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Talk:Kingston Fossil Plant coal fly ash slurry spill/GA2

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GA Review

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Reviewer: Femkemilene (talk · contribs) 15:28, 25 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]


Points from previous GA review

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  • layout I find the structure of the article quite vague. the Deepwater horizon oil spill has a good example of a clear structure for an spill. I think that a section with consequences would be quite good (subsections health and environment?). Part of the information under the vague section title 'Details' might be transferred there. You might also want to make a section called: cause of spill.
    • Comment - fixed the layout; split into multiple sections and moved appropriate content where it belongs. "Event" section is for initial spill and early effects; "Response" section is for initial response. Listed the cause, determined by the report, under "cause" section.
  • The biggest point for improvement in the response section is that it's too detailed. You can consider using some subsections to make it easier to read, as well as summarizing it. The article reads a lot like "He said, she said".
  • You have two single-sentence paragraphs in the article, which is discouraged in the MOS. You might want to expand the sentence about fish with the effect on bugs and swallows that the EPA mentions.
    • Got rid of the single sentence paragraphs by adding more details, including the effects on wildlife on the initial spill. I'm thinking that the article might be missing some information about the effects on wildlife of the initial spill, however. Not certain about that though. Bneu2013 (talk) 06:41, 27 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]
  • ash fill, which was situated 60 feet (18 m) above the ash pond. I don't understand this sentence, and could not find it back in the given source. My (poor) understanding is that pond, landfill and ash fill all refer to the same thing? If not, could the distinction be made clearer?
    • I completely rewrote this sentence in an effort to clarify exactly where the spill took place, the process by which coal ash is transported into the ponds and then dried, and how this relates to where the spill took place.
  • TVA had reportedly known about the dangers of using wet storage ponds for coal ash since a 1969 spill in Virginia in which coal ash seeped into the Clinch River and killed countless fish.[11] I cannot access the source, but as this implies legal culpability and legal cases have been fought, this sentence might be made more strong (they knew about).
  • The response section goes in unnecessary detail and the structure of the different paragraphs is unclear. One of the paragraphs is too long. It is probably best to decrease the amount of quotes, as this is not a newspaper article.
  • Avoid the quote tremendous for fish loss (can be written down more neutrally),
  • would have cost ratepayers tens of millions: I suspect his is framing? Could part of the costs have come from other parties? I'm thinking lower salaries, insurance, federal funds, savings, selling off property. There might be legal reasons why rate-payers would have to cough up the costs, so not sure.
  • Fly ash is described as a pollutant. I'm not sure whether that is entirely correct. This source: [1] describes some of its contents as pollutants.
    •  Fixed - no longer described as a pollutant; some of its contents are however. I'm wondering, however, if I should include the fact that some of the contents of fly ash are considered pollutants in the "Background" section, however. Bneu2013 (talk) 06:41, 27 May 2020 (UTC)[reply]

Two final points

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