•
              Section 319
              NONPOINT SOURCE PROGRAM SOCGESS STORY
                  West
Treating Acid Mine Drainage Improves Severn Run
Waterbody Improved
                              Add mine drainage (AMD) from atdoned coal mines
                              impaired West Virginia s Severn Run. As a result, the West
Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) added the 4.7-mile-long stream to its
Clean Water Act (CWA) section 303(d) list  of impaired waters in 1998. Project partners have
installed numerous passive AMD treatment systems, which have significantly reduced the
metals and acidity loadings into Severn Run, allowing benthic macroinvertebrate populations
to rebound in 3.3 miles of the 4.7 listed stream  miles.
Problem
The Sovern Run watershed is a sub-watershed
of the Big Sandy Creek watershed, which is part
of the Cheat River watershed in West Virginia.
The Sovern Run watershed drains approximately
5.36 square miles and empties into Big Sandy Creek
at Rockville, West Virginia (Figure 1).

This region of West Virginia historically supported
numerous coal mining operations. Before 1977, no
regulations requiring stabilization of coal mining
operations were in place, so many were abandoned
without any effort to seal the mine shafts and
remove refuse. Over the years, water percolating
through the mines and waste areas has reacted
with coal-bearing minerals containing crystalline
forms of iron sulfide, forming AMD. The headwaters
of Sovern Run are heavily polluted by AMD from
several deep mine discharges and acidic seeps
throughout the watershed.

Data collected in 1996 in Sovern Run showed low
pH levels and high concentrations of manganese,
iron and aluminum. As a result, DEP added the
entire 4.7-mile length of the stream to the 1998
CWA section 303(d) list of impaired waters for pH
and metals. In 2001 DEP developed a total maxi-
mum daily load (TMDL) for numerous impaired
waters in the Cheat River watershed, including
Sovern Run. After West Virginia's water quality stan-
dards were revised, DEP developed a revised TMDL
in 2010. The revised TMDL provides updated load
allocations for aluminum, iron  and net acidity (pH).
Project Highlights
                                              Legend

                                              lh» Sovern Run Watershed
                                              n Lower Sovern Benthic Site

                                              Q Upper Sovern Benthic Site
O Clark Project
® Bishoff Steel Slag Pond
© Sovern 62 Project
9 Limestone Sand Project
© Tichnell Project
& Eanes Project
In 1995 the River of Promise, a partnership of
state and federal agencies, academia, concerned
citizens and Friends of the Cheat (FOC), was formed
                                            Figure 1. Sovern Run is in northern West Virginia.
                                            to assess and remediate AMD in the lower Cheat
                                            River watershed. In 2005 the partnership devel-
                                            oped a watershed-based plan (WBP) for the lower
                                            Cheat River watershed, and the U.S. Environmental
                                            Protection Agency (EPA) approved the plan. Having
                                            such a plan in place enabled FOC and West Virginia
                                            University's National Mine  Land Reclamation Center
                                            (NMLRC) to pursue CWA section 319 funding from
                                            DEP's Nonpoint Source Program to design, con-
                                            struct and  monitor AMD systems.

                                            Since then, watershed partners have installed
                                            passive AMD treatment systems in the Sovern Run
                                            watershed (see Figure 1) with cooperation from

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Figure 2. The Bishoff Steel slag bed treatment system,
constructed in 2010, adds excess alkalinity to the main
stem of Severn Run.

     private landowners. The treatment systems include
     a mix of open limestone channels, limestone leach
     beds, limestone separation dams, addition of
     limestone fines, steel slag check dams, and steel
     slag leach beds (Figure 2). They also include natural
     ponds and wetlands to neutralize acidity, add  alka-
     linity and capture metals. In addition, the partners
     plan to install one new AMD treatment system and
     improve an old system in 2013.
     Results
     Since 2003 the AMD treatment systems have
     yielded significant load reductions—an estimated
     442,000 pounds per year (Ib/yr) in net acidity,
     45,000 Ib/yr in aluminum, 33,800 Ib/yr in iron
     and 3,200 Ib/yr in manganese. The estimated
     load reductions are translating into water quality
     improvements. FOC and its partners have been
     collecting data on Severn Run since the late 1990s.
     The data  show that levels of metals and acidity have
     dropped, particularly between 1997 and 2006, coin-
     ciding with the installation of the first three treat-
     ment systems. By 2010 data collected at the mouth
     of Severn Run showed that levels of aluminum, iron
     and acidity met water quality standards (Figure 3).

     Aquatic habitat conditions have also improved.  FOC
     recently completed its biannual benthic macroinver-
     tebrate sampling to monitor changes in biological
     integrity. The data are still being analyzed, but field
     observations indicate increased populations and
     diversity of macroinvertebrates. In addition, property
     owners have noted that fish and aquatic plants  have
     returned to the stream. DEP has not yet removed
                                                                 \
                                                                                    -X— Al
                                                                                                      -Acidity
                                                                                     -- -Al Standard  ........... FeStandard
                                                                     \v
                                                     60

                                                    -50

                                                    -40

                                                    -30 =5,
                                                       E,
                                                    -20 &
                                                       S
                                                       W
                                                    -10 •*
                                                               1997    2001     2006    2007    2008
                                                                               Yearly Averages
                                                                                                 2009
                                                                                                        2010
Figure 3. Data collected at the mouth of Severn Run show that
pollutant levels have dropped since 1997.
Severn Run from the list of impaired waters, but
it has noted dramatic improvements on at least
3.3 miles of the 4.7-mile-long listed segment.
Partners and Funding
These projects were implemented by River of
Promise partners, including FOC, NMLRC, DEP's
Nonpoint Source and Abandoned Mine Land
Reclamation (AMLR) programs, the federal Office of
Surface Mining (OSM), private businesses, land-
owners and many volunteers.

FOC staff and volunteers, in cooperation with
NMLRC staff, completed the chemical and field
sampling for the projects. NMLRC generated the
conceptual designs for the systems. Private con-
sultants and  contractors conducted the surveying,
engineering and construction. Volunteer landown-
ers Mark Dixon and Brian Sell constructed the
Severn Sands site.

Total restoration costs to date are approximately
$2.2 million,  of which about 40 percent ($891,000)
has been funded through EPA CWA section
319 grants provided by DEP's Nonpoint Source
Program. Cost-share support has been provided
by the OSM's Watershed Cooperative Agreement
Program ($244,000) and private industry funds
from mitigation administered  by DEP's AMLR
Program ($683,000). DEP's Division of Mining
and Reclamation Program also provided support
through its Stream Restoration Fund ($395,000),
and the NiSource Environmental Challenge provided
some Severn Sands site funding ($3,000).
us
o
          U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
          Office of Water
          Washington, DC


          EPA841-F-13-001I
          February 2013
For additional information contact:
Amanda Pitzer
Friends of the Cheat
304-329-3621 • Amanda@cheat.org
J. Brady Gutta
National Mine Lands Reclamation Center
304-293-7002 • jbgutta@mail.wvu.edu

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