
‘Don't dump our future' — Friends of Lackawanna's decadelong fight
'That was really the beginning of Friends of Lackawanna, though we didn't know it at the moment,' said Michele Dempsey, who is one of eight core, founding members of the grassroots group, which formed in 2014 to oppose the landfill and its decadeslong Phase III expansion. 'Everybody who was in that room that night, or at least the core members, are still there today.'
That scrutiny of the landfill in Dunmore and Throop never ended for Friends of Lackawanna, as members of the nonprofit environmental group became fixtures at local meetings, public hearings and even the courtroom while they worked under the motto, 'Don't dump our future.' Despite forming with no political or activism backgrounds and no expertise on the landfill, those core members would spend the next decade opposing Keystone and its 42.4-year Phase III expansion, and growing their grassroots group to more than 5,000 members today.
'We were all just citizens who were going about our daily lives and who are just like, 'Wait a minute, this doesn't smell right, literally and figuratively,' ' Dempsey said.
Following a four-year legal battle, Friends of Lackawanna's volunteer-driven efforts culminated this month when the Pennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board remanded the Louis and Dominick DeNaples-owned landfill's Phase III expansion approval back to the state Department of Environmental Protection over leachate and odor problems — two issues long argued by the environmental group. Approved by the DEP on June 3, 2021, the landfill's Phase III expansion allows it to triple its volume of waste by hauling in just over 94 million tons, or about 188 billion pounds, of additional garbage through the 2060s.
Friends of Lackawanna appealed that decision to the Environmental Hearing Board the following month, with the five-panel board of environmental judges ruling April 1 that the DEP erred in approving the landfill's expansion by issuing a permit that does not sufficiently control or mitigate issues with odors and excessive leachate generation, which the judges said the DEP was aware of prior to approving the expansion. In handing down their decision, the judges sent the expansion approval back to the DEP to determine whether it needs to mandate additional measures to control odors and leachate. Leachate is the liquid that percolates through garbage piles.
'Were we so excited at an opportunity for this to be looked at again? Of course. Was this a huge win? Yes,' Dempsey said. 'Are we done? No.'
In light of that court victory, members of Friends of Lackawanna reflected on their organization's growth over the past decade and the impact of grassroots environmental activism.
In response to questions about the effect citizen environmental activism can have on public policy, DEP spokeswoman Colleen Connolly said in an email that comments from the public are taken into consideration when the department reviews a permit application.
'The department welcomes comments from the public regarding environmental issues that impact them, including permit reviews, decisions, and operational performance,' she said.
'Gave me more resolve'
Core members of Friends of Lackawanna agree their group emerged from a September 2014 Dunmore council meeting. At the time, the 714-acre landfill had just applied for its sprawling Phase III expansion, and amid that process, it was going to sign a new host agreement with Dunmore. The borough had been receiving the state minimum payment of 41 cents per ton of garbage hauled into the landfill, and during that meeting, borough officials considered a $1-per-ton agreement.
The landfill needed the town's approval as part of its expansion plans, and at the meeting, then-Councilman Tim Burke, who also served as Dunmore's mayor from 2018 through 2021, handed out copies of the agreement. A group of citizens attended the meeting with concerns and read through the agreement prior to public comment, Dempsey said.
After hurriedly looking through the proposed host agreement, Pat Clark, another core member of Friends of Lackawanna, addressed council, with the scrutiny pushing council to table the decision.
'I think things could have gone very differently,' Dempsey said. '(Council was) ready to sign the contract with the Keystone Sanitary Landfill that night, and they had to table it. That gave us another chance to regroup and come back to the next meeting — and keep coming back.'
The borough would go on to renegotiate its host agreement with the landfill in November 2014, with an annually increasing agreement that now sees Dunmore receiving $1.56 per ton of garbage hauled into the landfill for 2025, increasing by a penny per year. Although the agreement wasn't perfect, Clark said it benefited Dunmore with tens of millions of dollars in additional revenue.
The core membership at that early meeting quickly realized that if they were going to go after the issue, and considering the landfill's resources, they had to do so in a professional, organized way, Clark said.
'The first step in doing that was going to be to get a formal entity as a nonprofit,' he said.
They chose the name Friends of Lackawanna because the issue isn't confined to Dunmore, Dempsey said.
'It's so big, and it's so far reaching in terms of the air and water, that it's not just Dunmore and Throop,' she said. 'This is really a regional issue.'
Dempsey recalled meeting with a local politician's staff member shortly before Friends of Lackawanna formed. The staffer told her, 'Listen, I consider you a friend. You're not going to win this, and I just don't want to see you waste your time,' she said.
'I left there in tears because he was being honest from what he knew,' Dempsey said. 'Through my tears, I was like, 'No, no, not while I'm here. Not on my watch,' and it kind of gave me more resolve.'
Although in recent years the DEP's phone lines have been flooded with odor complaints — something landfill officials often contend are frequently misattributed to Keystone — and while residents now pack important meetings about the landfill, Dempsey described a fear of speaking out a decade ago.
'The tides have turned. The community found its voice,' she said. 'Today, the entire community is standing together, from residents to local officials, and that's what grassroots power looks like.'
Core member Vince Amico, who served on Dunmore council from 2015 through 2023, including two years as president, believes the organization's biggest accomplishment has ultimately been making people aware of what's happening and showing them they can change the culture of their area.
'A small group of people can make a difference, not just to accept what's put in front of you and say, 'That's just the way it is,' and I think we've awoken a lot of people,' Amico said. 'Politicians listen to us now, and they realize that this issue isn't going away.'
'Everything was work'
The landfill's expansion review was initially estimated to take around 10 months, Clark said.
'We're on year 11 now,' he said, chuckling as he wondered how many members would have stuck it out if they'd known it'd be an 11-year endeavor.
Friends of Lackawanna is like a second full-time job for core members, who have families and careers, Dempsey said. While the DEP now has a webpage dedicated to the landfill with notices of violation, permit applications, communications and other documents available for the public to download, that wasn't the case a decade ago.
'Everything was work. Everything required a Right to Know,' Dempsey said, recalling going to the DEP's Wilkes-Barre office for in-person file reviews. 'Everything was research.'
Without having facts and data, people would only listen to them to a point, she said.
'We had to find the facts and data,' she said. 'We had to go out and find a lawyer. We had to hire environmental consultants.'
Some of those facts didn't yet exist.
'The fact that a health study had never been done — you want a 50-year expansion, and we have no baseline here. We have no benchmark to say whether or not this is safe for the community,' Dempsey said.
Sharon Cuff, another core member of Friends of Lackawanna, agreed, calling the early days 'research, research, research.'
'The hours put in reaching out to different organizations, reaching out to the health organizations, government officials, other grassroots (groups), just trying to find help along the way,' Cuff said. 'The rest of it was just really trying to figure out everything that's been going on over the years because we didn't have any documentation.'
Notably, Friends of Lackawanna pushed for a health study. In April 2019, the state Department of Health and the federal Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry released a public health report that concluded air quality around the landfill poses no long-term public health threat but can have short-term health effects on vulnerable individuals, such as pregnant women and the elderly. Those temporary health effects could include mild irritation of the eyes, nose, throat, skin and respiratory tract, according to the report.
Cuff, who strongly advocated for the study, contends it allowed them to emphasize the cumulative impacts of chronic exposure, even to low-level chemicals. Friends of Lackawanna pushed for transparency, she said.
'How much can one area take?' Cuff said.
As the grassroots group began to raise concerns about residents' quality of life, health and future by laying out what they discovered, their support grew, Dempsey said, attributing it to 'a lot of groundwork.' Members attended school board meetings, council meetings and other meetings, as well as working with local media, she said.
'It was slow, slow, slow and then fast,' Dempsey said, describing an early public meeting that packed Dunmore High School's auditorium. 'I couldn't have fathomed this months before.'
The public's perception of their group changed dramatically, Clark said.
'I'm sure there's plenty of people out there who still think we're crazy, and maybe they're correct a little bit, but I think perception has shifted to … one of respect,' he said. 'I think that tone has shifted because Friends of Lackawanna has proven as an organization that you can go about things in a professional way, just keep chugging along and doing the work at hand, and if you do that, and you always handle yourself the right way, and you are always willing to talk to people, and you always look at all the facts … there's a segment of people that grow to respect that, and I think that segment grows over time.'
'Better, brighter future'
Throughout the past decade, Friends of Lackawanna weathered setbacks, with the two largest being losing its first appeal before the state Environmental Hearing Board in 2017, followed by the DEP's June 2021 approval of the landfill's Phase III expansion.
Friends of Lackawanna initially appealed the landfill's 2015 operating permit approval, citing underground fires, groundwater contamination and damage to liner systems. Two years later, the Environmental Hearing Board ruled in November 2017 that it would not rescind the landfill's operating permit, though it did require Keystone to prepare a groundwater assessment plan because of leachate contamination that a monitoring well had detected since 2002. The board's decision also criticized the DEP, determining, 'The (DEP) relies upon formal, memorialized violations in conducting its review of Keystone's compliance history, but the department, with rare exceptions, never memorializes any of Keystone's violations.'
The ruling felt like a gut punch, but it also gave Friends of Lackawanna a road map to win its next appeal, Clark said.
'If we know there's problems and they're not writing them down, then we need to get these violations documented so that no one can deny them anymore,' Clark said. 'That's exactly what happened.'
In March 2024, a month before oral arguments began in Friends of Lackawanna's expansion appeal, the landfill signed a consent order and agreement with the DEP that required it to pay a $575,000 civil penalty and undergo 26 corrective actions as the culmination of 14 odor-related violations since January 2023, close to 1,000 odor complaints in seven months and at least 70 instances of DEP staff detecting offsite landfill gas and leachate odors attributed to the landfill.
Friends of Lackawanna members especially consider the June 2021 expansion approval to be a challenging time.
But the group continued its efforts to move toward the goal of a 'better, brighter future for this area,' Cuff said.
'That's always been the driving force,' she said. 'It's tough when you're hit with loss after loss after loss, but again, there was so much positive happening, too.'
The expansion approval was the group's low point, but it was also an easy call to action to keep going, Clark said.
'We kind of knew at the end of the day where we needed to get to, which was to challenge this expansion, and that's where we got to this past month,' he said.
Support from the community also gave the organization extra drive, he said.
Clark also pointed to the 'near universal support' Friends of Lackawanna received from local politicians, ranging from school boards and councils to federal legislators, starting with former U.S. Sen. Bob Casey.
'I'll be forever thankful for that,' he said.
Dunmore council President Janet Brier lauded the group in a statement.
'I believe FOL has had a positive impact on the whole region in that they have provided common sense and reason in contrast to a grossly negligent DEP decision,' Brier said.
With the major permit modification that granted the expansion now back in the hands of the DEP, and with the DEP recently extending its review of the landfill's 10-year operating permit for six months through Oct. 6 in light of the Environmental Hearing Board's decision, Friends of Lackawanna members plan to continue their work.
Dempsey wants the DEP to revoke the landfill's permit, saying, 'It's too big, it's too dangerous, and it's time to shut down.'
'What's next is to hammer that message home in whatever ways we can,' she said. 'This gave us another energy boost to mobilize and get the community behind us. It was a big win that definitely restored a lot of morale and momentum and has inspired us to continue the fight.'
The role of local grassroots activism
In light of their own grassroots efforts culminating by winning their appeal of the Keystone Sanitary Landfill's Phase III expansion, members of Friends of Lackawanna emphasized the importance of grassroots environmental activism.
'If you want to protect where you live, you have to take part,' core member Vince Amico said. 'You can't just wait and hope that somebody else, or the government, or another agency will take care of it for you.'
Over the last decade, Lackawanna County residents have raised environmental concerns over a slew of projects, whether it's the landfill expansion, a natural gas-fired power plant in Jessup, warehousing projects or, most recently, data centers proposed for the Midvalley.Friends of Lackawanna core member Sharon Cuff echoed Amico.
'Grassroots organizations are so important, especially today, and it gives a voice to the people who are directly affected by the issues,' she said.
Amico encouraged anyone interested in environmental activism to pick a cause, research, stay positive and continue moving forward.
'You'll have setbacks,' he said. 'You can't let setbacks take you out.'
If residents are willing to get their hands dirty, dig in and research, they can start to make a difference, core member Pat Clark said. Clark offered advice for fledgling environmental movements.
'Stay the course. If you believe in what you're fighting for, it ultimately will be worth it. Don't get discouraged when things don't go your way if you believe that you're correct in the end,' Clark said. 'Don't be afraid to punch back when you need to.'
Jessup resident Jeff Smith, who is the vice chair of the Pennsylvania Chapter of the environmental nonprofit Sierra Club and an executive committee member of the Sierra Club's Northeastern Pennsylvania Group, was a founding member of Citizens for a Healthy Jessup — a similar grassroots effort formed in 2015 in opposition of the Lackawanna Energy Center natural gas-fired power plant.
The Sierra Club also played a key role in Friends of Lackawanna's successful appeal of the landfill's Phase III expansion before the Pennsylvania Environmental Hearing Board, joining Friends of Lackawanna as an intervening party with local Sierra Club members testifying to the panel of environmental judges.
The local Sierra Club chapter will try to offer assistance to any local environmental groups, he said.
'The more people that we can help, the more people we can encourage, the more groups we can offer our support, whether it be financially, whether it be mentoring, whether it's some of our research, you name it, if we can offer it, we will help these groups prosper,' he said. 'It's part of our original beliefs — to build community.'
Citizens for a Healthy Jessup took a similar approach to Friends of Lackawanna, operating as a nonprofit group with both political and environmental components, Smith said.
'Where would we be without these groups?' he said. 'Jessup would not have as lucrative of a host agreement. They would have industrial wastewater placed directly into the Lackawanna River.'
Smith pointed to the information and research Friends of Lackawanna put forward.
'We're talking financially, the communities are better. The quality of the water, the quality of the air — without these people doing this hard work, where would we be as a community?' Smith said. 'That's why it's so important.'
— FRANK WILKES LESNEFSKY

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Politico
15-07-2025
- Politico
Stop the rain
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Yahoo
05-07-2025
- Yahoo
‘This bill protects our precious waters': how a Florida environmental group scored a win against big oil
The giant and catastrophic Deepwater Horizon oil spill, also known as the BP oil spill, didn't reach Apalachicola Bay in 2010, but the threat of oil reaching this beautiful and environmentally valuable stretch of northern Florida's Gulf coast was still enough to devastate the region's economy. The Florida state congressman Jason Shoaf remembers how the threat affected the bay. 'It harmed our commercial fishing, aquaculture operations, and just the threat of oil kept tourists away for months,' Shoaf recalls. 'Businesses were forced to close, jobs were lost, and the disaster reshaped our region forever.' Related: How Trump is targeting wind and solar energy – and delighting big oil Those memories were freshly triggered in April 2024, when the Florida department of environmental protection (DEP) granted a permit to Louisiana-based Clearwater Land and Minerals for exploratory oil drilling on the Apalachicola River basin. So area residents, along with environmental and business groups, formed a Kill the Drill coalition to oppose the permit. A year later, the coalition's efforts and an administrative challenge to the DEP's permit by the non-profit Apalachicola Riverkeepers prevailed when Judge Lawrence P Stevenson recommended the department deny the permit. In May, the DEP reversed course and denied the permit. But that was not enough to convince those seeking to preserve the region's environment. Shoaf, who represents Florida's north-eastern Gulf coast region, applauded the DEP's decision but says the threat of oil exploration and drilling near north Florida's inland waterways would only be ended by a permanent ban. So to prevent future threats and the DEP from issuing other oil exploratory drilling permits, Shoaf and state representative Allison Tant co-authored House Bill 1143. 'While the permit to Clearwater Land and Minerals was denied, we can't assume the next one will be,' Shoaf says. 'HB 1143 protects our precious water resources and the ecosystems that depend on them by prohibiting drilling, exploration and production of oil, gas and other petroleum products within 10 miles of a national estuarine research reserve in counties designated as rural areas of opportunity. It also requires the Florida department of environmental protection to ensure natural resources are adequately protected in the event of an accident.' This region has a deep collective memory of how the gulf oil spill devastated the regional economy Adrianne Johnson In April, the legislature overwhelmingly passed HB 1143 with only one dissenting vote in the Senate. It was presented to Florida's governor, Ron DeSantis, on 18 June. And, despite a poor recent record on protecting the environment, DeSantis signed the bill last week – handing the coalition that lobbied for it a cheering victory. The area now saved from the oil industry is invaluable both to nature and the people who live there. The Apalachicola River, formed by the meeting of the Chattahoochee and Flint rivers, flows 160 miles (258km) to the Apalachicola Bay and the Gulf. Both the river and bay are critical to the region's tourism and seafood production industries. For environmental campaigners, the success of their efforts might help lay to rest the ghosts of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion, which released nearly 3.19m barrels of oil into the gulf. 'Oil from the BP spill didn't reach our coasts, but the damage caused by the threat was enough,' Tant says. 'We've seen what can happen. We've lived it. This is not theoretical. It was a perilous time for small businesses and for those who lived in the area. It stopped tourism and shuttered small businesses. So it defies logic to think it's a good idea to drill for oil along the Apalachicola River.' Adrianne Johnson is executive director of the Florida Shellfish Aquaculture Association which represents more than 350 shellfish farmers in Florida. Johnson, an Apalachicola native, became involved in the Kill the Drill movement for personal and business reasons. 'This region has a deep collective memory of how the Gulf oil spill devastated the regional economy and collapsed the oyster industry in Apalachicola Bay,' Johnson explains. 'And that was just the threat of oil. The majority of the state's oyster farms operate across Wakulla, Franklin and Gulf counties, and these areas downriver would be most impacted by oil drilling upriver (at the proposed site in Calhoun county). If there were to be a spill upriver because of drilling in the basin, it would have catastrophic environmental and economic impacts on the area that would be felt for generations.' Johnson also points to the region's frequent weather-related natural disasters, such as hurricanes, as another reason why drilling had to be banned in the region. 'Our shellfish farmers are still recovering from the multiple hurricanes of 2024,' she explains. 'But the reality of being a Florida farmer is having to contend with these weather-related events. Hurricanes and natural disasters are outside of our control. Permitting oil drilling in ecologically sensitive areas is very much within our control and is an unnecessary threat to our industry.' Tant agrees. 'We are a hurricane-prone state,' she says. 'We can't get away from that. It's not a question of will we get hit by a hurricane because we know it's going to happen. But an oil spill caused by a hurricane would make the disaster 100 times worse.' According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa), the Deep Horizon oil spill caused the loss of 8.3 billion oysters, the deaths of nearly 105,400 sea birds, 7,600 adult and 160,000 juvenile sea turtles, and a 51% decrease in dolphins in Louisiana's Barataria Bay. Related: Ron DeSantis's fall from grace: 'He's completely crashed to the ground' Craig Diamond, current board member and past president of Apalachicola Riverkeeper, says another factor behind the ban was the river system itself. 'A spill would be highly impactful given the existing stresses in the system,' says Diamond, who has worked with the Northwest Florida Water Management District and taught graduate courses on water resources at Florida State University. 'Apalachicola Bay Riverkeeper and its allies believe the long-term risks of fossil fuel exploitation in the floodplain or bay (or nearshore) far outweigh the short-term benefits.' Shoaf says he was inspired to write HB 1143 by the community's grassroots efforts to defend the region's natural resources. 'This bill is essential to prevent unnecessary and irreparable harm to Apalachicola Bay, as well as the economies and ecosystems that depend on it,' he says. After DeSantis signed the bill into law, the threat of drilling has now receded into the distance for the foreseeable future.


CBS News
11-06-2025
- CBS News
Worker who leaked plans to build golf courses in Florida parks files whistleblower suit
A former worker who leaked information about plans by Gov. Ron DeSantis' administration to build golf courses and hotels in Florida state parks has filed a whistleblower lawsuit. James Gaddis alleges that the Florida Department of Environmental Protection retaliated against him for sharing details of the proposals, which caused bipartisan outrage and sparked protests. Ultimately the plans were scuttled. A spokesperson for the department declined to comment, saying the agency does not do so with pending litigation. Alleged orders to conceal destructive park plans Gaddis, who was a consultant in DEP's Office of Park Planning, says he was directed to draw up "secret maps" to build golf courses, hotels and pickleball courts in nine parks. Park staffers were ordered not to talk to any colleagues about the proposals, which in Gaddis' view amounted to destroying "globally significant" environments. The experience felt like "mapping out a future crime scene," according to the lawsuit, which was filed in Leon County. Leak leads to firing and legislative action Gaddis copied documents onto a flash drive and shared it with an unnamed intermediary, the lawsuit says, and the next day the Tampa Bay Times wrote about the plans. Gaddis says he was called into a meeting by a supervisor and asked if he shared the documents, which he admitted to. He was put on administrative leave and later fired, and the suit says that amounted to disparate treatment and retaliation. The complaint seeks damages of at least $100,000. The Republican-dominated state Legislature has since passed a bill banning development in state parks, and DeSantis signed it into law. Gaddis started an online fundraiser to help cover expenses, with an initial goal of $10,000. As of June 11, it had brought in more than $258,000.