Posts Tagged ‘Massey’

One of Three Released, Climate Ground Zero in Need of Funds

Saturday, February 27th, 2010
posted by ambernitch

Joe Hamsher, one of three arrested for occupying Marfork Coal Company’s main office in order to deliver a citizen’s arrest warrant to Marfork President, Christopher Blanchard, and Massey CEO, Don Blankenship, was released Thursday for a cash-only bail amount of $5,000. Mike Roselle and Tom Smyth remain in jail, held for a combined total of $12,500.

Upon release, Hamsher expressed concern for his fellow comrades still held in Southern Regional Jail and stressed the need for additional funds for the campaign. “We’ve put the pressure on Massey and they’re not making it easy, but that’s just proof we need to continue what we’re doing,” Hamsher said.

With the recent black water spill into Clear Fork River and the anniversary of the Buffalo Creek Disaster, we are reminded that neither coal companies like Massey Energy and Pioneer Fuel nor the West Virginia DEP have a history of adequately protecting public health and safety. Please contribute to the struggle by donating to Climate Ground Zero.

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Massey and Marfork, the real eco-terrorists

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
posted by charles

Massey Energy released this statement today in response to Roselle, Hamsher and Smyth occupying the Marfork Mining Co., office in Pettus, W.Va.  Here is my response:

The three arrested today have committed themselves to nonviolence and had no intention of causing harm to any individual. We regret to hear of the condition of Marfork’s secretary and hope she recovers quickly. However, Hamsher said in a call from jail that she was still working when they were driven away by police.

Last July, Massey tried during the dragline occupation to falsely claim that Climate Ground Zero protestors sent a Massey employee to the hospital. During the tree sit above Pettry Bottom last August, a Massey worker died because nobody could hear his emergency horn over the noise Massey ordered security to make to deprive the sitters of sleep. At the apparent request of his family, I am striking this sentence.  For background, please see the comments below.

The same shameful logic that allows Massey to blow up mountains and destroy peoples’ lives allows them to falsely blame protestors for employee injuries. Massey is the only one here using explosives and keeping people up at night worrying about flooding and failed sludge impoundments.  Who’s the real eco-terrorists?

“Yes, we agree, the county prosecutor needs to step up their enforcement of the law against Massey and their employees who engage in violence against our communities and activists,”  said Judy Bonds, who was slapped at the June 23 ralley by Ruth Tucker.  The county fined Tucker only $100 for her violent act, while nonviolent anti-strip mining activists have regularly been given maximum fines.

The only thing destroying West Virginia’s economy is coal and its boom-and-bust cycle. Appalachian counties that produce coal are, across the board, poorer, unhealthier and see shorter lifespans than geographically similar Appalachian counties that don’t produce coal, according to this study.  Two other studies, here and here, also show that the coal industry costs government more than it pays in taxes.

Massey, the coal industry and the banks that fund them are criminal enterprises living off the government and destroying one of the most beautiful and biodiverse places on the planet. As noted by the citizen’s arrest warrant the three protestors took to Marfork this morning, Massey and its executives are guilty of wanton endangerment involving destructive devices, explosive materials or incendiary devices, a felony, for the roulette game they’re playing with Brushy Fork. Massey is also guilty of attempting to kill or injure by poison, another felony, for its role in underground slurry injection near Rawl, W.Va., Prenter, W.Va., and the surrounding communities.

As I write this, I can hear and feel Massey blasting apart the mountains around us; they must be stopped before there’s nothing left to save. Please donate to our legal defense and general funds.

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Funds Needed for Combined $17,500 Cash-Only Bail

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
posted by ambernitch

Joe Hamsher, Mike Roselle, and Tom Smyth locked down this morning to Marfork Coal Company, Inc.’s office in order to deliver a citizen’s arrest warrant to Christopher Blanchard, president of Marfork, and Don Blankenship, CEO of Massey Energy. Currently they are being held for a combined cash-only bail of $17,500. Though all received the same charges of conspiracy, trespass asked to leave, and obstruction, Roselle received a bail amount of $7,500 cash-only while Hamsher and Smyth both received a bail amount of $5,000 cash-only.

Please allow us to continue opposing Massey and Marfork by donating to our legal fund. Donate online through paypal or another method of your choosing.

Thank you to everyone who has already donated or loaned money, but as the campaign continues, the need for legal funds increases. Many who risk arrest in this campaign are not able to pay all the fines that they may be sentenced to after trial and some loans need to be repaid.

As Massey accuses Hamsher, Roselle, and Smyth of terrorism and endangerment, we need to remember who the real criminals are: those who endanger thousands of lives by allowing the Brushy Fork impoundment to remain in violation of over 100 documented permit infringements. Help us stop the blasting, donate now to Climate Ground Zero.

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Citizen’s Arrest Warrant issued to Marfork president for wanton endangerment, poisoning & assault of children near a school

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
posted by Dea



marfork office occupation

Left, Joe Hamsher and Mike Roselle approach the Marfork Coal office with a banner reading "CLOSED: Stop the Blasting!" early this morning as Tom Smyth records on-site media. Right, the office employee who greets the peaceful protestors angrily rips the banner down from the door. Photo by Cheshire/Climate Ground Zero

Citizen’s Arrest Warrant

Defendant: Christopher L. Blanchard, President of Marfork Coal Company

Complaint: Since 1994, the Marfork Coal Company has committed over 100 documented permit violations.  Violations include (but are not limited to) multiple counts of improper blasting procedure (e.g. failure to notify residents of right to request pre-blast survey, failure to properly monitor blasts, etc.), failure to control air pollution, failure to install and/or maintain drainage control systems, and conducting surface mining operations beyond permit limits. Marfork’s continued operations in such close proximity to both Marsh Fork Elementary and the Pettus Head Start Program are not only endangering, but also assaulting the children at these locations with coal dust and other particulates floating off of the mine sites owned by Marfork Coal.

Moreover, on February 5, the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection issued a notice of violation to Marfork for failure of an upstream expansion of its Brushy Fork Impoundment to meet the engineering factor of safety of 1.5 required for coal dams.   The Brushy Fork Impoundment contains 8.2 billion gallons of toxic coal waste; if it fails, Marfork estimates that 998 people will be killed.  In spite of this violation and massive level of risk to human life, Marfork is continuing its operations on the Bee Tree Strip Mine, placing nearby communities in imminent danger.

As President of the Marfork Coal Company, you are responsible for the illegal practices of Marfork.  Given the absence of any intervention from West Virginia or federal law enforcement, a citizen’s warrant has been issued for your, Christopher L. Blanchard’s, arrest.  Citizens of West Virginia have found probable cause that you are in violation of the following sections of the West Virginia State Code:

§61-3E-10.  Wanton endangerment involving destructive devices, explosive materials or incendiary devices; penalty: “Any person who wantonly performs any act with a destructive device, explosive material or incendiary device which creates substantial risk of death or serious bodily injury to another shall be guilty of a felony and, upon conviction thereof, shall be committed to the custody of the division of corrections for not less than two years nor more than ten years or fined not more than ten thousand dollars, or both.”

§61-2-7.  Attempt to kill or injure by poison; penalty: “If any person administer, or attempt to administer, any poison or other destructive thing in food, drink, medicine or otherwise, or poison any spring, well, reservoir, conduit or pipe of water, with intent to kill or injure another person, he shall be guilty of a felony, and upon conviction, shall be confined in the penitentiary not less than three nor more than eighteen years.”

§61-2-9b. Penalties for malicious or unlawful assault or assault of a child near a school: “Any person who, under the provisions of section nine of this article, maliciously assaults a child sixteen years of age or under within one thousand feet of a school is guilty of a felony, and, upon conviction, shall be punished by confinement in the penitentiary not less than five nor more than fifteen years.”

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Protestors Occupy Marfork Coal Co.’s Office in Response to Mounting Violations

Thursday, February 18th, 2010
posted by Dea

Contact: Mike Roselle (304 854 1852), Charles Suggs (304 854 7372), news@climategroundzero.org

Mike Roselle, Joe Hamsher, and Tom Smyth walk with purpose towards the Marfork Coal Company office this morning. The three activists peacefully entered the office to deliver a citizen's arrest warrant for Christopher Blanchard and Don Blankenship, the CEOs of Marfork and Massey, who are responsible for the destruction of Coal River Mountain and for numerous violations on their sites. Photo by Cheshire/Climate Ground Zero

Pettus, W.Va.– Three occupied Massey Energy subsidiary Marfork Coal Company, Inc.’s main office this morning at eight.  The protestors plan to present a citizen’s arrest warrant and list of violations on the Marfork processing plant, Bee Tree Surface Mine and Brushy Fork sludge impoundment to company president Christopher Blanchard and Massey CEO Don Blankenship.

Brushy Fork Impoundment activity
The above image shows two areas, in purple, where Massey Energy is blasting dangerously close to the Brushy Fork Impoundment and multiple gas wells. The tree sit was right next to the #2 Haul Road. Click the image for a larger version.

Marfork Coal Co. has started work on the Bee Tree Surface Mine, and is blasting within 1,000 feet of the impoundment. The blasting threatens to decrease the stability of the Brushy Fork dam, which sits above a honeycomb of abandoned underground mines.

Just last week, the W. Va. Department of Environmental Protection issued a violation on the impoundment for failing to meet an engineering safety factor. This measurement determines how much force a structure can withstand beyond the amount that is expected to be exerted upon it. At the time of the issuance, the dam could withstand thirty percent additional force, rather than the fifty percent mandated by law.

The WVDEP was acting under a ten-day notice issued to them by the federal Office of Surface Mining.

“What’s sad is that the federal government has to go in,” said Joseph Hamsher of Charleston, W.Va., one of the protestors occupying the office. “You just know that someone up the road is telling the West Virginia DEP not to give Massey any more violations.”

If the Brushy Fork impoundment breaks, a 38.49-foot wall of water will arrive in Sylvester, a town 4.8 miles downriver, within 36 minutes. By Massey Energy’s own estimates, the disaster would kill 998 people.

“I won’t stop breaking the law until they do,” said Mike Roselle, who along with Hamsher and Tom Smyth, intends to stay in the office until Marfork Coal Co. suspends blasting operations.


Addendum

Marfork Coal Company Violations on Coal River Mountain

Drainage violations on Marfork Coal Co.’s Brushy Fork impoundment, processing plant & refuse pile

Water violations on the Brushy Fork sludge impoundment

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Brushy Fork fails to meet safety requirement; Massey continues blasting on Coal River Mountain

Tuesday, February 9th, 2010
posted by Dea

The West Virginia Dept. of Environmental Protection issued a notice of violation to Massey subsidiary Marfork Coal for failure to meet a required safety factor at its Brushy Fork sludge impoundment. The safety factor indicates the amount of additional force, beyond expected maximums, that a structure can endure. At the legal standard of 1.5, Brushy Fork would be able to endure 50% more pressure than anticipated. It currently meets a safety factor of 1.32.

Citizens disagree with the DEP’s statement, released Monday, which states that “there is no risk to communities downstream of the impoundment.”  The DEP contends that only the upstream expansion portion is non-compliant and that the face of the dam is sound.

Community members cite concerns about potential breakthroughs via abandoned deep mines under the dam. In 2000, the bottom of a Massey-operated impoundment in Martin County, KY broke in to an underground mine, releasing 300 million gallons of sludge. Inspectors previously claimed that the dam was sound.

Another threat to Brushy Fork’s integrity is blasting on Coal River Mountain’s Bee Tree permit site, adjacent to the dam. A recent tree sit by civil resistance campaign Climate Ground Zero halted blasting on the site for nine days.

The WVDEP issued the violation following a 10-day notification they received from the U.S. Office of Surface Mining.

“The DEP’s failure to act without federal prompting is further proof that it is not doing its job and should be taken over by the Office of Surface Mining and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency,” said Vernon Haltom, co-director of Coal River Mountain Watch.

Massey Energy is allowed to appeal the violation, but is currently required to take measures that will bring Brushy Fork up to legal standards.

The DEP’s press release can be viewed on their website.

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Climate Ground Zero Files Motion to Dismiss; Federal Hearing Delayed

Friday, February 5th, 2010
posted by andrewmunn

February 5, 2010

Yesterday, Judge Irene Berger issued a continuance and delayed the federal hearing on Marfork Coal Company’s request for an injunction against activists associated with Climate Ground Zero and Mountain Justice.  Marfork, Massey’s subsidiary operator on Coal River Mountain, filed in federal court for $75,000 in damages and filed a restraining order against five of the seven people arrested during the recent tree-sit.  Marfork is asking that the defendants be restrained from trespassing “or otherwise congregating” on any mining property associated with Massey Energy.  In its complaint, Marfork cites Climate Ground Zero’s unwavering commitment to a sustained campaign of civil disobedience as a justification for the injunction, stating: “Defendants and their cohorts affiliated with Climate Ground Zero and Mountain Justice, have represented by their words and proven through their actions that they will not be deterred by the imposition of a monetary fine or the prospect of serving a jail sentence for their criminal conduct, but will continue to trespass on mining properties operated by Marfork and other entities affiliated with A.T. Massey and Massey Energy.”

Judge Berger granted Marfork a temporary restraining order (TRO), and a hearing to extend the TRO into a full injunction was to be held yesterday, February 4, in Beckley.  Earlier this week, we filed a motion to dismiss the lawsuit, as Marfork’s claim of $75,000 in damage contradicts their own public statement that the tree-sit did not stop operations at the Bee Tree Strip Mine. As tree-sitter Amber Nitchman put it: “It is ridiculous that Marfork claims that I did nothing to interfere with their work, and at the same time is asking me for $75,000 in damages.  They should be the ones paying for damages.  The citizens of Raleigh County deserve far more than $75,000 for the harm being done to their mountains, air, and water.”

The hearing has been continued until February 23, at 10 a.m., to give Marfork lawyers time to respond to our motion.  Please stay tuned for any updates — we’ll be asking for as many people as possible to show up in federal court as we put Massey and mountaintop removal on trial.

Relevant court documents can be found here.

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CGZ Activist Sentenced to Maximum Fines in Jury Trial

Saturday, October 17th, 2009
posted by cgz-news

MADISON, W. Va. – October 15, 2009 – In the second jury trial of the Climate Ground Zero campaign, Mat Louis-Rosenberg appeared before Boone County Magistrate Byrneside to plead a necessity defense on counts of trespassing and conspiracy.

On May 23, Louis-Rosenberg and seven others were arrested after locking themselves down to rock trucks on Kayford Mountain, halting work for four hours. Appearing before a jury, Louis-Rosenberg faced the risk of up to 18 months in jail.

Despite hearing evidence that Louis-Rosenberg was never asked to leave the site, the jury convicted Louis-Rosenberg on both charges and, while not incarcerated, he was sentenced to the maximum penalties of $1,500 plus court costs which brought the total to over $2,700. Six other activists that participated in the lockdown plead no contest and received maximum fines and court costs of $1844. After trial, Louis-Rosenberg returned to Rock Creek to appear on a panel at the Mountain Justice Fall Summit, a weekend of service and education focused around ending the devastation of mountaintop removal.

In a statement before his trial, Louis-Rosenberg explained why he wished to appear before a jury. “This campaign, just like the civil rights movement and many other struggles for change, is founded on a strategy of non-violent civil disobedience. And just like the civil rights movement, it draws its strength and its power from the willingness of ordinary people to take extraordinary risks and sacrifices because of the strength of their beliefs.

“My conscience demands that I stand up in that court room and explain to the people of Boone County why I did what I did. I will not contest the facts of what happened, but rather assert my belief that what I did was right, that I was stopping a far greater crime than I was committing. And if I go to jail because of it, I know that I go as many have gone before me, in defense of my friends, this land and my convictions.”

***

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Seniors March Culminates at Gates of Massey’s Mammoth Coal Company

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009
posted by andrewmunn

The 25-mile, five-day Senior Citizens March to End Mountaintop Removal culminated at 4 p.m. Monday in a protest and press conferences at the gates of Mammoth Coal Company, a Massey subsidiary. Mammoth was named by the US Mine Safety & Health Administration yesterday as one of ten mining operators that need to improve performance or face tougher enforcement. The expansive mountaintop removal site at Mammoth Coal Company is currently inactive. See the AP story on the march for complete coverage. For video essays on each day of the march, visit Mobile Broadcast News.

Regina Hendrix, whose family has lived in the Kanawha Valley for over 200 years, returned to West Virginia in the early 90s to enjoy her retirement. Instead, she learned about mountaintop mining and saw the environment around her home totally destroyed.

“I came on this walk to support the incredible people of West Virginia who have been fighting mountaintop removal for years,” said Sue Rosenberg, 62, of Saugerties, New York. She is the mother of Mathew Louis-Rosenberg, who has been living in the Coal River Valley for over a year. He is going to trial on October 15 at the Madison County Courthouse for an action which included a lock down to a rock truck on Kayford Mountain in May 2009.

A press conference and rally kicked off the march at the State Capitol in Charleston on Thursday, October 8th. On Saturday, two young people hung a banner off of the Walker CAT building in Belle as the march passed by. The banner read “Yes, coal is killing West Virginia communities.” Steve Walker, CEO of Walker Machinery Co., equated the two banner hangers to suicide bombers in the Middle East in this radio interview. Evening events, which included talks by Larry Gibson of Kayford Mountain and Jesse Johnson of West Virginia’s Mountain Party, were held at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Charleston.

Roland Micklem, 81, self-proclaimed ‘instigator’ of the Senior Citizens March Against Mountaintop Removal, joined Climate Ground Zero in June. He has since been arrested twice for nonviolent civil disobedience. The first arrest was in opposition to Massey Energy’s infamous coal sludge impoundment located above Marsh Fork Elementary School, and the second for a road-blockade outside of Massey Energy’s regional headquarters in Boone County, W.Va.. Micklem, a former environmental journalist, has written open letters calling senior citizens and Christians to join the fight against mountaintop removal. He was joined on this March by two of his daughters, Sue and Sarah Micklem.

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Blockaders, Journalist Arrested at Massey W.Va. Regional Headquarters

Wednesday, September 9th, 2009
posted by andrewmunn

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Four Protesters, ages 22 to 81, and Journalist Arrested at Blockade of Massey Energy Regional Headquarters

Contact – Andrew Munn 304-513-4710
Note – Go to www.climategroundzero.org for pictures, audio, video and updates

JULIAN, W.Va.—Four protesters blocking the road to Massey Energy’s Regional Headquarters in Boone County and a journalist covering the event were arrested this morning. The protesters are charged with trespass, conspiracy, destruction of property, disobeying a lawful order and resisting arrest. Roland Micklem, 81, James McGuinness, 53, Joseph Hamsher, 22, and Fred Williamson, 75, comprised the human roadblock. The journalist, Gianni Lapis, is charged with trespass, failure to obey a lawful command, and conspiracy.

“All four have pledged to not participate in property destruction — these are likely just trumped up charges,” Charles Suggs of Climate Ground Zero said.

The four men used plastic pipes and chain to lock themselves together and to a guardrail and light post, shutting down the road to the headquarters for early morning traffic. State troopers and Boone County Sheriffs were on the scene soon after the lockdown and bolt cutters arrived shortly thereafter. Police cut the chains binding the men to the guardrail and light post and dragged them to the side of the road by the pipes that still locked their arms together.

Eyewitness Ivan Stiefel also reported that two of the three drivers-by who stopped to ask questions were supportive of the protesters. “One fellow was a deep miner passing through on his way to Charleston and broke down on the road,” Stiefel said. “He went to the cops to ask to use their phone to call a cab and was told to leave or he’d be arrested for trespassing. So he walked over to us and asked if it was a strike.

“I said it was a protest against Massey and mountaintop removal. He said he was a deep miner and hoped we didn’t hold that against him, but he didn’t like mountaintop removal. We said it was mountaintop removal and Massey’s horrible business practices we were protesting. Then we talked a while and called him a cab.”

Stiefel and other bystanders were asked to leave before the team was taken from the scene.

“I am exercising a spiritual obligation as a steward of Creation. It was not God’s intent that these mountains be destroyed to enhance the wealth of a few individuals,” said Micklem. “This should not be solely a young person’s campaign. Now that they have provided the example and inspiration, we seniors need to make a statement with our own actions and share the risks that are part of this ongoing effort to stop the obliteration of West Virginia’s mountains.”

Micklem is organizing a 25-mile senior citizen’s march set to begin in
Charleston on Oct. 5.  All four protesters are being held on $5,000
bail each, while the journalist is held on $3,000.

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