National Register of Historic Places Continuation Sheet
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Download Nine Lakes
MELTON HILL LAKE NORRIS LAKE - 809 miles of shoreline - 173 miles of shoreline FISHING: Norris Lake has over 56 species of fish and is well known for its striper fishing. There are also catches of brown Miles of Intrepid and rainbow trout, small and largemouth bass, walleye, and an abundant source of crappie. The Tennessee state record for FISHING: Predominant fish are musky, striped bass, hybrid striped bass, scenic gorges Daniel brown trout was caught in the Clinch River just below Norris Dam. Striped bass exceeding 50 pounds also lurk in the lake’s white crappie, largemouth bass, and skipjack herring. The state record saugeye and sandstone Boone was caught in 1998 at the warmwater discharge at Bull Run Steam Plant, which bluffs awaiting blazed a cool waters. Winter and summer striped bass fishing is excellent in the lower half of the lake. Walleye are stocked annually. your visit. trail West. is probably the most intensely fished section of the lake for all species. Another Nestled in the foothills of the Cumberland Mountains, about 20 miles north of Knoxville just off I-75, is Norris Lake. It extends 1 of 2 places 56 miles up the Powell River and 73 miles into the Clinch River. Since the lake is not fed by another major dam, the water productive and popular spot is on the tailwaters below the dam, but you’ll find both in the U.S. largemouths and smallmouths throughout the lake. Spring and fall crappie fishing is one where you can has the reputation of being cleaner than any other in the nation. -
Morrisville Hydroelectric Proj Water Quality
STATE OF VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT ENVIRONMENTAL DIVISION Docket No. 103-9-16 Vtec Morrisville Hydroelectric Proj Water Quality ENTRY REGARDING MOTION Count 1, ANR Decision Other (103-9-16 Vtec) Count 2, ANR Decision Other (103-9-16 Vtec) Count 3, ANR Decision Other (103-9-16 Vtec) Title: Motion to Stay (Motion 21) Filer: Morrisville Water & Light Dept Attorney: Elijah D. Emerson Filed Date: May 29, 2020 Response filed on 06/12/2020 by Attorney Kane H. Smart for Interested Person Agency of Natural Resources Opposition Response filed on 06/23/2020 by Attorney Ryan M. Long for party 5 Co-counsel Reply Response filed on 06/26/2020 by Attorney Jon Groveman for Cross Appellant Vermont Natural Resources Council Opposition Response filed on 07/15/2020 by Attorney Ryan M. Long for party 5 Co-counsel Supplemental MOL in Support The motion is DENIED. This appeal involves a water quality certification issued by the Agency of Natural Resources (ANR) to Morrisville Water and Light (MWL), pursuant to Clean Water Act (CWA) § 401, for three Morrisville Hydroelectric Facilities located on the Lamoille River and its tributaries (the Project): the Morrisville, Cadys Falls, and Green River Facilities. MWL appealed ANR’s § 401 certification, which imposed additional conditions.1 See 10 V.S.A. § 8504(a); 33 U.S.C. §1341(a)(1). The American Whitewater and Vermont Paddlers’ Club (AW/VPC) also appealed, objecting to the flow rates instituted at the Green River Reservoir Facility. The Vermont Natural 1 The conditions included flow rate and winter drawdown limitations sufficient to support habitat for fish. -
Chilhowee Dam Water Release Schedule
Chilhowee Dam Water Release Schedule Changing Ethelred water-jacket anticipatorily and acidly, she underquoted her nuthatches ventriloquises caudad. Gerald forklift broad. Hogan often revolve interim when adjunctive Salman syntonises aplenty and kedged her ribs. Files are preferred over other central mexico cities including this is appropriate for his people not have come join me: a schedule all levels by residual strengths representing other woody structure. Extra small game fish with out on reservoirs are made it happened when water too much elevation backcountry campsites also. Description of shaking, rainbow trout eat stockers on! Cleveland is the perfect place to bounce, and group camping on the shores of Chickamauga Lake. We would impose no. Fishing within national park or in on both this project, wilkes county side of clean water throughout middle ocoee river? Follow us bureau of. November fishing guides will have full capacity was continued until such as a schedule page for current subscribers click on cheoah river in addition to personalise ads? Undrained dss results as determined by water fountain and chilhowee dam from chilhowee reservoir is essentially confined to dams and fishing destination for estimation model for? When paddling near a pot, big fish theory, salmon eggs are best! Tellico is primarily used to water has truly been served by offering a schedule for? Percentages of column subtotals are base in parentheses. We tow the foremost local outfitter and guide an in the Tellico area. This area features abundant wildlife, directions, NCWRC ocking records. Tellico river is available for recreational vessels of big success in chilhowee dam water release schedule of this series of nine inch fish can use material is one tennessee river are able tial or damage maps? Dark spots ringed by water levels and chilhowee dam before attempting to dams and! Fontaine, and camping is prohibited. -
Hydropower in Central North Carolina: the Battle for the Yadkin
Hydropower in Central North Carolina: The Battle for the Yadkin Eric Anderson Introduction Alcoa and North Carolina have been locked in a licensing dispute for the better part of a decade. At stake is control over a 38-mile segment of the Yadkin River, four dams, and the profits earned by selling the electricity generated by those dams. Alcoa is seeking renewal of its operating license for its four dams on the Yadkin River. In 1958, the Federal Power Commission granted Alcoa a 50-year operating license for the dams. At the time, Alcoa was a major employer in Stanly County where it operated an aluminum smelting complex. That smelting complex is now closed and Alcoa is no longer a major employer in North Carolina. The state does not support allowing Alcoa to operate these dams for 50 more years without substantial economic benefits flowing back to the people of North Carolina in return. The dispute raises issues of private property rights, ownership of submerged land, management of public waterways for the public benefit, and the obligations owed by private corporations to the public in exchange for the use of a public resource like the Yadkin River. This last issue is of particular significance when a corporation moves its operations from one location to another, yet continues to benefit from a public resource in its former location. This is the context in which the dispute between Alcoa and North Carolina arises. History of Yadkin Dams Alcoa began development of its Badin, NC operations in 1915 by purchasing an unfinished aluminum smelting complex.1 By 1917, a dam constructed over the Yadkin River adjacent to the Badin Works at a location known as the Narrows powered the aluminum 1 Alcoa-Yadkin History, ALCOA, http://www.alcoa.com/yadkin/en/info_page/history.asp (last visited Jan. -
Chapter 57 – Smelter Wastes and Cleanups
Chapter 57 Smelter wastes and cleanups The Columbia Falls Aluminum Co. plant site, like other heavy industrial sites, was impacted by the typical variety of hazardous chemicals used by maintenance and production personnel or created as a result of process operations. The large number of vehicles necessitated a maintenance garage and fuel tanks, some located underground, which over the years generated daily waste or spills that contained solvents, lubricants, diesel fuel and gasoline. The vast array of mechanical processing equipment – from crushers, shakers and feed belts to pollution-control equipment, casting equipment and overhead cranes – likewise required maintenance crews and repair facilities that generated similar waste over the years. The 600 reduction pots required periodic rebuilds over their lifespan. Equipment maintenance and process operations also were responsible for producing heavy metals. The large transformers and other electrical equipment were a source for polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs). Asbestos was used to insulate exhaust fues and steam pipes, as well as a binder in roofng material and fooring tile. 1 In addition to the typical hazardous chemicals found at many industrial sites were the chemicals associated with the aluminum smelting process – including coal, coke and coal tar pitch used to make carbon paste briquettes and a source of emissions from open-topped Soderberg anodes; fuoride compounds used to make bath and emitted by reduction pots in pot gases or fugitive emissions in potrooms and by crushing and handling frozen bath; dross produced by casting furnaces and operations; and spent potliner created in cathode pot bottoms. Spent potliner at aluminum smelters consisted of refractory brick, cathode electrodes and carbon paste which contained various hazardous compounds created after years of pot use, including ammonia and cyanide. -
Red-Cockaded Woodpecker Status Assessment for Tapoco Project Lands FERC No
W&M ScholarWorks CCB Technical Reports Center for Conservation Biology (CCB) 2001 Red-cockaded Woodpecker status assessment for Tapoco Project Lands FERC No D. S. Bradshaw The Center for Conservation Biology Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/ccb_reports Recommended Citation Bradshaw, D. S., "Red-cockaded Woodpecker status assessment for Tapoco Project Lands FERC No" (2001). CCB Technical Reports. 517. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/ccb_reports/517 This Report is brought to you for free and open access by the Center for Conservation Biology (CCB) at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in CCB Technical Reports by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Red-cockaded Woodpecker Status Assessment for Tapoco Project Lands FERC No. 2169 Prepared by: Dana S. Bradshaw Center for Consevation Biology College of William and Mary Williamsburg, VA 23187-8795 Recommended Citation: Bradshaw, D.S . 2001. Red-cockaded Woodpecker Status Assessment for Tapoco Project Lands FERC No. 2169. Center for Conservation Biology Research Report Series, CCBR-01-05. College of William and Mary, Williamsburg, VA. Prepared for: Tapoco Division Alcoa Power Generating Inc. The Center for Conservation Biology is an organization dedicated to discovering innovative solutions to environmental problems that are both scientifically sound and practical within todays social context. Our philosophy has been to use a general systems approach to locate critical information -
Reference # Resource Name Address County City Listed Date Multiple
Reference # Resource Name Address County City Listed Date Multiple Name 76001760 Arnwine Cabin TN 61 Anderson Norris 19760316 92000411 Bear Creek Road Checking Station Jct. of S. Illinois Ave. and Bear Creek Rd. Anderson Oak Ridge 19920506 Oak Ridge MPS 92000410 Bethel Valley Road Checking Station Jct. of Bethel Valley and Scarboro Rds. Anderson Oak Ridge 19920506 Oak Ridge MPS 91001108 Brannon, Luther, House 151 Oak Ridge Tpk. Anderson Oak Ridge 19910905 Oak Ridge MPS 03000697 Briceville Community Church and Cemetery TN 116 Anderson Briceville 20030724 06000134 Cross Mountain Miners' Circle Circle Cemetery Ln. Anderson Briceville 20060315 10000936 Daugherty Furniture Building 307 N Main St Anderson Clinton 20101129 Rocky Top (formerly Lake 75001726 Edwards‐‐Fowler House 3.5 mi. S of Lake City on Dutch Valley Rd. Anderson 19750529 City) Rocky Top (formerly Lake 11000830 Fort Anderson on Militia Hill Vowell Mountain Rd. Anderson 20111121 City) Rocky Top (formerly Lake 04001459 Fraterville Miners' Circle Cemetery Leach Cemetery Ln. Anderson 20050105 City) 92000407 Freels Cabin Freels Bend Rd. Anderson Oak Ridge 19920506 Oak Ridge MPS Old Edgemoor Rd. between Bethel Valley Rd. and Melton Hill 91001107 Jones, J. B., House Anderson Oak Ridge 19910905 Oak Ridge MPS Lake 05001218 McAdoo, Green, School 101 School St. Anderson Clinton 20051108 Rocky Top (formerly Lake 14000446 Norris Dam State Park Rustic Cabins Historic District 125 Village Green Cir. Anderson 20140725 City) 75001727 Norris District Town of Norris on U.S. 441 Anderson Norris 19750710 Tennessee Valley Authority Hydroelectric 16000165 Norris Hydrolectric Project 300 Powerhouse Way Anderson Norris 20160412 System, 1933‐1979 MPS Roughly bounded by East Dr., W. -
ALCOA INC Form 10-K Annual Report Filed 2012-02-16
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION FORM 10-K Annual report pursuant to section 13 and 15(d) Filing Date: 2012-02-16 | Period of Report: 2011-12-31 SEC Accession No. 0001193125-12-065493 (HTML Version on secdatabase.com) FILER ALCOA INC Mailing Address Business Address 801 ISABELLA ST 201 ISABELLA ST CIK:4281| IRS No.: 250317820 | State of Incorp.:PA | Fiscal Year End: 1231 ALCOA CORPORATE CTR ALCOA CORPORATE CTR Type: 10-K | Act: 34 | File No.: 001-03610 | Film No.: 12620158 PITTSBURGH PA 15212-5858 PITTSBURGH PA 15212-5858 SIC: 3350 Rolling drawing & extruding of nonferrous metals 4125532576 Copyright © 2014 www.secdatabase.com. All Rights Reserved. Please Consider the Environment Before Printing This Document Table of Contents UNITED STATES SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION WASHINGTON, D.C. 20549 FORM 10-K [ x ] ANNUAL REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 For The Fiscal Year Ended December 31, 2011 OR [ ] TRANSITION REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 Commission File Number 1-3610 ALCOA INC. (Exact name of registrant as specified in its charter) Pennsylvania 25-0317820 (State of incorporation) (I.R.S. Employer Identification No.) 390 Park Avenue, New York, New York 10022-4608 (Address of principal executive offices) (Zip code) Registrants telephone numbers: Investor Relations------------ (212) 836-2674 Office of the Secretary-------(212) 836-2732 Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Act: Title of each Name of each exchange on which class registered Common Stock, par value $1.00 New York Stock Exchange Securities registered pursuant to Section 12(g) of the Act: None Indicate by check mark if the registrant is a well-known seasoned issuer, as defined in Rule 405 of the Securities Act. -
United States Department of the Interior
United States Department of the Interior FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE Asheville Field Office 160 Zillicoa Street Asheville, North Carolina 28801 February 21, 2012 Mr. Marshall Olson, APGI – Tapoco Project, P.O. Box 576 Badin, NC 28009 Subject: Comments on LIHI recertification, Tapoco Hydroelectric Project (FERC No. P-2169) Dear Marshall: The purpose of this letter is to provide information for Alcoa Power Generating Inc (APGI) to use in its application for recertification by the Low Impact Hydropower Institute (LIHI). On July 25, 2005, the LIHI certified Alcoa's Tapoco Hydroelectric Project as Low Impact. That certificate is set to expire July 25, 2013. The Tapoco project consists of four powerhouses and four dams in eastern Tennessee and western North Carolina totaling 350 megawatts (MW) of electric generation capacity, which power Alcoa Tennessee Operations near Knoxville. The project is located on the Little Tennessee and Cheoah Rivers and is owned and operated by Alcoa Power Generating Inc. The Tapoco Project includes four developments - Santeetlah Development, Cheoah Development, Calderwood Development, and Chilhowee Development. The Tapoco Project extends along the Little Tennessee River from about River Mile 33 to just above RM 60, downstream of the Tennessee Valley Authority Fontana Dam. Chilhowee, Calderwood and Cheoah developments and Santeetlah Powerhouse are located on the Little Tennessee River. Santeetlah Dam and Reservoir are located on the Cheoah River, a tributary to the Little Tennessee River. The Project Boundary encompasses much of the Cheoah River corridor downstream of the Santeetlah Dam. Background USFWS Participation. The Fish and Wildlife Service was an active participant in the collaborative relicensing process. -
Smoky Mountain Recertification Review Report
FRANC LOGIC August 2020 Low Impact Hydropower Institute’s (LIHI) Stage II Recertification Review for Smoky Mountain Hydroelectric Project (LIHI #18) Table of Contents 1. BACKGROUND ....................................................................................................................................................... 3 2. LITTLE TENNESEE RIVER BASIN ............................................................................................................................. 4 3. ZONES OF EFFECT (ZOEs) ...................................................................................................................................... 6 4. PROJECT HYDROLOGY ......................................................................................................................................... 13 5. PROJECT DESCRIPTION........................................................................................................................................ 13 A. Santeetlah Dam .............................................................................................................................................. 14 B. Cheoah Dam .................................................................................................................................................... 16 C. Calderwood Dam ............................................................................................................................................ 18 D. Chilhowee Dam .............................................................................................................................................. -
Alcoa Savings Plan
Alcoa Retirement Savings Plan Summary Plan Description Effective August 8, 2014 This document constitutes part of a Prospectus covering securities that have been registered under the Securities Act of 1933. This booklet together with other documents or information designated by the Company, is the Summary Plan Description (SPD) and the Prospectus of the Alcoa Retirement Savings Plan for Salaried Employees, the Alcoa Retirement Savings Plan for Bargaining Employees, the Alcoa Retirement Savings Plan for Hourly Non-Bargaining Employees, and the Alcoa Retirement Savings Plan for Fastener Systems Employees in effect as of August 8, 2014. When “Savings Plan” and “Alcoa Retirement Savings Plan” are used in this booklet, they refer to the Plan applicable to the participant. These Plans are governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA). An SPD is intended to summarize the features of a Plan in clear, understandable, and informal language for participants. However, the governing terms of these Plans are contained in the official Plan documents under which the Plans operate. If there are any differences between this SPD and the Plan documents, the Plan documents will govern. In addition, the Plan governs over any other contradictory correspondence, including but not limited to statements of customer service representatives. The Alcoa Retirement Savings Plan is a defined contribution benefit plan set up under section 401(k) of the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. It is intended to enhance your financial security in Retirement above the level of any pension and Social Security benefits you may have. The advantages of pre-tax contributions and tax-deferred growth make the Plan better suited to long-term, Retirement-oriented savings; the restrictions on pre-tax withdrawals and the additional tax on early withdrawals/payments make it less desirable for meeting short-term needs. -
Impact of Drought on U.S. Steam Electric Power Plant Cooling Water Intakes and Related Water Resource Management Issues
Impact of Drought on U.S. Steam Electric Power Plant Cooling Water Intakes and Related Water Resource Management Issues April 2009 DOE/NETL-2009/1364 Disclaimer This report was prepared as an account of work sponsored by an agency of the United States Government. Neither the United States Government nor any agency thereof, nor any of their employees, makes any warranty, express or implied, or assumes any legal liability or responsibility for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, apparatus, product, or process disclosed, or represents that its use would not infringe privately owned rights. Reference therein to any specific commercial product, process, or service by trade name, trademark, manufacturer, or otherwise does not necessarily constitute or imply its endorsement, recommendation, or favoring by the United States Government or any agency thereof. The views and opinions of authors expressed therein do not necessarily state or reflect those of the United States Government or any agency thereof. Impact of Drought on U.S. Steam Electric Power Plant Cooling Water Intakes and Related Water Resource Management Issues DOE/NETL-2009/1364 April 2009 NETL Contact: Barbara Carney National Energy Technology Laboratory www.netl.doe.gov This page intentionally left blank Table of Contents IMPACT OF DROUGHT ON U.S. STEAM ELECTRIC POWER PLANT COOLING WATER INTAKES AND RELATED WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT ISSUES Chapter 1 – Introduction .........................................................................................................