Robeson County, N.C.
Contributing Writers | April 11, 2018 | No Comments
Robeson County is the designated southern terminus of the ACP and already hosts a compressor station, an industrial facility that re-pressurizes gas for a Piedmont Natural Gas pipeline. In 2017, a valve at that station failed and leaked gas into the air.
“They called it an ‘occurrence,’ we called it an ‘accident,’” Robie says. “The construction of the ACP increases the potential for more of these kinds of leaks.”
Just outside the town of Pembroke, Duke Energy plans to build a metering station and a 350-foot-tall microwave tower to relay signals between one compressor station and another. Concerned about the health effects of these facilities, Robie has filed a petition with the county board of commissioners seeking to have a conditional use permit for the metering station and tower revoked, and is waiting to see whether or not he will be allowed a public hearing to provide further evidence against these facilities.
Robie is a member of the Lumbee Tribe and has a particular interest in how the pipeline will impact tribal members and their ancestral lands, as well as other citizens of Robeson County.
Robie is one of the principal spokespersons in “Robeson Rises,” a documentary film that warns of potential environmental risks from the pipeline. Produced with the involvement of Appalachian Voices, the publisher of this newspaper, the film is posted for public viewing at robesonrises.com.
He also co-organizes EcoRobeson, a local citizens’ group which, in addition to challenging the pipeline, is raising awareness about a Duke Energy coal ash basin in Lumberton, N.C., the chemical GenX recently found in some local wells, and large-scale livestock facilities whose waste disposal methods can contribute to water pollution. — By John Manuel
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