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HomeMy WebLinkAboutNC0000272_Publc Comments 4-9-2021_20220401OHY TAMS NON CW Boy 51592 April 9, 2021 North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality 217 West Jones Street Raleigh, NC 27603 publiccomments@ncdenr.gov Re: Blue Ridge Paper Products hearing Ladies/Gentlemen: Knoxville, Tennessee 37950-1592 I am writing on behalf of the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club (SMHC) in connection with the upcoming hearing on April 14 regarding Blue Ridge Paper Products' proposed wastewater permit renewal and variance removal. Please make these continents a part of the record for such hearing. SMHC was founded in 1924 and is one of the original clubs responsible for making the dream of the A.T. a reality. Today, SMHC maintains 102 miles of the A.T., including the portion within the Great Smoky Mountains National Park (GSMNP) that is adjacent to the Pigeon River. SMHC has a longstanding tradition of hiking, fellowship, volunteerism, and conservation of the Great Smokies and surrounding lands. Until the mid-1980s the Pigeon River that flows through Cocke County (between the GSMNP and Cherokee National Forest) and into the French Broad River (and then into Knoxville where SMHC is based) was a sensory mess, dirty, smelly, and polluted, all resulting from discharges by Champion International Paper Company (now Blue Ridge Paper Products) in Canton, NC. Successful lawsuits by citizens and regulatory action forced a cleanup of the river and has made Cocke County a budding adventure travel destination (around $52 million in direct tourism expenditures in 2019 and especially rafting on the Pigeon). Now, Blue Ridge Paper is requesting renewal of its National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System discharge permit and seeks to loosen regulations, including removal of a color variance, on effluent entering the Pigeon River, thereby opening the possibility of returning the river to its past polluted state. The quality of the water in the Pigeon River is important to the downstream residents, to the downstream recreation users of the Pigeon River, and to the adjacent National Park. We are therefore very much opposed to any relaxation or reduction of the existing permit requirements and urge you to continue to protect the water quality of the Pigeon River. Respectfully, Diane Petrillo M.D., President Smoky Mountains Hiking Club Exploring the Smokies Since 1924