insects.

Paddlefish travel long distances in river systems, and reproducing populations still exist in the Mississippi River. Water pollution and navigation dams are believed to have caused the fish’s extinction in Pennsylvania by 1919.

Polyodon spathula "Paddlefish"

Pic: Polyodon spathula “Paddlefish” [USFWS]

“The Fish and Boat Commission began restocking paddlefish around Pittsburgh in 1991,” said the agency’s Denny Tubbs. “Similar programs exist in New York and Maryland. The hope is that fish from our program and theirs will meet up in the middle and establish a reproducing population.”

Penn State and California University of Pennsylvania are evaluating the paddlefish reintroduction effort. David Argent, chair of Cal U’s Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences Department, said restoring paddlefish is “the right thing to do,” but the question of how they’ll bypass dams “is a tough one.”

“While [dams] are an impediment to movement, paddlefish can find ways to successfully lock through or navigate through hydroelectric dams,” he said. “Certainly dams have altered habitat conditions in the river, yet for this species [dams] have been identified as one of the key staging areas during spawning runs.”

To date there’s “no information to support reproduction in Pennsylvania,” said Fish and Boat’s Bob Ventorini. Most of the fish are raised at the Linesville Fish Culture Station until they’re 14-18 inches. Stocking alternates yearly in the Ohio and Allegheny rivers — about 13,000 were planted in the Ohio in August.

The zoo got 10 of the Linesville paddlefish and raised them at their Highland Park facility. A couple of weeks ago Stephan and other staff stocked them in the Ohio River.

“It’s not a huge expense. It ties up a quarantine tank for a bit,” Stephan said. “We learned a lot about the husbandry of fish. We had to figure out how to keep them from beating up that long paddle on the wall of the tank. We put a cushion on the wall to soften the blow.”

Paddlefish are currently not on exhibit at the zoo. Stephan said the paddlefish husbandry project, partnerships with PFBC and the display of native species are expected to grow in coming years.

Contact John Hayes for more: [email protected].

Source

Visit the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Posted in biodiversity, collaboration, conservation, dams, fish, fishing, flora and fauna, habitat, health, heritage, rivers, The Ohio River | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Officials: Stay out of the Ohio River

Louisville, Ky. (WHAS11) - Metro Sewer District is installing a secondary alarm system after an alarm system failed to notify workers of a gate failure that caused three to four million gallons of sewage to spill into the Ohio River.

MSD is advising everyone to stay out of the river for the next day as the sewage flows downriver from Louisville. This includes all fishing.

MSD says the gate at the Starkey Pump Station in Butchertown failed Oct. 31 but since the alarm didn’t sound they didn’t know until the morning of Nov. 1.

Bud Schardein with MSD says there are people who monitor the system 24/7 but they didn’t know there was a problem because of the faulty alarm.

Source.

Visit WHAS11 News.

Posted in drinking water, fishing, fresh water, health, pollution, rivers, sanitation, The Ohio River, watershed | Tagged , | Leave a comment

Link to 160 year old photographs of Cincinnati’s Ohio river waterfront.

Once In a Lifetime River Tour Starts Here! Unfortunately, Everybody’s Dead.

Posted in fresh water, heritage, The Ohio River, tourism | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Toxic coal sludge pollutes Ky. town 10 years later.

By DYLAN LOVAN (AP) 10/11/2010

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — In parts of eastern Kentucky, the pictures coming out of Hungary of the red sludge that roared from a factory’s reservoir, downstream into the Danube River, are all too reminiscent of what happened a decade ago this week.

A layer of dark goo still sits under a creekbed on Glenn Cornette’s land, the leftovers from when a coal company’s sprawling slurry pond burst, blackening 100 miles of waterways and polluting the water supply of more than a dozen communities before the stuff reached the Ohio River.

A torrent as wide as a football field and 6 feet deep covered Cornette’s property in Martin County, near the West Virginia line about 175 miles east of Louisville. It killed all manner of plants and cut off his access to the street.

“It just looked like pudding or something,” Cornette said recently.

With seven dead so far and at least 120 injured, the 184-million-gallon spill of toxic muck from a Hungarian alumina plant has already proven more dangerous than what’s known as the Inez (eye-NEHZ’) disaster.

But the mess in Kentucky was considerably bigger — some 300 million gallons of slurry, a byproduct of purifying coal, oozed into yards and streams for miles in what was considered one of the South’s worst environmental disasters at the time.

And a decade later, its effects linger.

The slurry burst through the bottom of the Martin County Coal Corp.’s 68-acre holding pond early on the morning of Oct. 11, 2000, sending the goo washing through an underground mine and into two creeks. The sludge blackened 100 miles of waterways, polluted the water supply of more than a dozen communities and killed aquatic life before reaching the Ohio River. There were no human casualties.

“The sludge looked like a flow of black lava,” said Mickey McCoy, an Inez resident whose creek was blackened by the spill. “We’re not talking brown water, we’re talking black, black lava just rolling.”

The coal company, a subsidiary of Richmond, Va.-based Massey Energy, eventually paid $46 million for the cleanup, along with about $3.5 million in state fines and an undisclosed sum to residents, including Cornette, who sued over property damages.

Because of the failure, Massey has studied its other slurry ponds, or impoundments, and hired outside experts to prevent another sludge release, company spokesman Jeff Gillenwater said. The impoundment site where the spill occurred is no longer in use, he said.

“The company is proud of the efforts it has undertaken to remediate the spill,” Gillenwater said in an e-mail to The Associated Press.

Since the 2000 disaster, there have been 22 coal impoundment spills at Massey-owned sites, according to the Coal Impoundment Location and Information System, a database kept by Wheeling Jesuit University in West Virginia. Most were minor, and none approached the size of the release at Inez.

There are 285 active slurry ponds in 11 states, according to the federal Mine Safety and Health Administration. More than half are in Kentucky and West Virginia, and with another 71 in Illinois and Pennsylvania.

The Martin County spill prompted MSHA to stiffen its sludge pond review process with closer attention paid to underground mining issues, spokeswoman Amy Louviere said.

Louviere provided a long list of measures MSHA has taken to improve oversight since the disaster, including increased training, publishing a new handbook on sludge impoundment management and requiring company engineers to thoroughly investigate underground mining in the area of the impoundment.

Mine safety advocate Tony Oppegard, a Lexington attorney and former government regulator, said MSHA “basically missed the boat” with its investigative report of the Martin County disaster. The overriding issue was whether slurry ponds should be built above the active workings of coal mines, he said.

“It’s just a matter of time before you have another failure in one of them,” said Oppegard, who was MSHA’s lead accident investigator into the Martin County disaster until he was replaced when President George W. Bush took office.

The Martin County impoundment was supported by a relatively thin barrier of earth and rock — 15 to 18 feet — between the bottom of the sludge pond and an underground mine, said Jack Spadaro, former director of the National Mine Health and Safety Academy, which trains inspectors. Spadaro, who also led a team that looked into the spill for MSHA, said the pond was 80 feet deep when it burst.

The same slurry pond had a small release in 1994, and the company should have known the impoundment was a risk to fail again, Spadaro said. Instead, several dozen feet of sludge were added to the pond before the break in 2000.

In addition to state fines and legal settlements, Massey paid federal penalties totaling $5,600, which Spadaro called “a huge miscarriage of justice.”

Spadaro, who became a critic of MSHA’s handling of the spill investigation and eventually left his federal job to become an engineering consultant in West Virginia, estimated that about three-quarters of Kentucky’s 79 active sludge ponds sit atop old mine workings.

Spadaro said MSHA could go further to prevent future coal slurry disasters, including better engineering evaluations of potential weak spots. He said MSHA continues to rely on engineering data provided by coal operators, just as it did in 2000.

Louviere said MSHA requires that the impoundments be designed by a professional engineer, and the agency’s role is to review the design. She said after the Martin County spill, evaluating the breakthrough potential at slurry pond sites has become routine in designing the impoundments.

The Martin County release was considered the country’s worst coal-related spill until an earthen dam breached at a Tennessee Valley Authority power plant in 2008, sending more than 1 billion gallons of watery coal ash into a nearby river and surrounding lands. Coal ash is formed during combustion at power plants, while coal slurry is part of the production process at mines. Officials have estimated the cleanup at the Tennessee site will exceed $1 billion.

McCoy said he visited fellow Inez resident Cornette’s home Oct. 3 to look for remaining sludge a decade later.

“I dug at the edge of the bank,” McCoy said. “Now this was in the water, and I pulled up a shovelful and threw it upside down on the bank and there was the sludge, under about 3 inches of sand.”

Associated Press writer Bruce Schreiner contributed to this report.
Full article here.

Visit Google News.

Posted in community rights, conservation, dams, disaster, drinking water, flood, flora and fauna, fresh water, health, jobs, livelihood, pollution, rivers, The Ohio River, tributary of the ohio river, watershed | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Coal mine slurry fouls an Ohio tributary

Articles about Murray Energy’s spill last week into Captina Creek.

By Doug Caruso for The Columbus Dispatch

Water contaminated with coal dust has spilled for the fourth time since 2000 into a Belmont County creek that is home to an endangered salamander, state agencies reported this morning.

The coal slurry, water used to wash newly mined coal, spilled from a pipeline that runs from Murray Energy’s American Century Mine across Captina Creek to the company’s Ohio Valley coal slurry impoundment, said Mike Shelton, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.

The break occurred in a joint in the pipeline about 250 feet north of the creek in a hayfield, Shelton said, spilling slurry into the field and the creek.

The company issued a brief statement this afternoon saying that it is cooperating with state officials on the cleanup.

Murray Energy stopped pumping slurry, erected dikes to keep additional slurry out of the creek and is vacuuming up the spilled slurry, Shelton said.

“Our staff is still out on site and we’re walking the rest of the pipeline to make sure the pipeline is stable,” Shelton said.

Ohio Environmental Protection Agency crews also are on their way to the scene, said Erin Strouse, an agency spokeswoman. Murray called the EPA’s spill hotline to report the leak around 7:30 a.m., she said.

The spill apparently is smaller than one in February 2008 that sent coal slurry as far as the Ohio River, Strouse said, but EPA crews will determine just how bad this spill is.

Coal slurry has spilled into Captina Creek in 2000, 2005 and in 2008.

Captina Creek is home to the endangered eastern hellbender salamander.

Murray paid a $50,000 fine for the 2005 spill, which polluted 2,300 feet of the stream and killed thousands of fish. Murray Energy is applying to build a new coal slurry lagoon in the area, but so far none of its plans has met with approval from the Ohio EPA or the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

This spill should serve as a warning against allowing more slurry lagoons, said Jack Shaner, deputy director of the Ohio Environmental Council.

“If the state of Ohio ever needed a reason to not allow another impoundment of coal waste, this is it,” he said.

Murray Energy officials did not immediate respond to a request for comment.

Source

Visit Columbus Dispatch

And also NRDC with Shannon Fisk’s Blog

Posted in biodiversity, conservation, disaster, fishing, flora and fauna, fresh water, habitat, health, jobs, pollution, rivers, steam, The Ohio River, tributary of the ohio river, watershed | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

ODNR (Ohio Department of Natural Resources) releases mussels into the Valley’s rivers.

By Brad Bauer for The Marietta Times

About 600 of the most critically endangered mussels native to area rivers were released Thursday at locations in Wood and Washington counties in hopes of raising future populations of the species.

Two hundred of the fanshell mussels were released into the Muskingum River just below Devols Dam. The others were released near the Ohio River Islands National Wildlife Refuge and the Kanawha River near Parkersburg.

Full story at The Marietta Times.

Visit The Marietta Times.

Posted in biodiversity, conservation, dams, flora and fauna, fresh water, habitat, health, rivers, The Ohio River, watershed | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment