Black Warrior Riverkeeper: Difference between revisions

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Industries which have been threatened by legal action by Black Warrior Riverkeeper include:
Industries which have been threatened by legal action by Black Warrior Riverkeeper include:
 
* [[Vulcan Materials]] [[Vulcan Materials Bessemer Quarry|Bessemer Quarry]], for 465 alleged violations of their dumping permit. Black Warrior Riverkeeper filed a motion to appeal a $50,000 penalty negotiated by ADEM in secret. Their standing to appeal was rejected by Judge Bill Shashy.
* [[East Walker County Sewer Authority]] [[East Walker County Wastewater Treatment Plant|Wastewater Treatment Plant]], for 4,473 alleged violations of their dumping permit. ADEM has filed their own complaint, superseding Black Warrior Riverkeeper's Circuit Court filing.
* [[Cordova Wastewater Treatment Plant]] in [[Walker County]], for 618 alleged violations of their permit. ADEM filed their own complaint in November 2005, superseding Black Warrior Riverkeeper's Circuit Court filing.
* [[Brookside Village Wastewater Treatment Plant]], for 1,134 alleged violations of the Clean Water Act for improper discharges into [[Newfound Creek]]. Black Warrior Riverkeeper filed notice of intent to sue on May 19, 2006.


==External links==
==External links==

Revision as of 20:25, 22 September 2006

Black Warrior Riverkeeper is a non-profit environmental group formed as part of the national "Waterkeeper Alliance" in order to patrol and protect the Black Warrior River watershed. It was founded in Fall 2001 by David Whiteside and Roger Conville. The current Executive Director is Brantley Fry. The position of "Riverkeeper" is held by Nelson Brooke, who acts as the primary patroller and spokesperson for the group. Other staff include chief prosecutor and general counsel Mark Martin, legal program coordinator John Kinney, and director of development Charles Scribner IV. The groups offices are located at 712 37th Street South in Avondale.

The Board of Directors consists of J. David Tidwell (president), Gordon Black, Rob Brewer, Mike Cowan, James Lowery, Eugenia McWilliams, M. Clay Ragsdale, William Kent Upshaw, and Randy Watts.

The Black Warrior Riverkeeper was named "Organization of the Year" for 2006 by the Alabama Rivers Alliance.

Legal actions

Black Warrior Riverkeeper has filed notices of intent to sue several polluters under the provisions of the Federal Clean Water Act. In many cases, their actions have prompted regulatory actions by the Alabama Department of Environmental Management (ADEM), at which point Black Warrior Riverkeeper intervenes to ensure diligent prosecution. In all, the group has documented over 11,000 individual violations since 2002 and has helped to successfully force compliance with the Clean Water Act in a number of cases.

Industries which have been threatened by legal action by Black Warrior Riverkeeper include:

External links