The Illinois Environmental Protection Agency will have a public hearing on a proposal by Dynegy Midwest Generation, LLC to stabilize the Middle Fork River at the retired Vermilion Power Station near Oakwood.
The hearing will be Tuesday, March 26, at Danville Area Community College. The state has also opened up public comment on the proposal until April 25.
Dynegy has applied for a permit to construct a 1,900-foot long wall of rock on the river.
Construction would require excavation of the river bottom up to seven feet deep, and replacing river sediments with 20,240 cubic yards of rock materials. Another 2,130 cubic yards of boulders would be placed above the water line.
The Middle Fork is cutting into the riverbank under three Dynegy ponds holding back 600 million gallons of toxic coal ash. An assessment of the riverbank paid for by Dynegy shows continued erosion of up to 3.6 feet per year. The construction is intended to prevent rapid erosion from undermining the ash ponds, and the possibility of a massive spill of toxic coal ash into the Middle Fork.

The project is opposed by many Vermilion County officials, residents, businesses, and environmental groups. They say the wall is a temporary solution, and that its construction – and the wall itself – would damage the Middle Fork, Illinois’ only National Scenic River. They want Dynegy to eliminate the risk by moving the coal ash away from the river.
Vistra Energy Corp., Dynegy’s parent company, said in a written statement that the company worked with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources in planning the construction project.
“It’s our belief that the riverbank stabilization work could be completed in the course of a year. The start date is impacted by the timing of regulatory approvals,” the statement said. “We are working through the regulatory process as swiftly as possible, we are engaging with the appropriate agencies, and we are committed to providing a permanent and effective solution.”
Dynegy’s proposal is being reviewed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the Illinois EPA, the Illinois Department of Natural Resource, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the National Park Service.
The Illinois EPA’s role is to review the project’s potential impact on water quality standards set by state and federal laws including the Clean Water Act. The agency has said any proposed solution must show that it will meet water quality standards “in perpetuity.”
Illinois EPA “Tentative Determination” to approve the project.
In announcing the public hearing, the Illinois EPA said it has made a “tentative determination” to approve Dynegy’s permit application based on information provided by Dynegy.
But Sanjay Sofat, head of the Illinois EPA’s Bureau of Water, said the agency “has made the determination that there is significant public interest in this and therefore we made a decision to hold a hearing” to gather more information.
“The objective and the purpose here is to seek information from the public that we may not have, Sofat said. “That will help us make the final decision.”

Illinois EPA public hearing and comment period
The Illinois EPA will accept public comments by mail or email through April 25th. Sofat said the agency will consider public input on how the Dynegy plan would affect violations of Illinois and Federal water quality standards, or “interference with existing water uses, particularly public recreation, on the affected water.”
Public comments can be sent by mail to:
Hearing Officer Dean Studer
Dynegy Midwest Generation 401
Illinois Environmental Protection Agency
1021 North Grand Avenue East
P. O. Box 19276
Springfield, IL 62794-9276
Comments sent by email must specify “Dynegy Midwest Generation 401” or “COE 2018-602” in the subject line, and may be sent to epa.publichearingcom@illinois.gov.
The wallo solution is temporary, and when it fails, the disaster is permanent. It also destroys the scenic and recreational value of the river. Dynergy keeps trying to pretend that a temporary solution solves the problem. The coal ash just can’t be allowed into the river, not now and not later. It has got to go