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CENTRAL VALLEY UTILITIES AGREE TO PAY NEARLY $110,000 TO SETTLE ALLEGED AIR VIOLATIONS
Release Date: 4/5/2000
Contact Information: Leo Kay, Press Office, 415/744-2201
SAN FRANCISCO The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency reached agreements recently with three San Joaquin Valley utilities that call for them to pay a collective $109,641 in civil penalties to settle numerous alleged acid rain reporting violations under the federal Clean Air Act.
The Modesto Irrigation District will pay $40,313, the Turlock Irrigation District will pay $34,300, and the Northern California Power Agency will pay $35,028 for alleged violations at its facility in Lodi. The three utilities have also agreed to comply with the regulations.
In 1995, the EPA began requiring electric utilities to report all sulfur dioxide and nitrogen oxide emissions the primary ingredients of acid rain as part of a national goal to reduce acid rain, which causes acidified lakes and streams, lowers visibility in national parks and deteriorates buildings and monuments. Forests and water bodies, especially, from the Sierra Nevada to the Appalachians have been damaged by acid rain. Proper reporting is one element of the EPA's requirement that electric utilities reduce annual nitrogen oxide emissions by 2 million tons.
"These settlements strike a fair balance between the utilities' violations, and their efforts to correct them," said Deborah Jordan, acting director of the EPA's air division in San Francisco. "All power providers from Maine to California share a responsibility in reporting their nitrogen oxide and sulfur dioxide emissions to the EPA so that we can work to reduce acid rain."
The alleged violations at the three facilities included:
failure to submit acid rain monitoring plans
failure to submit quarterly emissions reports
failure to conduct emission monitoring certification testing and submit certification reports
failure to keep proper records
The EPA became aware of the alleged violations through communications with the San Joaquin Valley Unified Air Pollution Control District and with the facilities themselves.
The three publicly owned utilities provide electric, irrigation and domestic water service in northern San Joaquin Valley.
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