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Alabama Power's Barry Plant and Toxic Coal-ash Pond Near Mobile Draw Scrutiny from CNN and EPA, as Heat Rises on CEO Mark Crosswhite and Balch & Bingham

Posted on the 07 December 2021 by Rogershuler @RogerShuler

Alabama Power's Barry Plant and toxic coal-ash pond near Mobile draw scrutiny from CNN and EPA, as heat rises on CEO Mark Crosswhite and Balch & Bingham

Alabama Power's Plant Barry and coal-ash pond

 

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is investigating Alabama Power, focusing on the company's Barry Plant and toxic ash pond near Mobile. From a post at banbalch.com, based on original reporting from CNN:

Posted [Sunday], CNN’s bombshell visual and interactive story on polluting ash ponds outlines potential environmental disasters and the “money-making” schemes surrounding those foolish decisions.

Alabama Power’s Barry Plant and toxic ash pond near Mobile, Alabama, is a central figure of the investigative story and highlights the controversy surrounding the future of these contaminated ash ponds.

But the real explosive grenade was confirmation that the EPA is probing Alabama Power. CNN reports:

While state regulators approved Alabama Power’s plans for the Barry pond in July, EPA Administrator Regan told CNN last month that his agency is “actively investigating (…) the Plant Barry situation.”

“We understand the concerns about this facility in Alabama,” Regan said. “The last administration’s leadership failed to act on these concerns. This administration will act to protect communities and, based on my prior experience, if there is coal ash in contact with groundwater, that’s putting the health and safety of communities at risk and requires our attention.

Regan and the EPA could now expand the investigation and probe Alabama Power’s ash pond at Miller Steam Plant in Jefferson County and alleged secret indemnity deals, known as the Crosswhite Scandal.

The Crosswhite Scandal, of course, refers to Alabama Power CEO Mark Crosswhite and his cozy relationship with the Balch & Bingham law firm. Writes banbalch.com Publisher K.B. Forbes:

The Crosswhite Scandal involves indemnity deals allegedly paid through third-party entities, like embattled law firm Balch & Bingham, to cover up alleged unsavory and criminal misconduct.

Mark A. Crosswhite, CEO of Alabama Power, a former Balch partner, is under fire for his alleged failed leadership at the utility.

Unsubstantiated rumors claim that Southern Company CEO Tom Fanning is retiring next year and that Crosswhite has allegedly told insiders he’s next in line at the C-Suite in Atlanta.

Crosswhite was infamously photographed chugging cocktails with disgraced now ex-U.S. Attorney Jay E. Town who insidiously claimed the North Birmingham Bribery Scandal involved two lone wolves, an assessment no one believed, not even federal investigators.


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