TVA to Build 'Magic Mountain' from Coal Ash
"Mount Ashmore" to be agency's answer to Mount RushmoreFrom APB reports. KINGSTON - As the first anniversary of TVA's coal ash spill disaster looms like angry storm clouds hanging over placid seas, the agency is building a coal-ash "Magic Mountain" tourist attraction that will loom over the surrounding countryside.
"We're trying to do something positive with this disaster," explained TVA President and CEO Kilmore Trout. "Some people look at a calamity and see havoc, misery, grief and woe. We look at this debacle and see an opportunity. We're taking one supremely devastating environmental and human catastrophe and making it a fun-filled multi-attraction theme park the entire family will enjoy: Six Floods Over Swan Pond."
Although it was only one flood resulting from the failure of a TVA coal-ash retention pond that destroyed the Swan Pond community, Trout explained that the "six floods" in the title was "hyperbole intended to build upon the alliterative possibilities offered by the title."
Trout confirmed that the towering centerpiece of the attraction, Mount Ashmore, would have portraits carved in relief on the coal-ash mountain's face. "My face will be up there, overlooking the residents of Roane County like some benevolent titan," said Trout. "We haven't decided which others to honor yet, but Bill Baxter and Franklin Delano Roosevelt are definitely top contenders. We want to share the bla- er, glory, with a motley assemblage of the leaders who brought us to where this agency is today."
That doesn't sit well with some Roane County residents on several fronts, they said Thursday.
"TVA didn't tell the county of its tourist-attraction plans," said leading citizen Fermin Birdenhand. "This massive thingy will create more traffic woes and draw more gawkers to something that I wish would go away - or that TVA would give us more money for."
Birdenhand said he and others learned of the project secondhand, from a citizen who spoke to a friend of his wife who knew a worker at TVA's Kingston Fossil Plant who overheard a security guard receiving instructions from a TVA Media Communications Clarification Specialist.
"That's what really sticks my crawfish in boiling water - the lack of communication or lack of compensation thereof for," Birdenhand said. "TVA doesn't communicate or compensate very well."
On the contrary, said TVA Message Massage Therapist Jackie Stonewall, such circular message-conveyance is the standard chain of communication at TVA.
"We always want our messages to go through as many levels as possible to ensure that all aspects of communiqué clarity have been considered," she said. "We want what we say to be as clarified as butter. It's standard operating practice that increases transparency at every level of TVA, from the highest director to the lowest pond-scum skimmer..."
10/21
TVA Held "Practice" Accidental Ash Release Before Actual Accidental Release
"We've got to practice these accidents to be sure we get them right," says TVA CEOFrom APB reports. KINGSTON - Eight days before the Sept. 18 release of airborne ash during a test burn at TVA's Kingston Fossil Plant, a similar but smaller "practice" fallout occurred, a report released Tuesday by the federal agency said.
According to the report, while TVA was investigating the Sept. 18 event, it discovered that its plant had released materials on Sept. 10, a discovery at which TVA's management is shocked, shocked they tell us. Some flakes of material were found on an employee's car in the parking lot of the Kingston plant. Investigators immediately theorized that the employee had climbed into the smokestack and manually scraped the flakes from it, because they didn't want to think about more likely possibilities.
However, under close questioning, the employee insisted that the ash had gotten onto the car by "some crazy accident." At that point, TVA concluded that the release was a "practice" accident, but noted that the incident was not reported to TVA management and that it was entirely harmless, too.
"We appreciate the zealousness of our employees, who want us to be ready for accidental releases of all sorts, but we sure wish someone had told us about this, because we like management to be in the loop on our accidental practice releases - and all the other ones too," said TVA President and CEO Kilmore Trout.
TVA initiated the root-cause study of the Sept. 18 event at the direction of the Tennessee Verification of Answers Unit of the Department for Ignoring the Validity of Occam's Razor when Considering Explanations Contrary to Earlier Ones (TVAUDIVORCECEO).
"We will study the study - and likely that will be the last of it, because it's TVA - with TVA, what else can you do but study the studies?" said TVAUDIVORCECEO spokeswoman Trisha Flying-Trapeze. "It's not like we can fine them or anything..."
10/18
In Memoriam: Recalling Bill Phillips's Political Career
Mourners to hold wake for school board member's political aspirationsFrom APB reports. KNOXVILLE - In the wake of yet another forgery accusation, observers have decided to declare Bill Phillips's political career dead and go ahead with a wake for it. The embattled school board member had previously pleaded guilty to misdemeanor assault, for which he was censured by the school board. He recently admitted to forging names on his campaign documents.
Despite pundits' plans to proceed with the wake, the spirit of Phillips's career protested that it still had life in it. "I'm not dead yet," it cried. "I haven't given up the ghost."
Former County Commissioner Jack Huddleston said mourners are already collecting signatures for a petition declaring Phillips's career deceased. Huddleston also said to pay no attention to the protests emanating from Phillips's career
"A political corpse is a lot like a chicken with its head cut off," said Huddleston. "It takes a while for the reality to sink in. But it'll stop running soon enough."
Huddleston also said that the mourners would try to verify the truth of a rumor that Phillips's political career was seeking a reinstatement of its gun-carry permit, and if true, would oppose it.
"A dead political career has no business carrying a gun loaded with live ammo," he said. "That's a lethal combination."
Other mourners recalled some of their favorite Bill Phillips quotes, including the following...