Archive for June, 2010

Much-lauded strict mountaintop mining guidelines not so strict–Pine Creek approved

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010
posted by admin

From our friends at Rainforest Action Network:

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 28, 2010

CONTACT:
Nell Greenberg, 510-847-9777

Much-Lauded Strict Mountaintop Mining Guidelines Not So Strict

EPA’s First Decision Under New Mountaintop Mining Guidelines is to Approve Coal Permit; Permit Would Create Three New Valley Fills

Pine Creek permit map

Pine Creek permit map

SAN FRANCISCO– Just last week, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency gave the Army Corps of Engineers a green light for the Pine Creek mine permit, a mountaintop removal (MTR) mining site in Logan County, W.Va. This is the first permit decision the EPA has issued under the new mountaintop mining guidelines, which came out last April and were anticipated to provide tougher oversight of mountaintop removal coal mining.

The new MTR guidelines were understood to provide greater protection for headwater streams by curbing the practice of dumping waste in neighboring valleys to create what is known as valley fills. The Pine Creek permit is the first test of these guidelines, and green lights three new valley fills (each over 40 acres large). It was anticipated that these guidelines, by requiring mining operators to control levels of toxins in nearby streams, would significantly reduce the dumping of mining waste in valleys, which the EPA said was scientifically proven to contaminate drinking water and wreck ecosystems.

(more…)

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Drainage Releases Polluted Water in to Coal River Near Marsh Fork Elementary

Saturday, June 19th, 2010
posted by Dea

This just in from Coal River Mountain Watch:

SUNDIAL, W.Va.– Just after dawn this morning, a community member noticed a torrent of murky, grayish water flowing from a drainage in to the Coal River. The drainage is located on the banks of the river adjacent to Massey Energy’s Goals Coal Processing Plant and across from the entrance to Marsh Fork Elementary School.

Drainage release in Sundial, WV-- Notice the color of the water flowing from the pipe on the left.

At 7:10 a.m., two volunteers photographed the spill and took a water sample several hundred feet down stream, at the nearest accessible location.

We encourage all concerned citizens to call this polluting drainage release in to the West Virginia DEP’s emergency hot line, reached at 1-800-642-3074. The operator will ask for your name, number, and the location of the spill (Sundial, Raleigh County, along WV-3 between Goals Coal Processing Plant and Marsh Fork Elementary).

More photos here


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Appalachia Rising: Call to Action

Thursday, June 17th, 2010
posted by jimmy

Yesterday, coalfield residents and organizers from across Appalachia gathered on the West Virginia state capital steps in Charleston, calling for an end to mountaintop removal and surface mining.

Here, they announced Appalachia Rising, a mass mobilization set for September 27th in Washington, DC and issued a rallying call for thousands to join in demanding the Obama Administration abolish surface mining and invest in sustainable economic diversification in Appalachia. Photos are available here. Watch it here:

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McGuinness released from jail, Micklem goes in

Tuesday, June 15th, 2010
posted by charles


Roland Micklem.  Photo courtesy of West Virginia Regional Jail Authority.

Roland Micklem. Photo courtesy of West Virginia Regional Jail Authority.


HOLDEN, W.Va.—James McGuinness was released from the West Virginia Southwestern Regional Jail yesterday, just as Roland Micklem was turning himself in to serve his 20-day sentence.  Micklem’s sentence is from when he, along with McGuinness, Joe Hamsher and Fred Williamson, blocked the entrance to Massey Energy’s regional headquarters outside Madison, W.Va., last September.

“People there [in jail] liked what I was doing with MTR,” McGuinness said when discussing his time spent in Southwestern Regional.  “Jail was fine and I got along with everyone.”  McGuinness served his 21-day sentence for his participation in the September blockade.  This action is part of the larger campaign to end mountaintop removal mining and to bring attention to the coal industry’s horrible business practices.

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Spill at base of valley fill on Clear Fork of Coal River

Monday, June 14th, 2010
posted by charles

Update 6/17/10:

The West Virginia DEP has issued an Imminent Harm Cessation Order and 3 Notices of Violations in response to the pond failure incident.  Catenary Coal was cited for sediment control, downslope spoil disposal and operating off their permit for the EnviroFlocc tanks.  The company has been ordered to restore the retention pond to full working capacity, repair off site damages to the stream and neighboring property, and remove the illegally placed tanks of flocculant.  Fines have yet to be assessed.

This now makes 7 violations on the Kayford South Mine in the last 12 months, some for a similar incident to Gardner Branch.  Further problems with downslope spoil disposal could make this mine a candidate for a Show Cause hearing.

Spill below valley fill on the Clear Fork of the Coal River, Raleigh County.  Photo by Andrea Lai.

Spill below valley fill on the Clear Fork of the Coal River, Raleigh County. Photo by Andrea Lai.


DOROTHY, W.Va.—A large volume of water gushed from the area of a retention pond at Caternary Coal’s Kayford South Surface Mine yesterday, leaving an approximately 40-foot-wide swath of rubble and mud and heavily sedimented water, down Gardner Branch past houses and into the Clear Fork of the Coal River.  Through investigating the spill, citizens found a tube from a flocculent tank going into Gardner Branch below the failed retention pond.

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State’s attempt to de-list road endangers Blair Mtn.

Sunday, June 13th, 2010
posted by charles

Hope this email finds you well, and thanks for reading this. Many of you may be familiar with Blair Mountain, a deeply historic and critically endangered mountain in West Virginia. Below is a short video about the current situation.

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Micklem Sentenced to 20 Days for Blockade of Massey Regional HQ

Tuesday, June 8th, 2010
posted by Dea

Veteran and lifelong activist Roland Micklem had a hearing at the Boone County courthouse this morning regarding the September 2009 blockade of Massey Regional Headquarters in Julian, WV.  Micklem took action with three others in protest of Massey’s destructive mountaintop removal mining tactics. Magistrate Charles Burnside sentenced Micklem to 20 days of jail on charges of conspiracy and trespassing.

(more…)

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Lexington protest shames PNC’s mountaintop removal financing

Monday, June 7th, 2010
posted by jimmy


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Monday, June 7, 2010
CONTACTS:
Ashley Browning 859-248-7027, Martin Mudd 859-963-5574

Lexington Protest Shames PNC’s Mountaintop Removal Financing
PNC Bank is the biggest US financier of Appalachian mountain destruction


Banner floated in Lexington, KY, PNC Bank branch.

Banner floated in Lexington, KY, PNC Bank branch.


LEXINGTON, KY – Concerned citizens rallied in downtown Lexington today to express their anger at PNC Bank for financing mountaintop removal (MTR) coal mining. Local activists were joined by members of the group Mountain Justice and residents from mountaintop communities, who spoke out about the direct impact that this destructive form of mining has on their community, health and environment.

“Several banks have realized that they shouldn’t be involved with companies that are causing the total annihilation of a culture by their use of MTR. It’s unfortunate that PNC, like Massey, is putting profits over people and over God’s creation,” said Mickey McCoy, a Martin County resident whose community was affected by a coal sludge spill in 2000.

Also present at the protest were a colorful street-theater troupe of ‘clowns,’ who acted out a performance of a coal company blasting the top off a mountain, then extracting a bag of money and passing it between U.S. Banks like a hot potato, to symbolize PNC Bank doing business with companies that other banks have moved away from.

The protesters paid a visit to the PNC branch at Main and Deweese streets and released a banner inside attached to some helium balloons, which said “PNC + Your Money = Toxic Tap Water.” Activists also passed out literature about the issue to bank customers and employees and delivered a letter to the bank branch manager asking that PNC end their financing of mountaintop removal.

“PNC Bank was a recipient of bailout funds, so their investments in MTR represent my tax dollars. I am vehemently opposed to the destruction of the mountains, forests and communities of Appalachia, and I’m concerned by the impacts of strip mining on water quality in central Kentucky,” said Martin Mudd, a Lexington resident and activist with Kentucky Mountain Justice.

Since January 2008, PNC has become the number one U.S. financier of mountaintop removal coal mining. The bank has provided more than $500 million in loans and bonds to six companies practicing mountaintop removal: Massey Energy, Patriot Coal, Alpha Natural Resources, International Coal Group, Arch Coal and Consol Energy (Source: Bloomberg). These six companies are collectively responsible for almost half of all mountaintop removal coal mining in Appalachia.

“The idea of corporate responsibility has come up repeatedly in recent weeks following the coal mine and oil disasters. That responsibility extends beyond profits to the health and wellbeing of our communities. Some banks, such as Bank of America and Wells Fargo have made commitments to reduce and even end their funding of the dirtiest coal mining practices. By continuing to finance mountaintop removal coal mining PNC is throwing that responsibility aside,” said Amanda Starbuck of Rainforest Action Network, who is campaigning for banks to end their investments in the sector and shift their support to clean, renewable energy and green job creation.

PNC recently ranked bottom in a score-card report on MTR financing by Rainforest Action network and the Sierra Club. The bank earned an “F” for its total failure to take environmental risks into account in its lending practices.

A copy of the report card and supporting data can be found here: www.ran.org/reportcard

Mountaintop removal mining is a devastating form of mining where companies blow the tops off mountains to reach a thin seam of coal and then dump the waste rock into valleys below. This destructive practice has buried nearly 2,000 miles of streams and threatens to destroy 1.4 million acres of land by 2020. The mining destroys Appalachian communities, the health of coalfield residents and any hope for positive economic growth.

A video of the PNC Bank Protest is available here.


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Martin Released From Jail

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010
posted by ambernitch

EmmaKate Martin was released from Southwestern Regional Jail today on a $2,500 bond after her pre-trial hearing.  Both the defense and the prosecutor agreed on 18 days time served with a community service option for the remaining 3 days of a 21 day sentence.  However, Magistrate Snodgrass blocked this option, offering instead that Martin plead guilty and accept whatever sentence the court offered.  Martin did not take the deal and is instead taking her case to a bench trial.  She has been released on bail with the condition of home confinement until her sentence is served.

“Thanks to everyone for their support; I really appreciated all the letters and messages I received.  I am very happy to be out, and plan to keep in contact with the new friends I made while in jail” Martin said upon release.

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Fred “Foxfire” Williamson Released from Jail

Tuesday, June 1st, 2010
posted by mat

Fred Williamson was released from Southwestern Regional Jail today after serving 12 days. Williamson was serving a 20 day sentence for his participation in a blockade of Massey Regional Headquarters in Boone County last September.   The remainder of his sentence will be served as community service in Boone County.  We are all glad to have him back here at Climate Ground Zero.  Emmakate Martin and James McGuinness remain incarcerated at Southwestern Regional Jail.

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