A protester poured a cup of water on the head of former Alabama state representative Kyle South in protest over how the state regulates the storage of toxic coal ash.
During a hearing featuring the federal Environmental Protection Action, which is seeking to deny Alabama’s Coal Ash Permit Program, and testimony from local residents, a woman Anne DiPrizio approached Mr South and launched into a speech to the rest of the hearing.
“I’m a former researcher at [University of Alabama at Birmingham] School of Public Health, I did my dissertation research on vulnerable populations,” she said. “Everybody knows that this is a spectacle, right? You created a spectacle. Y’all might say that’s crazy, that’s a crazy unhinged lady. I might be at this point.”
She then dumped the water over Mr South’s head.
Earlier in the hearing on Wednesday, Mr South, head of the Chamber of Commerce of West Alabama, testified in support of Alabama’s existing regulatory regime, which allows toxic coal byproducts to be stored in unlined ponds near waterways.
"They’ve got a remediation process that’s legal, approved and everything else that the [Alabama Department of Environmental Management] allows within the [Environmental Protection Agency’s] rules," he said. "It’s almost like [the EPA] is trying to change the rules of the game mid-stream and there’s been a lot of back-and-forth about it."
“You look around those settings and everything’s pretty emotional to start with, then you get some people that are maybe a little too passionate about a topic and get them all bottled up in there together - these things tend to happen,” Mr South later told the Tuscaloosa Thread of the incident. “She kind of caught me off-guard but I was definitely not gonna give her the reaction that she was seeking.”
After Ms DiPrizo poured the water on the local leader’s head, she continued with a “tirade that was laced with obscenities and directed ire a nearly everyone present,” according to AL.com.
A woman named Anne DiPrizio just poured water over the head of former Alabama State Rep. Kyle South at a Montgomery hearing about Alabama Power’s storage of coal ash. Story to come for @insideclimate pic.twitter.com/HSYjAhieGi
— Lee Hedgepeth (@lee_hedgepeth) September 20, 2023
She’s previously been arrested for protests on issues ranging from abortion to police shootings, using tactics that included throwing paint and Christmas ornaments, according to the outlet.
The EPA has proposed denying Alabama’s coal ash storage plan, arguing the toxic byproduct exists leeching in waterways, wildlife, and farms.
Local residents have taken both sides on the proposal.
“We have 24 million tons of coal ash in Wilsonville...It is toxic. We know it’s toxic, “ former Wilsonville Mayor Lee McCarty told CBS42. “Capping it in place does nothing. It’s going to run, run, run, into the river, into peoples’ wells, into peoples’ gardens, into peoples’ cattle.”
“I live right near the Mobile Bay, and I swim and fish in all of those. I believe it is safe,” Energy Institute of Alabama Executive Director Blake Hardwich told the outlet.
Another hearing over the plan is scheduled for next week.