Posts Tagged ‘coal river mountain’

Coal River Tree Sit Day 4: Still going strong

Sunday, January 24th, 2010
posted by brast


After four days 60 ft up in the air the treesitters, David Aaron Smith, 23, Amber Nitchman, 19 and Eric Blevins, 28 are still going strong.   The sleet, fog, mist, and rain are not making things easy – but every time that people have talked to them they sound chipper and steadfast.  The sitters plan to endure the discomforts created by Massey security and the weather and hold out for as long as possible to defend Coal River Mountain.  This mountain has been a rallying point for clean energy all over the state because of its potential for wind energy.

Since their first night in the trees Massey has been harassing the sitters using sleep deprivation tactics; this is harming the hearing of both the security and the sitters.  Security personnel are perpetually shining bright lights and employing the noise-making machines.  A few hours ago Eric Blevins took action by calling the state police and reporting a noise violation.  Quite soon after he called the noise machines turned off but they have since been turned back on.  In a similar vein of harassment, Massey security has tied a rope to a smaller tree next to Amber’s platform. They are pulling and releasing the rope so that the sapling smacks the bottom of her platform, hoping that she will feel unsafe and come down.

Beyond the harassment of the sitters and the miners, Massey is still validating the destruction of the precious Appalachian mountains.  In their press release Massey stated, “Opponents of coal who claim Coal River Mountain is the last intact mountain are lying and deliberately spreading this information in a desperate attempt to stop coal miners from working.”  We know that this truly is one of the last intact mountaintops in the area. The following video outlines the reality of the situation on Coal River Mountain and the potential for renewable energy instead of coal:


Other information resources:

Our response to Massey’s Press Release:
http://climategroundzero.net/2010/01/response-to-massey-energys-statement-about-tree-sit/

Marfork Coal Company in Violation of Office of Miners’ Health Safety & Training Noise Protocol:
http://climategroundzero.net/2010/01/Marfork-Violation

Clip of Amber’s Voice from the Tree:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aLA_fPvzx6k

Call Massey and Demand a Stop to Their Illegal Abuses:
http://climategroundzero.net/2010/01/callmasseyonjan25/?

Update on Arrested United Mountain Defense Volunteers in Tennessee:
http://climategroundzero.net/2010/01/umd/


 

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Response to Massey Energy’s Statement About Tree Sit

Sunday, January 24th, 2010
posted by norag

Massey Energy released a statement yesterday in response to the ongoing tree sit on Coal River Mountain.  It’s partially posted here, but we’ve been unable to find the rest of it because it was not given directly to Climate Ground Zero.  This is Climate Ground Zero’s response:

Massey Energy, in their recent statement, makes a number of allegations against Climate Ground Zero and our ongoing tree sit on Coal River Mountain’s Bee Tree Mine Site.  We would like to address these allegations formally, in order to set the record straight and clarify some of Massey’s more misleading comments.

Massey has repeatedly and vociferously pointed out that certain individuals taking part in actions on Massey property are not from the state of West Virginia.   Though the sitters are not West Virginian, neither is Massey. Massey Energy is an out-of-state mining and landowning company – falling in tradition to the absentee landholders that have plagued West Virginia for centuries. Landholding companies own 90 percent of Coal River Mountain and out-of-state landholding companies own 60 percent.  In fact, out-of-state, usually absentee landholders like Rowland Landholding (Massey’s sometime landlord) hold the vast majority of southern West Virginia.

Coal River Mountain is by no means untouched; underground mining, contour mining and the huge toxic threat that is the Brushy Fork Impoundment have already disturbed it.  However, taking down Coal River Mountain’s mountaintop would still be extremely detrimental to the watershed, because it would remove a large chunk of the land that currently absorbs rainfall and sequesters carbon.  This would cause more flooding along the lines of what was seen along the Tug Fork last May, kill the Coal River with sediment and contribute to climate change.

According to the WV Office of Miners’ Health, Safety, and Training 2008 Annual Report and Directory of Mines, 25 % of the coal mined in West Virginia was mined by mountaintop removal, yet the industry routinely claims that only a tiny fraction of permits are “true mountaintop mining” permits. “For example, in the Mountaintop Mining Fact Book, the National Mining Association wrote “About 70 percent of U.S. coal production is mined using surface mining methods, including MTM.”  Massey claims surface mining as mountaintop removal when it suits them, and then reverts to a highly specific definition in order to attempt to discredit those who oppose MTM.

Massey’s planned 6,000 acre mine on Coal River Mountain would destroy the entire mountain and create 17 valley fills. It falls clearly into the EPA’s definition of mountaintop mining from its 2003 Environmental Impact Statement: “’Mountaintop mining’ refers to coal mining by surface methods (e.g., contour mining, area mining, and mountaintop removal mining) in the steep terrain of the central Appalachian coalfields.”  The tree sit is stopping a box cut, and whether it is on the top of the ridge, or just underneath, to claim that it is not a mountaintop removal operation is a deceptive splitting of hairs.

At the Twilight, Edwight and Kayford mine sites they destroyed multiple mountains, including Bailey Mountain, Cherry Pond Mountain and Kayford Mountain.  The more mountains that are leveled by the mining companies in this valley, the more the valley and the communities in it are made into a drainage ditch; if it continues this way, they will have to rename the Mountain State.

According to Massey’s “Monitoring and Emergency Warning Plan and Procedures for the Brushy Fork Impoundment,” the Brushy Fork Impoundment is permitted to hold up to 8.2 billion gallons of sludge. That in itself is dangerous. Massey’s own filings with the WVDEP state that the children in the Head Start facility in Pettus, W.Va., would have no time to get out before they are hit by a 72 ft wall of toxic coal sludge.  Five hours later, 25 miles away, the sludge will be 40 feet deep.

Massey accuses us of misrepresenting the volume of sludge in Brushy Fork, but their lower estimates on the volume of toxic sludge could be due to their recent drainage of the dam and the movement of the sludge to another location.  Moving the sludge does little to address the real dangers of the matter of toxic coal waste storage.

The Tennessee Valley Authority coal ash spill was just over one billion gallons. The resulting flood covered 300 acres and contaminated tributaries of the Tennessee River with toxic coal ash waste. The full extent of the disaster’s ecological and health impacts are still unknown more than a year later.  This is just one of many coal waste storage failures or spills in the past two decades. What’s more, despite their rejection of the figure, Massey offered no exact figure to counter 8.2 billion gallons because they’re just playing a semantics game.

As we have said before, when Massey leaves Coal River Mountain it will be so scarred and de-elevated that, in the end, the effects will be the same whether you checked the box on that permit or not.  It’s mountaintop removal.

Massey stated that MTM/VF sites will be useable for wind farms.  On the contrary, Gamesa, a major wind developer, said they won’t put a wind farm on Coal River Mountain after mining.  After a mountain is strip-mined, the ground is too unstable to support wind turbines without making their foundations many more feet deep, which is prohibitively expensive.

The sitters acknowledge they are putting themselves at risk and believe it’s worth that risk to stop the greater crime of strip mining.  The statement that the sitters are a threat to the safety of the miners and police is unsound.  The protestors seek to make this situation as safe as possible for all individuals, being careful to avoid dropping things from their platforms or engaging in any other unsafe behavior. Alternatively, Massey actively seeks to endanger the sitters through their wanton use of noisemakers and lights; depriving the sitters of sleep and creating a more dangerous situation. The more significant danger at hand is Massey’s gambling with the lives of over 1,000 people living on, around and downstream of Coal River Mountain and the Brushy Fork Impoundment as well as the safety of their own workers.

It’s high time Massey stopped shifting the focus away from their destructive behavior and time for them to take responsibility for the danger they are creating in these communities. If Massey were truly held to the law just like the rest of us, they would have been locked up long ago.

We take accuracy and facts very seriously and believe the truth is on our side.  It is never our intention to deceive anyone or to be untruthful.  It’s time the EPA stopped beating around the facts and ban strip mining for good.  No more SMCRA compromise, no more mountaintop removal.

Learn About Mountain Top Removal on Coal River Mountain

Take Massey’s advice and look at Google Earth.  You’ll see strip mines all around Coal River Mountain.  However, since Massey has been so quick and efficient at destroying mountains, Google Earth has not been able to keep up and doesn’t show all the destruction.  First, turn on the mountaintop removal layer under “Global Awareness.”  Second, download additional layers of mining permit boundaries here. Just take a spin around and see the reality of this horrible mining practice.

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Three Remain in Jail

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009
posted by Dave

Yesterday, four individuals halted blasting on Coal River Mountain. They are now charged with trespassing, conspiracy, obstruction, and littering; bail has been set at $2,000 cash-only per-person.

Nick Martin enjoying some cowboy coffee after his release from jail.

Nick Martin enjoying some cowboy coffee after his release from jail.

Early this morning, we were able to bail Nick Martin out of jail. He gladly gave his thoughts on the action, “I’m proud to have been part of something that successfully stopped blasting. This act of nonviolent civil disobedience is only a small piece of a resounding call to save Coal River Mountain.”

The powerful actions of our friends did not go unnoticed by community members. Bo Webb, a resident of Naoma said, “The people of the Coal River Valley who are threatened by this sludge dam failure are appreciative, at least I am very appreciative, and proud of these folks to risk arrest of themselves in order to protect this community.”

In light of his return home, Nick further stated, “I am glad to be out of jail and back in a loving community of friends, thanks to everyone who supported us during this action. I can’t wait to see the others and I hope we can bail them out soon.”

Laura Von Dohlen, Grace Williams, and Dea Goblirsch will remain in jail until we can gather enough donations to bail them out as well. Please donate to our legal fund in order to support our brave friends by clicking the “Legal” button below.


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Four Arrested on Coal River Mountain, Bail Unknown

Saturday, November 21st, 2009
posted by Dave

Today’s action marks the eighteenth consecutive act of nonviolent civil disobedience from Climate Ground Zero in what is now undeniably a sustained fight against mountaintop removal. The four protestors stopped blasting on Coal River Mountain’s Bee Tree site, resolving to lock down to a drill rig. Their direct action speaks out against mountaintop removal and the extreme danger of blasting in such close proximity to the Brushy Fork Impoundment. Brushy Fork is permitted to hold 9 billion gallons of toxic sludge. It has already been stated that this impoundment is highly unstable and that blasting will only increase this exponentially. If this were to break it would devastate not only an entire town but the entire length of the Coal River.

Coal River Valley resident Judy Bonds commented on the action earlier today, saying, “This is further proof that Nick and Dea, Laura and Grace are backing up what the community people said in the press conference: Coal River Mountain is a hope and a future. I’m thrilled! I say hooray for the brave folks that’s up there. They are my heroes.”

All four protestors have been arrested and charged with trespassing, conspiracy, obstruction and littering.  They have been set $2,000 cash-only bails.  Please donate to their legal fund and support their brave actions! Just click the “Legal” button below.


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Responding to Harmful Government Inaction, Protestors Stop Blasting on Coal River Mountain

Saturday, November 21st, 2009
posted by Dave

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE    11/21/09
Contact: Zoe Beavers 304-854-7372
Email: news@climategroundzero.org

PETTUS, W. Va. – Early this morning two concerned citizens, Dea Goblirsch and Nick Martin, locked down to a drill rig on Coal River Mountain’s Bee Tree mountaintop removal site, effectively stopping blasting. Two others, Grace Williams and Laura Von Dohlen, joined them in direct support, holding a banner with the message “Save Coal River Mountain”.

These nonviolent protestors have taken this action to bring attention to the extreme danger facing residents of the Coal River Valley from blasting near the Brushy Fork Impoundment. They plan to stay locked down until law enforcement removes them.

The banner hanging on the drill rig two protestors are locked down to.

The banner hanging on the drill rig two protestors are locked down to.

Resident of Rock Creek, W Va., Delbert Gunnoe, stated his concerns with the blasting, “You know when they put a blast over there, and it shakes the windows over here, at what, ¾-a-mile distance, imagine what it does over there.” Gunnoe continued, “if [the impoundment] did bust…what would be the destruction? The town of Whitesville would no longer exist.”

The four are fearful of the blasting that Massey Energy began in late October.  These blasts are 200 feet from the Brushy Fork Impoundment, permitted to hold nine billion gallons of toxic coal slurry. The impoundment sits atop miles of hollow, abounded underground mines, further endangering its integrity.  By Massey’s own estimates, roughly 998 people will die should the dam break. The emergency evacuation plan states that a 40-foot wall of sludge, cresting at 72 feet, will flow through the valley, reaching 20-feet-high about 15 miles down the road.  Apart from the initial flood, the impact of this potential spill would be felt along the Coal River’s 88 miles.

“The Brushy Fork Sludge Impoundment keeps residents of the Coal River Valley up at night, waiting for eight billion gallons of toxic coal slurry to come rushing towards them,” said Dea Goblirsch, one of the two locked down. “I don’t know how Massey executives sleep soundly at night.”

Hydrologist, Dr. Rick Eades spoke of concerns about the stability of the dam as blasting occurs.  He questioned “blasting where underground mines existed in the Eagle coal seam, the possibilities for adversely affecting near-surface bedrock in a way that could possibly enhance pathways for slurry to be released via the subsurface and bypass the dam.”

The concern is that slurry will break into underground mine shafts and blow out through old mine openings on the side of the mountain. This potentiality for Coal River Mountain mirrors the cause of the world’s largest slurry spill which occurred in Martin County, Ky.  In 2000, 250 million gallons of slurry broke forth from a 2.2-billion-gallon impoundment, killing nearly all life in the Big Sandy River. Its impact reached all the way to the Ohio River, about 100 miles away.

A drill rig on a mountaintop removal site.

A drill rig on a mountaintop removal site.

Earlier this week, EPA sent out a letter to Marfork Coal Co., a subsidiary of Massey Energy Co., airing concerns about the absence of a valley fill permit, and requesting an extensive amount of information concerning the mountaintop removal operation on the Bee Tree site.

In note of this, Nick Martin, currently locked down, said, “The EPA’s recent action proves that the communities’ concerns about this site are shared at the highest levels of government.”

Matt Louis-Rosenberg, a Climate Ground Zero activist, adds, “Coal River Wind attempted to get a meeting with the governor for a year and it took people sitting in his office to get him to sit down and meet with concerned community members, just like it takes our actions up on Coal River Mountain to get the federal government to step in.”

The concern showed by the EPA reflects what the residents of the Coal River Valley have known for a long time; the Brushy Fork Impoundment is putting lives in danger, and the blasting on Coal River Mountain only increases that danger. The protestors on the Bee Tree site are putting out a call to action to save Coal River Mountain and protect all those who would be impacted by a catastrophe there. This action fits into a larger fight against mountaintop removal in Appalachia.

On the whole, Gunnoe’s sentiment was, “Don’t like much about Obama, but he’ll have one heck of a supporter if he stops mountaintop mining.”

Note: More information available at http://climategroundzero.org.

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Interior’s move small step in right direction

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009
posted by charles

The U.S. Interior Department released advanced notice tonight of some rule changes regarding water quality impacts of mountaintop removal.

This all looks good on a press release, but actions are what count. Interior’s intention to conduct independent inspections is really important. Perhaps now regulations will actually be enforced. We also applaud a basis on sound science, something not seen from the previous administration. We’re glad to see some real teeth starting to poke through their gums. But they’re still blasting on Coal River Mountain adjacent to seven billion gallons of toxic coal sludge on top of a hollowed out mountain, endangering a thousand people.

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Al Jazeera English: People and Power: Battle for Coal River Mountain

Wednesday, July 29th, 2009
posted by antrim

Watch the latest international report on the battle for Coal River Mountain:


And Part II


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Photo Essay: Kayford Mountain Lock Down

Sunday, May 24th, 2009
posted by antrim

8 Activists Arrested at Kayford Mountain Lock Down
Antrim Caskey

Kayford, WV — Eight activists with a coalition of groups including Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero walked on to the Patriot Coal mountaintop removal coal operation on Larry Gibson’s Kayford mountain in the early morning hours of March 23, 2009. Six of the protestors locked themselves, in groups of three, to a piece of massive earth moving equipment–referred to as a Yuke–with tires 24′ tall and hung a banner reading “Never Again” on the machine. The activists locked down for five hours. Ten officers from three different state and county authorities responded to the protest on Kayford, the largest number of people to be arrested during this sustained campaign of non violent civil disobedience that began in February, 2009.

The eight activists arrested include Kim Kirkbride, Ash-Lee Henderson, Tanya Turner, Jared Story, Willie Dodson, Will Wickham, Mathew Louis-Rosenberg, and Glenn Collins.

The activists were arrested and taken to Boone County seat at Madison, were processed and released on their own recognizances.




Kayford Mountain Action, May 23, 2009 - Images by antrim caskey

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8 activists arrested on Kayford Mountain

Sunday, May 24th, 2009
posted by antrim


Will Wickham, Glenn Collins, Jared Story, Willie Dodson and other activists with Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero are taken into custody after a 5 hour lock down to machinery on Patriot Coal's operation on Kayford Mountain. Three state authorities arrived on the scene: 6 Kanawha Sheriffs, 2 Boone County sheriffs and 2 WV state troopers.  The protestors were taken to the Boone County seat at Madison and released on their own recognizances.  photograph (c) Antrim Caskey, 2009

Will Wickham, Glenn Collins, Jared Story, Willie Dodson, Mathew Louis-Rosenberg, Kim Kirkbride, Ash-Lee Henderson and Tanya Turner, activists with Mountain Justice and Climate Ground Zero, are taken into custody after a 5 hour lock down to machinery on Patriot Coal's operation on Kayford Mountain. Three state authorities arrived on the scene: 6 Kanawha Sheriffs, 2 Boone County sheriffs and 2 WV state troopers. The protestors were taken to the Boone County seat at Madison and released on their own recognizances. photograph (c) Antrim Caskey, 2009


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Breaking: Arrest warrant issued for Roselle

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009
posted by antrim


West Virginia State Trooper Sgt. Smith arrests Mike Roselle for laying down in the road with a banner on Massey Energy owned Edwight mountaintop removal coal mine site, Febraury 25, 2009, exactly 37 years after the Buffalo Creek disaster in Man, WVa.

West Virginia State Trooper Sgt. Smith arrests Mike Roselle for laying down in the road with a banner on Massey Energy owned Edwight mountaintop removal coal mine site, Febraury 26, 2009, exactly 37 years after the Buffalo Creek disaster in Man, WVa.


Arrest warrant issued for Roselle

Rock Creek, WV — The Raleigh County Court issued a warrant for activist Mike Roselle this morning. Roselle has agreed to turn himself in at the State Police office in Beckley tomorrow morning at 9:00 AM.

For information call Climate Ground Zero

304 854 7372

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