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Originally published Thursday, March 19, 2009 at 10:41 AM

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W.Va. lawmaker says coal slurry findings back up his call for ban on injection

Early findings about coal slurry have lent urgency to a bill that would institute a moratorium on the practice of injecting it into worked-out mines.

CHARLESTON, W.Va. —

Early findings about coal slurry have lent urgency to a bill that would institute a moratorium on the practice of injecting it into worked-out mines.

Members of the Sludge Safety Project presented preliminary findings from independent lab results Thursday at the Capitol.

The tests conducted by Heidelberg University found six metals — antimony, arsenic, lead, barium, cadmium and chromium — in levels exceeding federal standards for primary drinking water at one or more sites.

Sen. Randy White introduced the moratorium bill. The Webster County Democrat says the tests show a need to halt the practice until it can be studied more.

Industry groups say coal slurry injection is safe.

Copyright © 2009 The Seattle Times Company

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