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Ask Curious Louis: Tracking Missouri’s Toxic Coal Ash Ponds

The Missouri Department of Natural Resources released its plan last week for regulating ponds and landfills where utilities dump toxic coal ash waste.
Ameren Missouri
The Missouri Department of Natural Resources released its plan last week for regulating ponds and landfills where utilities dump toxic coal ash waste.
Have a question about coal ash or its impact on the environment? What do you want to know about the new state plan to regulate ponds?
Credit Ameren Missouri
Have a question about coal ash or its impact on the environment? What do you want to know about the new state plan to regulate ponds?

Coal-fired power plants used to dispose of coal ash by dumping it into ponds, resulting in millions of cubic yards of toxic waste in pits in the ground.Eli Chen, St. Louis Public Radio’s science reporter, published a two-part investigation into coal ash ponds in Missouri. Read her coverage: Data From Missouri Utilities Shows Polluted Groundwater Near Massive Pits Of Coal Waste

Environmental activists have long expressed concerns that coal ash — which contains mercury, lead, arsenic and other cancer-causing chemicals — could contaminate groundwater and pose health risks to rural residents who depend on wells for their drinking water. There is also fear that future floods could cause the nearby Missouri and Mississippi rivers to spill into the ponds and local waterways. Last fall, floodwaters caused by Hurricane Florence breached a coal ash pond in Wilmington, North Carolina.

Have a question about coal ash or its impact on the environment? Ask in the box below: What do you want to know about the new state plan to regulate ponds? What should our reporters be asking? We’ll use your questions to inform our reporting, and we’ll share answers as we find them here: 9 Questions Answered About Missouri’s Toxic Coal Ash Ponds

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For more about coal ash contamination, read our previous coverage:

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Follow Lindsay on Twitter: @StLouisLindsay

Send questions and comments about this story to feedback@stlpublicradio.org

Copyright 2021 St. Louis Public Radio. To see more, visit St. Louis Public Radio.

Lindsay Toler joined the St. Louis Public Radio as digital engagement producer in January 2018. A native of Dallas, Texas, Lindsay first moved to the Show-Me State to study at the University of Missouri, where she received Bachelor’s degrees in journalism and sociology and a certificate in multicultural studies.