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Death in the Pot

 



 The Hidden Vulnerability of the Greenbrier: 5 Surprising Truths About One of America’s Most Beautiful Rivers

To the casual observer, the Greenbrier River is a masterpiece of Appalachian scenery. Its clear, cold waters wind through lush valleys, offering a seemingly pristine escape for kayakers and anglers alike. But beneath this pastoral surface lies a "Swiss cheese" paradox. The very geology that makes the Greenbrier Valley so unique—the sprawling Greenbrier Limestone Formation—also makes it one of the most geomorphologically vulnerable watersheds in the United States.

The ground here is a deceptive floor. With an average of 18 sinkholes per square kilometer, the landscape is defined by a dense network of "losing streams" that vanish into the earth and "dark subterranean cave networks" that carry water where the eye cannot follow. In this "sinkhole plain," the distinction between surface and groundwater is a dangerous illusion; the riverbed is essentially a sieve, where the distance between a surface contaminant and your drinking water is often measured in hours, not years.

A Landscape Without a Filter (The Karst Transit)

In most environments, the earth acts as a massive, natural purification system. As rainwater moves through layers of soil, physical and biological processes trap and break down pollutants. In the Greenbrier’s karst topography, this filter is essentially bypassed.

The region is defined by "vertical conduits"—sinkholes and shafts that funnel surface runoff directly into deep aquifers. Once a toxin enters a sinking stream, it joins a high-speed subterranean highway. Historical dye tracer studies conducted in the Milligan Creek system demonstrated that untreated waste introduced into these underground passages could travel 10 kilometers to its resurgence point at Davis Spring in just 18 days. The speed of this transit can be lethal: in the nearby town of Union, untreated wastewater discharged into a sinkhole resurfaced at a private spring 2.7 kilometers away in less than 48 hours, triggering a localized typhoid fever outbreak.

"This rapid transit mechanism... allows contaminants to transition from surface runoff to deep groundwater without filtration... rendering traditional surface containment and remediation strategies ineffective once a toxin enters the karst network." — Environmental Science Reports / WVDEP

The Paradox of Light: How UV Radiation Becomes Water Pollution

We typically think of water pollution as something dumped directly into a river, but in the Greenbrier, the sun itself can activate a chemical threat. The construction of the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) has introduced a modern concern: PFAS, or "forever chemicals."

At Pence Springs, the pipeline crosses the river via a micro-tunneling boring process, utilizing horizontal directional drilling to place the pipe 13 feet beneath the active riverbed. Due to years of litigation and construction delays, massive sections of the pipe sat exposed to the elements. This prolonged exposure to ultraviolet (UV) radiation degrades the chemical structure of the external polymer coatings. As these compromised pipes are dragged through boreholes, they may shed particulate matter directly into the alluvial aquifer.

Because these coatings utilize polymer formulations that can degrade into PFAS, the construction process creates a direct, localized pathway for carcinogenic chemicals to enter the water supply immediately upstream of public intakes. This threat is not merely chemical; the boring process itself risks "frac-outs," where pressurized drilling mud can suffocate benthic life, specifically endangering the green floater mussel (Lasmigona subviridis), a declining species for which the Greenbrier is one of the last remaining strongholds.

The Sediment Time Bomb (Bacteria and Pathogens)

Biological contamination is a persistent ghost in the Greenbrier, which has been listed as "impaired" for fecal coliform bacteria since 2006. This is driven by "sediment-bacterial coupling," where the river’s floor acts as a reservoir for pathogens. In sub-watersheds like Milligan Creek, which hosts over 34,000 animal units, bacteria from livestock waste don't just wash away; they settle into the fine karst sediments.

These sediments harbor and preserve viable bacteria for extended periods. When the water is disturbed—whether by grazing cattle or heavy construction activity—the turbidity spikes, and pathogens are resuspended into the water column in massive numbers.

Monitoring Site

Baseline Turbidity (NTU)

Baseline Fecal Coliform (Counts/100 mL)

Altered Turbidity (NTU)

Altered Fecal Coliform (After Disturbance)

Site 1 (Upper Milligan)

16.0

745

56.3

2,100

Site 2 (Mid-Milligan)

42.0

38

56.4

1,500

Site 3 (Lower Milligan)

1.0

2,800

56.4

3,900

Legislating Toxicity: The Selenium Threshold Shift

While nutrient management has improved, the Greenbrier faces a new legislative challenge regarding selenium, a metalloid released by coal mining activities. While a micronutrient in tiny amounts, selenium is highly bioaccumulative and causes "teratogenic effects"—permanent, horrific physical deformities such as spinal curvature (scoliosis) and facial misshapenness in fish.

Despite these risks, 2026 saw the passage of Senate Bill 256 (originally introduced as SB 264), which authorized raising the allowable concentration of selenium in fish tissue from 8.0 µg/g to 12.5 µg/g. This shift, driven by industrial lobbying, represents a calculated move away from established ecological safety standards.

"Senior scientists and environmental coalitions have strongly condemned this legislative move, warning that raising the threshold will allow higher loads of selenium to accumulate in river basins like the Greenbrier, endangering sensitive fish populations." — West Virginia Rivers Coalition

Acute Chemical Influx: 48 Hours to Zero

The Greenbrier’s vulnerability is perhaps most acute where it intersects with major transportation corridors. Interstate 64 and Route 92 carry a constant flow of hazardous materials through the heart of the valley. Because of the karst landscape’s speed, a single accident can escalate into a regional humanitarian crisis almost instantly.

In 2015, a diesel spill of roughly 4,000 gallons on Route 92 forced the city of Lewisburg to shut down its water intakes. Within just 48 hours, the municipal system ran dry, leaving 12,000 residents dependent on emergency tankers. The danger remains present: as recently as May 5, 2026, a tractor-trailer crash on I-64 released another 4,000 gallons of diesel. While emergency dams were constructed, chemical sheens were observed downstream, proving that in this "Swiss cheese" geology, the margin between a highway accident and a dry tap is razor-thin.

A Watershed Scale Future

The Greenbrier River proves that point-source fixes—like upgrading wastewater plants to stop seasonal algae blooms—are only half the battle. To protect this landscape, we must move toward holistic, watershed-scale management that accounts for the invisible, subterranean plumbing of the karst.

The history of the Greenbrier is written in these underground passages, from the typhoid outbreak of the past to the diesel spills and PFAS threats of the present. As we continue to thread high-pressure pipelines and industrial corridors across this fragile terrain, we must confront a difficult reality: Can our modern infrastructure truly coexist with a geology that remembers every spill and filters almost nothing? The future of the river, and the 12,000 people who drink from it, depends on recognizing that what happens on the surface never stays there.

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Ecotoxicological Assessment of the Greenbrier River Basin: Themes, Risks, and Historical Trajectories

Executive Summary

The Greenbrier River Basin in southeastern West Virginia is a hydrologically complex system characterized by extreme geomorphological vulnerability. Due to its expansive karst topography—featuring one of the densest sinkhole plains in the world—the region lacks the natural filtration mechanisms typical of other watersheds. This allows surface contaminants to transition rapidly into deep groundwater aquifers, often traveling miles in a matter of hours or days.

Current environmental pressures on the basin are multifaceted:

  • Persistent Contaminants: While baseline PFAS levels remain relatively low compared to the Ohio River Valley, infrastructure projects like the Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) introduce localized risks of "forever chemical" contamination through degraded pipe coatings.
  • Heavy Metals and Legislative Shifts: Historical mercury levels have declined, but new legislative actions in 2026 have weakened selenium standards, potentially increasing the risk of chronic toxicity and reproductive failure in aquatic life.
  • Biological and Nutrient Stress: The river has historically struggled with severe filamentous algae blooms and fecal coliform contamination. While point-source nutrient controls have successfully mitigated algae outbreaks, nonpoint source pollution from high-density livestock grazing remains a critical threat to water quality.
  • Acute Infrastructure Risks: The basin is highly susceptible to sudden chemical emergencies, exemplified by significant diesel spills from major transportation corridors and the physical disruptions caused by pipeline micro-tunneling.

Geomorphological Vulnerability and Karst Transport

The Greenbrier River Valley is underlain by the Greenbrier Limestone Formation, a geological structure that dictates the transport and concentration of toxins. The region averages approximately 18 sinkholes per square kilometer, creating a highly porous landscape where the traditional soil matrix—which normally acts as a biological filter—is bypassed.

Hydrological Connectivity

  • Direct Vertical Conduits: Precipitation drains through thin soils into sinkholes and losing streams, entering aquifers without filtration.
  • Rapid Transit Systems: The Milligan Creek and Davis Spring system illustrates this velocity. Tracer studies show that waste introduced into sinking streams can travel 10 kilometers in 18 days. In the town of Union, untreated wastewater traveled 2.7 kilometers to a private spring in less than two days, resulting in a typhoid outbreak.
  • Regional Escalation: Because surface and groundwater are intimately linked, localized pollution events can rapidly escalate into regional water quality crises.

Persistent and Emerging Chemical Contaminants

PFAS and "Forever Chemicals"

Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) are anthropogenic compounds known for their extreme stability and resistance to natural degradation.

  • Regional Baseline: A USGS study (2019–2021) of 279 public water systems found that while PFAS contamination is prevalent in the Ohio River Valley, detections were rare in the fractured-rock aquifers of the Greenbrier basin.
  • Utility Status: Public water utilities are currently establishing baselines and ensuring compliance with the EPA’s 2024 National Primary Drinking Water Regulation.

Water Utility

Population Served

Source Water Type

PFAS Testing and Regulatory Status

Greenbrier Hotel Corp.

3,280

Surface/Groundwater Mix

Active monitoring; currently complies with federal guidelines.

Lewisburg Municipal Water

~12,000

Surface (Greenbrier River)

Authorized participation in National Class Action Settlement for infrastructure funding.

Ronceverte Water Dept.

2,091

Surface (Greenbrier River)

Establishing baseline concentrations for federal EPA databases.

Greenbrier Village Utility

50

Groundwater Aquifer

Undergoing baseline monitoring; no violations recorded.

Risks from Pipeline Construction

The Mountain Valley Pipeline (MVP) represents a primary pathway for new PFAS introduction.

  • Coating Degradation: Years of litigation left pipe sections exposed to UV radiation, which degrades external polymer coatings. These compromised coatings likely shed particulate matter—potentially containing PFAS—directly into the alluvial aquifer during the boring process.
  • Pence Springs Micro-tunneling: The use of horizontal directional drilling (HDD) beneath the riverbed creates a direct, localized pathway for carcinogenic chemicals immediately upstream of public water intakes.

Heavy Metals and Mineral Extraction Legacies

The basin’s industrial history of coal and timber extraction has left a legacy of Acid Mine Drainage (AMD) and toxic metal transport.

Mercury (Hg)

Historically, mercury concentrations in sport-caught fish necessitated restrictive consumption advisories.

  • Status Trend: Long-term monitoring showed a gradual decline in tissue concentrations. In 2014, the specific restrictive advisory for smallmouth bass was removed.
  • Current Management: Fish are now managed under a general statewide advisory, though risks from atmospheric deposition remain.

Selenium (Se)

Selenium is a naturally occurring metalloid released during coal mining, specifically mountaintop removal and valley fills.

  • Toxicology: At low thresholds, selenium causes teratogenic effects in fish and waterfowl, including spinal curvature and reproductive failure.
  • Legislative Weakening: In early 2026, West Virginia Senate Bill 256 authorized the WVDEP to raise the allowable selenium concentration in fish tissue from 8.0 mg/kg to 12.5 mg/kg. Scientists warn this will allow higher loads of the toxin to accumulate in the Greenbrier basin.

Agroclimatology and Pathogen Dynamics

Pesticide Inputs

Historical USGS data from the Alderson monitoring station identifies 1,3-dichloropropene (1-3-D), atrazine, and metolachlor as primary agricultural contaminants. These highly soluble herbicides leach into the karst network, posing risks to aquatic plants and invertebrates. Additionally, the USFS "Greenbrier Southeast Project" (2022) approved broadcast herbicide applications across 16,888 acres of the Monongahela National Forest, threatening cold-water brook trout habitats in the East Fork headwaters.

Biological Contamination

The Greenbrier River has been listed for fecal coliform bacteria impairment since 2006, largely due to high-density livestock grazing in the Milligan Creek watershed (approximately 34,755 animal units).

  • Sediment-Bacterial Coupling: Fecal pathogens are preserved in bottom sediments. Activities that increase turbidity—such as cattle movement or pipeline construction—resuspend these bacteria.

Monitoring Site

Baseline Fecal Coliform (Counts/100 mL)

Altered Fecal Coliform (Counts/100 mL)

Upper Milligan Creek

745

2,100

Mid-Milligan Creek

38

1,500

Lower Milligan Creek

2,800

3,900

Pre-Sink Karst Window

791

891

Eutrophication and Restoration Efforts

In 2008, the WVDEP designated the Greenbrier as the most algae-impacted river in the state. Outbreaks were driven by water hardness (calcite-rich limestone) and nutrient influx.

  • The Adaptive Restoration Plan (2013/2014): Instead of a traditional TMDL, the state upgraded wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) in Alderson, Ronceverte, and White Sulphur Springs.
  • Impact: New NPDES permits imposed a strict monthly limit of 0.5 mg/L of total phosphorus. Following capital upgrades in 2016–2017, phosphorus concentrations dropped, eliminating severe blooms even during low-flow periods.

Infrastructural and Acute Chemical Threats

Transportation Corridor Spills

Major transit routes like I-64 and Route 92 facilitate the transport of hazardous materials through the valley.

  • January 2015: A 3,975-gallon diesel spill on Route 92 forced Lewisburg to shut its water intake; the city ran out of water within 48 hours.
  • May 2026: A tractor-trailer crash on I-64 released 4,000 gallons of diesel fuel into Howard's Creek. While containment booms prevented "free product" from entering the Greenbrier main stem, chemical sheens were observed downstream.

Pipeline Construction Hazards

  • Frac-outs: Pressurized bentonite clay slurry used in boring can escape through bedrock fissures. Such incidents can suffocate benthic life, specifically the green floater mussel, a sensitive and declining species found in the Greenbrier.
  • Well Water Disruption: Residents along the MVP path have reported pristine well water turning brown or white with sediment following blasting and trenching operations, leading to the abandonment of private water sources.

A Tanning Tale

 

 


Based on the provided documents, Greenbrier Environmental Group was hired to establish a new, contemporary baseline for the former Howes Tannery site in Frank, West Virginia, because the historical monitoring wells had been unmonitored for decades.

The environmental assessments of the property have identified a complex "commingled plume" of historical pollutants that Greenbrier Environmental is now actively monitoring and tasked with remediating. The primary contaminants identified at the site include:

  • Tannic Acid: A defining pollutant of the vegetable tanning industry, extracted from hemlock and chestnut bark. While tannic acid is a natural compound, it acts as a "chelating agent" that alters groundwater pH. This chemical reaction inadvertently binds with naturally occurring metals in the soil, making them more soluble and increasing the mobility of other trapped contaminants.
  • Heavy Metals: The site is contaminated with chromium (a byproduct of mid-century chrome tanning salts), arsenic (historically used in the dehairing stage and as a pesticide to preserve hides during transport), and lead (originating from finishing pigments and old industrial debris).
  • Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs): The soil and groundwater are impacted by industrial degreasers and finishing solvents, specifically toluene and varsol. These chemicals are highly mobile in groundwater and pose a risk of vapor intrusion.
  • Persistent Organic Pollutants: The site also contains polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), which are highly persistent environmental toxins historically used in the tannery's electrical transformers and hydraulic fluids.

To track the stabilization of these pollutants, Greenbrier Environmental's mandatory three-year "purge and sample" monitoring routine requires testing the aquifer for Target Analyte List (TAL) Metals to identify residual chromium and other minerals, as well as testing for Total Organic Carbon (TOC) to measure the lingering organic loads associated with the tannic acid.

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In late 2023, the Pocahontas County Commission awarded the environmental engineering and consulting bid for the former Howes Tannery site to Greenbrier Environmental Group, Inc.. This selection fundamentally impacted the trajectory of the Tannery project by transitioning it from a dormant environmental liability into an active, multi-phase industrial rehabilitation effort.

The bid impacted the Tannery project in three primary ways:

1. Managing Mandatory Asbestos Abatement and Structural Demolition A condition of the federal Brownfield Clean-Up Grant funding the project is the mandatory demolition of three to four dilapidated structures on the property, including the historically controversial Howes Office Building. Greenbrier Environmental Group is responsible for overseeing the strict asbestos abatement required before these buildings can be torn down. Their engineering oversight ensures that demolition contractors do not cross-contaminate the site with friable asbestos debris, which would severely complicate the subsequent soil and groundwater remediation phases.

2. Directing Complex Groundwater Remediation and VRP Integration By winning the bid, Greenbrier Environmental Group took charge of the EPA’s Voluntary Groundwater Remediation Project and formally integrated the site into the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection’s (WVDEP) Voluntary Remediation Program (VRP). The firm is tasked with:

  • Designing and drilling new groundwater testing wells to accurately map the commingled subsurface plume of historical pollutants, which includes tannic acid, heavy metals (like chromium and arsenic), and volatile organic compounds.
  • Executing a mandatory three-year groundwater monitoring schedule to track pollution levels through various seasonal and hydrologic cycles, verifying that the remediation efforts are successfully stabilizing the site.
  • Enforcing strict protocols for site restoration, including the mandatory testing of all new fill dirt brought onto the site to prevent accidental re-contamination.

3. Providing Regulatory Authority for Future Economic Reuse A major factor in awarding the bid to Greenbrier Environmental Group was that its Vice-President, Audrey Sampson, is a WVDEP-certified Licensed Remediation Specialist (LRS). Under West Virginia law, an LRS is a statutory necessity to oversee the VRP process and issue a final "Certificate of Completion". By acting as a liaison between the county, the WVDEP, and the EPA, the firm ensures the cleanup meets stringent state and federal standards. Ultimately, their work is "de-risking" the property by stripping away its environmental stigma, preparing the land to be safely repurposed as a "shovel-ready" commercial space known as the East Fork Industrial Park.

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Based on the provided documents, asbestos abatement rules significantly extend and dictate the demolition timeline for legacy buildings by introducing strict mandatory steps before, during, and after the physical tear-down.

Here is how these rules affect the timeline:

1. The Mandatory 10-Day Notification Period In West Virginia, a "Notification of Abatement, Demolition, or Renovation" must be filed with the state's Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) at least ten working days prior to the commencement of any demolition activity. This waiting period is required even if the building is presumed to be asbestos-free, as it allows state health and environmental agencies time to coordinate on-site inspections to verify compliance with safety standards. Property owners are legally required to have a licensed inspector perform an asbestos inspection prior to demolition.

2. Abatement as a Prerequisite to Demolition The actual mechanical demolition of a building cannot begin until all asbestos-containing materials (ACMs) are safely removed. Because industrial buildings often used "friable" asbestos (which easily crumbles and becomes airborne), the abatement process is highly technical and slow. Contractors must set up "negative pressure" containment areas using specialized HEPA filtration units and employ "wet methods" to ensure that not a single hazardous fiber escapes the structure during removal.

3. Disposal Logistics and Hauling Delays Asbestos rules require a bifurcated waste stream that significantly increases project timelines. Asbestos-containing debris cannot simply be taken to a standard local landfill, like the Pocahontas County Landfill. Instead, the hazardous material must be double-bagged in 6-mil plastic, labeled with OSHA-compliant warnings, and manifested for transport. It must then be hauled to one of the very few specialized facilities in the state authorized to accept it (such as the Ham Sanitary Landfill in Monroe County).

Overall Timeline Impact Because of these rigorous administrative, containment, and disposal requirements, the demolition phase of a project becomes a massive undertaking. For example, at the former Howes Tannery site, the integrated "Phase I Asbestos Abatement and Structural Demolition" was estimated to take between 12 to 18 months to complete.

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The East Fork Industrial Park project (located at the former Howes Leather Tannery site in Frank, West Virginia) is primarily funded through a combination of federal and state grants designed to address environmental remediation and structural demolition.

The two main funding sources for the project are:

  • EPA Brownfields Cleanup Grant ($497,697): Awarded to the Pocahontas County Commission in 2023, this grant is funded by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law. It is specifically designated to clean up historical pollutants such as heavy metals, PCBs, and volatile organic compounds (VOCs). The funds cover the installation of groundwater monitoring wells, the development of a groundwater monitoring report, and the management of the EPA's Voluntary Groundwater Remediation Project at the site.
  • Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) ($380,000): This separate grant is allocated specifically for the physical decommissioning phase of the project. A condition of the Brownfield funding requires the demolition of three to four dilapidated buildings on the property. The CDBG funds this requirement, with $350,000 dedicated to the actual physical tear-down and site clearing, $20,000 for administrative expenses coordinated through the Region 4 Planning and Development Council, and $10,000 for regulatory permits.

By layering these grants, the Pocahontas County Commission is able to cover the high costs of both asbestos abatement/demolition and long-term groundwater restoration, effectively shifting the financial burden away from local taxpayers while preparing the site for future commercial and industrial redevelopment.

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Here is a research breakdown of the specific hazards, environmental behaviors, and toxicological impacts of the contaminants listed.

1. Tannic Acid (Vegetable Tanning Extract)

While tannic acid is an organic, plant-derived compound, its concentrated release into the environment disrupts local geochemistry through several distinct mechanisms:

  • pH Manipulation: Concentrated tannic acid lowers the pH of soil and groundwater, increasing acidity. This acidic environment accelerates the weathering of local minerals.

  • Chelation and Metal Mobility: As a potent chelating agent, tannic acid binds with naturally occurring, otherwise stable metals in the soil (such as iron, aluminum, and manganese). This binding alters their chemical structure, making them highly soluble in water. Consequently, these metals—along with other trapped contaminants—are stripped from the soil matrix and mobilized into the local water table.

  • Surface Water Depletion: When tannic acid enters surface waters, it exerts a high Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD). Its decomposition consumes dissolved oxygen, creating hypoxic or anoxic conditions that can devastate aquatic life. It also discolors water ("blackwater" effect), blocking sunlight and inhibiting photosynthesis.

2. Heavy Metals (Chromium, Arsenic, and Lead)

Heavy metals do not biodegrade; they persist indefinitely in the environment, shifting between different chemical states and accumulating in the food chain.

Chromium ($\text{Cr}$)

  • The Hazard: Tannery operations historically utilized chromium salts. While Trivalent Chromium ($\text{Cr}^{3+}$) is less toxic and relatively immobile, it can oxidize in the soil to Hexavalent Chromium ($\text{Cr}^{6+}$) under certain environmental conditions (such as the presence of manganese oxides).

  • Impact: $\text{Cr}^{6+}$ is a known human carcinogen, highly soluble in water, and easily absorbed by plants and animals. It causes severe cellular damage, skin ulcerations ("chrome holes"), and respiratory cancers if inhaled via dust.

Arsenic ($\text{As}$)

  • The Hazard: Used historically in the "beaming" or dehairing stage and as a hide preservative.

  • Impact: Arsenic is a potent systemic toxin and carcinogen. It disrupts cellular energy production (ATP synthesis). Chronic exposure via contaminated drinking water or dust inhalation leads to skin lesions, peripheral neuropathy, cardiovascular disease, and increased risks of lung, bladder, and skin cancers.

Lead ($\text{Pb}$)

  • The Hazard: Derived from historical finishing pigments, primers, and aging facility infrastructure.

  • Impact: Lead is a powerful neurotoxin that binds tightly to soil particles but can be ingested via dust or mobilized by low pH (such as that caused by tannic acid). It bioaccumulates in bony tissues and causes irreversible neurological damage, renal impairment, and hematological disorders (anemia).

3. Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs: Toluene and Varsol)

VOCs are characterized by their high vapor pressure and mobility, posing distinct risks both underground and at the surface.

Toluene

  • The Hazard: A clear, water-insoluble liquid used as a solvent in finishes and coatings. It moves rapidly through soil into groundwater, where it can travel long distances as a dissolved plume.

  • Impact: Toluene targets the central nervous system (CNS). Acute exposure causes headaches, dizziness, and confusion, while chronic exposure can lead to permanent neurological impairment, kidney damage, and liver dysfunction.

Varsol (Mineral Spirits / Stoddard Solvent)

  • The Hazard: A complex petroleum distillate mixture used as an industrial degreaser. Because it is lighter than water, it can form a Light Non-Aqueous Phase Liquid (LNAPL) layer that floats on top of the water table, continuously leaching dissolved fractions into the groundwater.

  • Impact: Exposure causes severe respiratory irritation, dermal dermatitis, and central nervous system depression. Prolonged exposure to the component hydrocarbons can damage bone marrow and the immune system.

The Vapor Intrusion Risk

Both Toluene and Varsol readily volatilize (turn into gas) from contaminated soil and shallow groundwater. These vapors migrate upward through soil pore spaces and can penetrate cracks in concrete slabs, utility conduits, or foundations of nearby buildings. This creates a hidden inhalation hazard for occupants, often resulting in poor indoor air quality long before groundwater impacts are visually noticed.

4. Persistent Organic Pollutants (PCBs)

Polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs) represent a class of synthetic organic chemicals that are highly resistant to physical, chemical, and biological degradation.

  • Environmental Persistence: PCBs bind strongly to organic matter in soils and sediments, resisting natural breakdown for decades. They do not dissolve easily in water but migrate by adhering to moving sediment particles or through the air as aerosols.

  • Bioaccumulation and Biomagnification: Because PCBs are highly lipophilic (fat-soluble), they accumulate in the fatty tissues of organisms. They biomagnify up the food chain, meaning concentrations increase exponentially in apex predators and humans.

  • Toxicological Profile: PCBs are classified as probable human carcinogens linked to melanomas, liver cancer, and gall bladder cancer. They act as severe endocrine disruptors, mimicking or blocking hormones to cause reproductive failure, developmental delays in children, and significant suppression of the immune system.

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Yes, Frank and Durbin in Pocahontas County have a documented historical vulnerability to this specific profile of toxic hazards due to their industrial legacy.

For nearly a century, the local economy and landscape were shaped by heavy industrial leather manufacturing—most notably by the Howe’s Leather Tannery (originally established in 1904 in the town of Frank, directly adjacent to Durbin). At its peak, it was one of the largest producers of shoe sole leather in the world.

The environmental footprint of a large-scale, long-operating facility of that era directly correlates with the specific classes of toxins mentioned.

The Specific Risk Factors for Frank & Durbin

1. The Interplay of Tannic Acid and Complex Topography

Historically, the Howe’s Tannery relied heavily on the traditional vegetable tanning process, consuming thousands of cords of chestnut, oak, and hemlock bark harvested from the surrounding forests.

  • The Concern: The discharge of highly concentrated, acidic tannic extracts into the local environment alters the local soil chemistry.

  • The Risk Factor: Because the region features complex underground formations and sits right along the headwaters of the Greenbrier River, any sustained reduction in groundwater pH poses an elevated risk. The acidic environment acts as a catalyst, dissolving otherwise stable, naturally occurring minerals and accelerating the travel of heavier industrial contaminants down-gradient or into shallow water tables.

2. Heavy Metals: The Military-Grade Chrome Legacy

While the facility began as a traditional vegetable tannery, it evolved with modern industrial demands. Notably, during the mid-20th century, the facility developed a chrome re-tanning process to produce specialized, mold-resistant insoles for military boots (extensively used during the Vietnam War).

  • The Concern: Chrome tanning relies on trivalent chromium ($\text{Cr}^{3+}$). If residual tanning salts or sludge were historically discarded in unlined on-site disposal areas or lagoons, they remain locked in the soil matrix.

  • The Risk Factor: If these historical deposits are exposed to oxidizing agents in the soil (like manganese oxides) or mobilized by the high volumes of acidic tannic extracts from the older operations, there is an inherent risk of conversion into Hexavalent Chromium ($\text{Cr}^{6+}$)—the highly mobile, soluble, and carcinogenic form of the metal. Furthermore, historical transport and storage of raw hides frequently utilized arsenic-based powders as a pesticide to prevent rot before processing.

3. Solvents and Electrical Transformers (VOCs & PCBs)

Operating a heavy manufacturing complex required substantial infrastructure, including large mechanical workshops, finishing bays, and high-capacity electrical grids.

  • The Concern: Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) like toluene and petroleum-based degreasers like varsol were standard industry formulations for cleaning machinery and thinning heavy leather finishing pigments. Concurrently, heavy electrical transformers and hydraulic presses of the mid-to-late 20th century universally utilized PCBs for heat stability.

  • The Risk Factor: Unlike heavy metals, VOCs migrate rapidly as fluid plumes. In areas with high water tables or shallow aquifers near the riverbanks, residual toluene and varsol pose a distinct vapor intrusion risk to older, nearby structures, where underground gases can seep through foundations. Meanwhile, if old transformers leaked into the ground, those PCBs bind tightly to organic sediment and resist natural breakdown, presenting a long-term bioaccumulation hazard if they migrate into aquatic food chains.

Summary of Exposure Pathways

Because the community of Frank sits immediately down-gradient from the historic industrial footprint, any legacy contamination tracks along two primary pathways:

  1. Groundwater and Surface Migration: Plumes moving through the alluvial soils toward the Greenbrier River, potentially impacting older, private shallow wells that are not tied into municipal water lines.

  2. Soil and Sediment Traps: Historic, unlined sludge pits or buried industrial debris that hold heavy metals and PCBs in place, where low pH groundwater (driven by old tannic acid concentrations) can slowly leach those metals out over decades.

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    The regulatory and remediation history of the former Howe’s Leather Tannery site in Frank, WV, spans decades—evolving from early water-monitoring disputes in the 1980s to its current active deployment under the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (WVDEP) Voluntary Remediation Program (VRP).

    1. Early Regulatory Action & The 1986 Consent Order

    Long before modern Brownfields initiatives, the environmental impact of the world's largest shoe sole leather tannery on the East Fork of the Greenbrier River was a major point of friction between the company and state regulators.

    • The Conflict: By the mid-1980s, the West Virginia Department of Natural Resources (the predecessor to the DEP in water management) sought strict limits on the tannery’s high-volume industrial discharges, which were rich in tannic acid and threatened a critical, high-quality trout stream.

    • The Resolution (1986): Following two and a half years of intense negotiations, a landmark Consent Order was entered on December 4, 1986. Rather than enforcing standard "end-of-pipe" effluent limits that would have forced the plant's immediate closure, the state permitted an innovative, computer-modeled discharge system. Developed by the tannery's environmental consultant, the program calculated real-time flow and dilution capacity of the East Fork to dictate how much treated wastewater could be safely released.

    2. Post-Closure Neglect (1994–2020s)

    When Howe’s Leather permanently shuttered its operations in 1994, it left behind a sprawling industrial footprint, collapsing brick structures, and a complex subterranean pollution profile.

    • The Broken Agreement: When the Pocahontas County Commission originally took title to the property from Howe’s Leather, the company installed several groundwater monitoring wells and legally committed to checking them.

    • The Reality: The company subsequently went out of business and dissolved. For nearly thirty years, the monitoring regimen lapsed, leaving a massive, un-remediated site sitting directly on the county's water table.

    3. The Modern WVDEP Brownfields Cleanup Era

    The site’s regulatory trajectory shifted dramatically when the Pocahontas County Commission, in tandem with the Greenbrier Valley Economic Development Corporation (GVEDC), actively sought to reclaim the land for future industrial and economic reuse.

    The 2024 Cleanup Initiative

    In January 2024, the Pocahontas County Commission officially launched a targeted remediation project funded by an EPA Brownfields Cleanup Grant. The project was contracted out to Greenbrier Environmental Group, Inc. (based in Lewisburg). The cleanup mandate focuses on two distinct environmental hazards:

    • Asbestos Abatement and Demolition: Stripping toxic asbestos from three to four dilapidated, non-functional buildings on the site to safely clear the path for demolition. This included heated local debate over the historical but heavily water-damaged old tannery office building.

    • Groundwater and Stream Remediation: Addressing the historical plume of tannic acid and associated industrial pollutants that have long since infiltrated the shallow soil matrix and local waterways.

    Transition to the Voluntary Remediation Program (VRP)

    To legally certify the land for future commercial use, the property was formally entered into the WVDEP Voluntary Remediation Program (VRP). Under this strict regulatory framework:

    1. New Infrastructure: The remediation team is drilling entirely new groundwater testing and monitoring wells across the footprint.

    2. Mandatory Testing Window: The site must undergo a mandatory three-year continuous groundwater monitoring period to track the behavior, concentration, and migration of legacy pollutants.

    3. Fill Testing: Any clean fill dirt hauled onto the site to cap or grade the property must be rigorously tested to guarantee it introduces zero external contaminants.

    Current Status: The ongoing remediation efforts have gained significant regional tracking; in late 2025, the West Virginia Brownfields Assistance Centers named the GVEDC the "Redevelopment Partner of the Year" specifically for their collaborative execution of the EPA-funded Howe’s Tannery cleanup. Once the WVDEP certifies that the three-year monitoring window meets clean water metrics, the property will receive an official Certificate of Completion, freeing the county from legacy liability and clearing it for new industrial development.

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    While it is highly likely that certain byproduct components—specifically raw animal hair, fleshing waste, and lime—were used by local farmers as an informal soil conditioner, the toxic industrial sludges containing heavy metals and chemicals were not officially or legally distributed as commercial agricultural fertilizer in Pocahontas County.

    However, the historical context of how "tannery dirt" and agricultural practices overlapped in the 20th century reveals a few important nuances.

    1. Informal Use of "Fleshing Waste" and Lime

    During the early and mid-20th century, before modern environmental regulations (like the 1976 Resource Conservation and Recovery Act), tanneries generated massive volumes of non-liquid solid waste during the initial "beamhouse" or preparation stages.

    • The Nitrogen Source: Hides were scraped to remove fat, tissue, and hair. This untanned organic matter was highly rich in nitrogen.

    • The Lime Source: Hides were soaked in large vats of hydrated lime (calcium hydroxide) to loosen the hair.

    • Local Practice: Across Appalachia, it was a common, informal practice for local farmers to haul away truckloads of this lime-heavy, hair-and-fat waste. Because Appalachian soils are naturally acidic, farmers used the lime waste to sweeten (raise the pH of) their pastures, while the animal protein acted as a rudimentary fertilizer. Because this material was scraped off before the hides entered the tanning vats, it generally did not contain high concentrations of chromium or solvents.

    2. Containment of Toxic Tanning Sludges

    In contrast, the actual chemical wastes—the spent vegetable tanning liquors (rich in tannic acid) and the later mid-century chrome-re-tanning salts—were handled as industrial liabilities rather than agricultural products.

    • On-Site Disposal: At the Howe's Leather site in Frank, these liquid wastes and chemical-heavy precipitates were systematically directed into on-site unlined lagoons, settling basins, and low-lying areas along the property footprint.

    • The Threat to Agriculture: Rather than being spread intentionally on crops, these toxins posed a threat to local farming through unintentional migration. The high water table along the East Fork of the Greenbrier River meant that buried heavy metals, leached tannic acids, and mobile VOCs could migrate laterally through alluvial gravels, potentially impacting down-gradient agricultural wells or low-lying pastures during seasonal flooding events.

    3. The Regulatory Loophole (The Modern Context)

    The concept of using tannery sludge as fertilizer is a recognized environmental issue nationwide, but it primarily stems from a legal loophole that emerged much later. Under federal regulations, certain industrial wastewater sludges can be treated, stabilized, and legally reclassified as "beneficial soil conditioners" or biosolids to be spread on crops.

    While this controversial practice occurred extensively with automotive and commercial leather tanneries in states like Michigan and Maine (frequently leading to modern heavy metal and PFAS contamination on farms), no records indicate that Howe's Leather in Frank operated a commercial sludge-distribution program for local agricultural lands. Their waste remained localized to the 26.5-acre industrial footprint currently being monitored and remediated under the WVDEP Voluntary Remediation Program.

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    If legacy toxins from the old industrial site in Frank migrate into the East Fork of the Greenbrier River, the impacts would ripple down the entire river corridor, threatening coldwater ecology, public health, and the local tourism economy. Because the Greenbrier is a highly dynamic, free-flowing river running through sensitive geological formations, contamination wouldn't stay localized—it would move.

    The specific impacts can be broken down into four distinct categories:

    1. Ecological Devastation to the Trout Fishery & Aquatic Food Web

    The upper reaches of the Greenbrier River are celebrated as premium coldwater habitats. The introduction of these specific contaminants strikes at different levels of the aquatic ecosystem:

    • Tannic Acid and Oxygen Depletion: As seen historically, high concentrations of tannic acid cause a "blackwater" effect. This blocks sunlight, halting the growth of beneficial river plants. More critically, the decomposition of tannic acid creates a massive Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD). This strips dissolved oxygen out of the water column, creating localized hypoxic (low oxygen) zones where trout, small-mouth bass, and sensitive macroinvertebrates (like stoneflies and mayflies) cannot survive.

    • Heavy Metal Bioaccumulation: Trivalent chromium ($\text{Cr}^{3+}$) or hexavalent chromium ($\text{Cr}^{6+}$), arsenic, and lead do not dilute away completely. Instead, they settle into the riverbed sediments. Bottom-dwelling organisms and insects ingest these fine sediments, passing the toxins up the food chain. Apex aquatic predators like native brook trout absorb these heavy metals, which can cause reproductive failure, spinal deformities, and die-offs.

    • PCB Biomagnification: PCBs bind tightly to organic matter in river mud. Because they do not break down, they accumulate exponentially in animal fat as they move up the food chain. This leads to severe regulatory consequences, such as long-term state fish consumption advisories that warn the public against eating caught fish.

    2. Risk to Public Drinking Water Supplies Downstream

    The Greenbrier River is not just an ecological asset; it is a primary source of drinking water for communities down-gradient from the tannery site.

    • Alluvial Well Infiltration: Many private residences and smaller community water systems between Durbin, Cass, and Marlinton rely on shallow wells drilled into the river’s alluvial gravel channels. Highly mobile Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) like toluene and varsol travel incredibly fast through these loose, water-bearing gravel beds, potentially bypassing surface barriers to infiltrate private wells.

    • Municipal Intakes: Further downstream, major public water utilities pull water directly from the Greenbrier River or from intakes highly influenced by surface water (such as the town of Marlinton). While standard municipal water treatment plants are designed to filter out sediment and biological pathogens (like bacteria), they are not traditionally equipped to handle raw industrial chemicals, dissolved heavy metals, or VOC plumes without specialized, highly expensive carbon-block or reverse-osmosis filtration upgrades.

    3. The Karst Hydrology Factor (Rapid Subterranean Transport)

    Pocahontas County features distinct karst topography—underground limestone networks, sinkholes, and losing streams.

    • The Danger: If a toxic plume enters a section of the riverbed that intersects with an underground cave or karst conduit, the contaminants can bypass the surface river entirely.

    • The Result: Instead of being naturally filtered by soil or diluted by river flow, the raw contaminants can travel miles overnight through subterranean channels, suddenly emerging miles away in completely unexpected public springs or pristine underground aquifers.

    4. Economic Shock to Outdoor Recreation

    The economy of Pocahontas County relies heavily on its reputation as "The Birthplace of Rivers." The Greenbrier River Trail and the river itself draw thousands of tourists annually for kayaking, canoeing, tube floating, and fly-fishing.

    [Toxic Migration from Frank Site] 
                   │
                   ▼
       [East Fork of Greenbrier]
                   │
     ┌─────────────┴─────────────┐
     ▼                           ▼
    [Ecological Impact]       [Economic & Public Impact]
    • Trout Suffocation       • Strict "Catch & Release Only" or Fish Advisories
    • Sediment Contamination   • Recreational Bans (No Swimming/Paddling)
    • Food Chain Disruption   • Threat to Downstream Municipal Intakes (Marlinton)
    

    If a major legacy contamination plume were detected in the water column, federal and state agencies (like the WVDEP and DHHR) would be forced to issue recreational water advisories. Closing sections of the river to swimming, paddling, or fishing due to heavy metal or PCB detection would deal a massive economic blow to local outfitters, campgrounds, and the regional tourism industry that depends on the river's pristine reputation.

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