Posts Tagged ‘Mountaintop Removal’

Roland Micklem On Ending His Fast Against Mountaintop Removal

Monday, December 14th, 2009
posted by Dea

Roland Micklem ended his fast against mountaintop removal on the evening of Dec. 13. Micklem shared a meal of yogurt and vegetable soup with his medic and his Charleston hosts, Don and Susan Churchill.

Micklem wrote a letter to friends, explaining his motives behind culminating the fast:

As you know by now, the fast is over—at least this one–and I very much feel many of you who perhaps expected it to go on longer are entitled to some explanation.  It’s partly logistical; Leah, my very competent medic/nurse has to leave Monday, and to tell the truth, it’s a real hassle having people burning fossil fuel to drive here just to make sure I haven’t collapsed on the steps of the Capitol, even though your visits were eagerly anticipated and a crucial part of my witness. Also, although I haven’t reached the stage where you could hang a hat on my hip, I’m starting to get skinny, and don’t want to lose so much vitality that I can’t split kindling the few days I’ll be spending in the Coal River Valley before Christmas.

I’d like to say that the fast–quote–accomplished its purpose–unquote–and perhaps it did to an extent. It got us some attention and provided another opportunity to keep MTR in the public consciousness. As for the mourning bit, I could fast until I passed . . . and would still have enough grief remaining to carry over into the after world.

I want you to know that my decision was formed after much consultation with the Big Boss Upstairs, and I’d like to think that Roland Micklem’s priorities played a subordinate role. And there’s more action coming down the pike . . .

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Hundreds to Converge at WV Department of Environmental Protection Against Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining

Monday, December 7th, 2009
posted by andrewmunn

Climate Ground Zero activists are participating in today’s rally at the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection. Multimedia updates will be available here throughout the day. Below is the full press advisory.

Hundreds to Converge at WV Department of Environmental Protection against Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining
Robert Kennedy, Jr. to speak at rally, calls for stop to MTR blasting of Coal River Mountain and protection of nation’s clean energy resources

WHEN: Monday, December 7th at 2:00 p.m.

WHERE: WV Department of Environmental Protection Headquarters, 601 57th Street SE, Charleston, WV.

WHAT: Hundreds are set to rally at the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) on Monday, December 7th to call for the end to the mountaintop removal coal mining on Coal River Mountain in the Coal River Valley. The site of a proposed wind farm and less than 200 yards from the largest coal sludge dam in the country, Coal River Mountain, is a line in the sand for residents, environmentalists, and prominent figures, like Robert Kennedy, Jr. Coal River Mountain is the last intact mountain in the Coal River Valley watershed, and its protection is seen as crucial in renewing Appalachia and building clean energy jobs in the region. In the face of slow government action, Climate Ground Zero has organized two actions on the mountain, halting clear cuts and blasts.

WHO: Coal River Valley community members, concerned citizens from across the region as well as Coal River Mountain Watch, Climate Ground Zero, Mountain Justice, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, Student Environmental Action Coalition (SEAC), Christians for the Mountains, the Alliance for Appalachia and Rainforest Action Network who have been advocated to abolish the mountaintop removal coal mining practice.

WHY: Despite regulatory violations, Massey Energy last month began clear-cutting the lush hardwood forests and setting off blasts for a massive 6,600-acre mountaintop removal operation on Coal River Mountain.

Just last week, the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) sent a letter to Marfork Coal Company, the Massey Energy subsidiary that is blasting on Coal River Mountain. The letter follows up on an EPA site visit to Coal River Mountain earlier this month, and notes with concern that the company appears to be operating without the required permit under the Clean Water Act.

The EPA is taking a tough look at the mining site, using its legal and regulatory authority to intervene in the operation of the Bee Tree mine on Coal River Mountain. Residents and environmentalists will be demanding that the West Virginia DEP do the same. Residents are asking the DEP to inspect the coal sludge dam nearest to the mine site, and to stop the blasting if Marfork/Massey cannot demonstrate that blasting so close to the largest coal sludge dam in the country is safe.

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Dec. 7th Rally Against Mountaintop Removal in Charleston!

Friday, December 4th, 2009
posted by Dea

Rally Dec 7th

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Senator Byrd Ready to See W.Va. Move Beyond Mountaintop Removal Mining

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009
posted by Dea

“Change is no stranger to the coal industry,” said Senator Byrd in a statement released today, which emphasized the need to shift West Virginia’s economy away from mountaintop removal mining and towards renewable energy. As the United States builds a lower-carbon economy, Byrd recognizes the importance of West Virginia developing industry beyond coal. Byrd referred to West Virginia as a clean energy innovator, citing the largest wind power facility in the eastern United States and three wood pellet plants as examples.

“Mountaintop removal mining, a declining national demand for energy, rising mining costs and erratic spot market prices all add up to fewer jobs in the coal fields,” said Byrd, who was raised in southern West Virginia before becoming the longest serving senator in United States history.

Senator Byrd’s record of favoring mountaintop removal as economically advantageous furthers the significance of today’s statement.

Byrd still supports the use of coal power and favors so-called “clean coal technology.” He has been working with a group of Democratic senators from coal-producing states in drafting provisions that will help the industry lessen their carbon footprint.

“These include increasing funding for clean coal projects and easing emission standards and timelines, setting aside billions of dollars for coal plants that install new technology and continue using coal,” said Byrd in his statement.

Update, 12/4/09:

“Increasing funding for clean coal projects and easing emission standards and timelines, setting aside billions of dollars for coal plants that install new technology and continue using coal,” is wrong-headed.  Coal is filthy, there’s no way around it.  Especially as long as coal slurry is produced.  Easing emission standards is no way into the future, but a step backward.  Giving billions of dollars to an already wealthy industry, for whatever purpose, is misplaced. All this money would be much better spent transitioning communities where coal is mined to more diverse economies with local control–not more outside industry that is unlikely to have the local communities’ welfare at heart.

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81-Year-Old Fasts at the W.Va. Capitol to Abolish Mountaintop Removal

Monday, November 30th, 2009
posted by Dea

Roland Micklem enjoys the sunny morning on Rock Creek, November 29, the day before he started his fast.  photograph (c) 2009 antrim caskey

photograph (c) antrim caskey 2009

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: 304 854 7372
Email: news@climategroundzero.org

CHARLESTON, W.Va.–Roland Micklem, 81, will begin a fast at the West Virginia State Capitol on Monday, Nov. 30. It will continue for an indeterminate period of time, and Micklem has neither set demands nor preconditions for its termination.

Micklem spent half a century as a naturalist, teacher and environmental writer. The loss of biodiversity caused by mountaintop removal is a focus of his activism.

“The loss of so many once common and beloved species has been traumatic and depressing, depressing to an extent that has resulted in a loss of enthusiasm for a field of study that had stoked my fires in bygone years,” Micklem writes in an open letter, explaining his motives for the fast, published on Climate Ground Zero’s web site.

Micklem organized and led over 30 people on the 25-mile Senior Citizen’s March to End Mountaintop Removal, which began at the state capitol on Oct. 8 and ended at the gates of Mammoth Coal in eastern Kanawha County on Oct. 12. This march followed Micklem’s participation in two acts of nonviolent civil resistance–the June 23 rally at Marsh Fork Elementary School and a blockade of the entrance to Massey Energy’s regional headquarters in Boone County on Sept. 9. At the Marsh Fork Rally, he was arrested alongside distinguished NASA climate scientist James Hansen, actress Darryl Hannah, Goldman Prize Winner Judy Bonds and dozens of concerned citizens.

His fast begins one week before a coalition of West Virginians and allies converge at the West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection to demand enforcement of the Clean Water Act and an end to blasting on Coal River Mountain.

“This is a prolonged act of mourning, not only for the mountains, but for all of God’s Creation–plants, animals, nature–that has been callously exploited and abused to satisfy the selfish wants of a single species,” stated Micklem, a devout Christian.

Read Roland Micklem’s open letter here.

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Roland Micklem’s Open Letter on His Fast to End Mountaintop Removal

Monday, November 30th, 2009
posted by Dea

For whatever it’s worth, I feel I owe an explanation to many of you who are concerned about my well being during my upcoming fast. It’s something I feel I must do, and I hope that after wading through these pages, you’ll have a better understanding of how I’ve come to this decision.

There’s a history here, and as I compose this message, I realize I’ll have to provide you with something I was hoping to avoid: An autobiographical sketch, which if nothing else you may use as a cure for your insomnia. Fasting is an exercise that is—for lack of a better word—inconvenient. I feel I must go to some trouble to give you the reasons why I’m giving up eating for an extended period, despite the fact that, aside from its necessary role in the maintenance of the body, it’s one of the joys of life.

So please bear with me.

At age 11, I ran an iron spike through my heel in a display of boyish exuberance and was off my feet for several days.  A kindly neighbor thought to give me something to read during my convalescence. It was a dog eared, taped-together, pocket size edition of The Red Book of Birds of America.

I was hooked from the git-go.

On the very first page was the portrait of a loon—a poor one compared to others I was  later to see—but with the backdrop of an open-water wilderness, including a forested shoreline, cattails, and other features of an unspoiled wetland. There was immediately stamped on my impressionable psyche a burning need to see, experience, and learn more about this magnificent representative of Nature in the Raw.  As I leafed through the pages and other images of bird life were revealed to my attentive eyes,  my awe and wonder grew.  I soon realized there were a good many more birds in the world than the limited number in my little volume, and life would not be worth living until I had copies of The Blue Book of Birds of America, and The Green Book of Birds of America.  These were advertised in the frontispiece of the Red Book, and  I nagged my parents unmercifully until to my everlasting joy, they appeared in my stocking the following Christmas.  Further nagging managed to score me a pair of 3X binoculars, and not wishing to press my luck with Mom and Dad, I turned to my Grandfather.

Fortunately for me, Grandpa Cook was a soft touch, and as a result of my impassioned beseeching, I received a copy of what was for the time (1940)  one of the definitive ornithological works of the day: Birds of America, edited by T. Gilbert Pearson.  (The book, I understand, is now a collectors item, and though having being leafed through thousands of times, my copy is only a little the worse for wear, and still usable as a reference).

My interests in birds expanded to include pretty much the rest of the animal kingdom. Using whatever references were available, I learned what I could about the creatures I chanced across during regular hikes to the many woods, fields and streams around my home in Hopewell, Virginia.  Hopewell was—and is– a blue collar town—the self proclaimed chemical capital of the South—and just about every adult male wage earner, including my father, worked at either Dupont, Solvay Process, Hummel-Ross Fiber Corp, Tubize (a maker of rayon) or Hercules Powder Company.

Many locals hunted and fished in the area, which included—in addition to large tracts of forests and open fields– the confluences of the James and Appamatox  Rivers and their semi-tidal marshes. But few had much detailed knowledge of the  native flora and fauna. Most people in Hopewell and vicinity would have thought a scarlet tanager was a brand of paint, and every snake one came across was either a copperhead or a water moccasin.   Not being able to discuss my interests with a fellow nature afficianado was somewhat lonely and frustrating. Indeed nature study was considered an offbeat pursuit among the city’s mixed population of Armenians, Greeks, Eastern Europeans, Jews; all of whom had gravitated to the area during the World War I era, when Dupont, in its search for cheap labor, had lured them thither with the promise of jobs. But as my family was loving and supportive, I wasn’t too put out by some of those within the Hopewell culture that tended to regard me as an oddball. Harmless, to be sure, but an oddball nevertheless.

To fast forward the reel, my passion for knowledge of the natural world was subordinate to a number of things as time went on; the usual hormone induced adolescent chaos, and as America entered the WW II era, surges of patriotism in my youthful breast.  This led to my enlistment into that honored institution, the U.S. Army.

And as fate would have it, an experience in the military led to a resurgence of my interest.  A fellow GI sold me a pair of 7X50 binoculars.  I’d never beheld any wild thing through anything stronger than a three power binocular, and like the first peek at the pages of my first bird book, it was instant fascination.

We  were at the time on a troopship in the middle of the Pacific,  and I was able to follow with greatly enhanced vision the flights of the shearwaters and petrels in the wake of our vessel.  Nothing, I mused at the time, was more romantic, dreamy and awe inspiring than the sight of these feathered vagabonds, hundreds of miles from the nearest land, dependent entirely on their remarkable aerial prowess and their ability to exploit nature’s maritime provender. They were epitome of untamed nature, and the sight of these winged creatures in this water wilderness was a soul-stirring experience which inspired awe and wonder–and reinforced my appreciation for the marvels of Creation.

My reawakened interest was sustained throughout the voyage, and received another boost when we arrived in San Francisco Bay.  While fellow GIs crowded the railings for the first sighting of land and civilization since leaving Yokohama, I was ogling the bird life through my 7X50s.  Gulls, cormorants, pelicans, most of which I’d seen only in books, passed within view in a never ending parade.

And as luck would have it, we were sent to Camp Stoneman, a  military base somewhat off the beaten track and populated by forms of wildlife other than GIs with hormones, prior to discharge.  Jack rabbits frolicked within a stone’s throw of the mess hall, and the open stretches surrounding some of the buildings were the foraging grounds for horned larks and other open country bird life. With a couple of good field guides acquired during a weekend in San Francisco, I set about adding to my knowledge, and when finally I was discharged and en route home on the train, I bird watched through the window from California to Virginia.

With the GI bill bankrolling my education, I enrolled as a journalism major at Richmond Professional Institute (now Virginia Commonwealth University). At the end of my sophomore year I was recalled to military service with the outbreak of the Korean War.

Once more, fate intervened to get me back on track. Carolyn Derby and I had met in an economics class at RPI and were married six months later–after I’d been sucked back into the army.  Knowing of my then latent passion for nature study, she persuaded me, after the army let me go, to enroll in Cornell as a conservation education major. Not only did she handle the paperwork to confirm my eligibility for continued veteran educational benefits, but she took an office job to supplement our meager income. Carolyn changed my life for the better in many other ways, but that’s another story.

My course work at Cornell mesmerized and enthralled me for the next two and a half years.  I studied ornithology under Doc A.A. Allen, a boyhood idol of mine and a frequent contributor to the National Geographic. I enrolled in just about every course the conservation department had to offer, and learned to identify the common vertebrate animals of the northeast and most of the common plants. As part of an Ichthyology course, we were required to I-Dee most of the fish species of the Great Lakes drainage basin, and our instructors were often able to collect over 20 species from nearby streams with only a couple of sweeps of the seine. I reveled in the biodiversity of our corner of the planet as it was in the 1950s, and during summer jobs as the nature study person at summer camps, and later as a classroom teacher in the public schools, I was fulfilled to the utmost in sharing my knowledge with others and adding to my own education.

In those days, the nature enthusiast could expect a different form of wildlife with every turn of the path.

Revisiting my former stomping grounds in Virginia after graduation from Cornell and a few years experience as an educator, I greeted as old friends the blue grosbeaks, the warblers–prairie, hooded, and Kentucky, along with the cricket frogs, fence lizards, box turtles; the list goes on and on. High in the autumn skies, large flocks of nighthawks were common sights as they drifted southward to their wintering grounds in Argentina.  In Penn Yan, New York, over the years of my longest and most rewarding tenure as a science and biology teacher, I frequently conducted informal, after hours field trips to the gorges and gullies of the area. Under almost every rock, as well as in the tiny rivulets that trickled through these meandering natural trenches, there was usually a salamander or salamanders of one kind or another, plus other interesting life forms.

That was yesteryear. For a former naturalist whose interest in and concern for the natural world has spanned over half a century, the loss of so many once common and beloved species has been traumatic and depressing, depressing to an extent that has resulted in a loss of enthusiasm for a field of study that had stoked my fires in bygone years.

My boyhood haunts, where I came to know the grosbeaks, warblers, and other once abundant members of the creature kingdom have been converted to shopping malls and housing tracts. A fisheries researcher would be hard put to collect more than two or three minnow species from the same waters that yielded twenty or more in my student years. The proliferation of motorized traffic in eastern Virginia—only one of many examples of how so-called progress has impoverished our lives–has all but decimated the populations of box turtles, snakes, and other creatures that have not learned to look both ways before crossing the highways. Air, soil, and water pollution, along with other forms of environmental degradation, have robbed us of our natural heritage and birthright, namely the infinite variety of life forms that once flew through our skies, swam in our waters, and enriched our space with their beauty, their voices,  and their strange and fascinating ways.

In the year 2009, I am, and have been for several years, an environmental activist.

I have exchanged my academic interest in the world of nature for a commitment to see that some of it is left for succeeding generations to study and enjoy.  My sorrow over the changes that self aggrandizing humanity has wrought have resulted in my decision to fast, and I will do so, as indicated in my statement, in a very public place before those with the power to bring about needed reform.

But I’m not without hope. I’m inspired and energized by the young people here at Climate Ground Zero, who at great personal risk are carrying on a campaign to stop mountaintop removal by nonviolent direct action. Despite the awesome challenge of climate change and other threats to the global ecology, there’s a new awakening among people and a renewed commitment to save Mother Earth from the excesses of our own species.

I’d like to be a part of this commitment.

Roland Micklem
Rock Creek, West Va.
Nov. 20, 2009

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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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Manchin calls W.Va. the “Extraction State”

Monday, October 19th, 2009
posted by admin

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VIDEO: Day Four of Sr. March to End MTR

Monday, October 12th, 2009
posted by nick.martin

This just in from Mobile Broadcast News

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Sr. Citizens March Brings Families Together to Fight Mountaintop Removal

Sunday, October 11th, 2009
posted by Dea

Herk McGraw drove from the outskirts of Charleston, West Virginia to participate in this week’s Senior Citizens March to End Mountaintop Removal. Sue Rosenberg made the trek from Saugerties, New York. They were not solely motivated by the call for elders to join the struggle against environmental devastation in Appalachia; McGraw and Rosenberg are joining the 25-mile march from the State Capitol to the gates of Mammoth Coal Company in part because of young people in their lives. McGraw’s granddaughter, Zoe Beavers, and Rosenberg’s son, Mathew Louis-Rosenberg, are both active in Climate Ground Zero, a civil disobedience campaign based in the coalfields of southern West Virginia.

“I’m opposed to mountaintop removal, of course,” said McGraw, a Methodist minister and coal miner’s son, “But particularly after they arrested Zoe [in August's tree sit at Pettry Bottom, W.Va.], that gave me a little more enthusiasm about coming out and supporting her.” Beavers, 28, served as ground support for the two tree sitters. She was arrested twice over the course of the six-day protest; once two days after returning as a liason for the sitters at the request of state police.

Beavers enlisted in the U.S. Army after her high school graduation in 2000 and did not move back to her home state until May of 2009. She credits her return to West Virginia, where she lives with family in St. Albans, to the burgeoning movement for environmental justice in the coalfields.

“My whole life I was taught that nothing can change in West Virginia, we shouldn’t fight for it because it’s a lost cause,” the Iraq War veteran, who now works with the Student Environmental Action Coalition out of Charleston, said, “We are not powerless.”

Her grandfather’s main concern with mountaintop removal mining is the industry’s dishonesty.

“What they’re talking about mountaintop removal and what actually happens with mountaintop removal are two different things,” he said, “They say that they are putting it back like it was . . . but what’s been done with it mostly is the golf course and the prison.”

Mat Louis-Rosenberg grew up in the Catskill Mountains of New York State. Born in to a family with deep activist roots, his first memory is of participating in a march in his hometown at three years of age. Louis-Rosenberg was raised with a strong appreciation for United States radical history—he learned about West Virginia through family friends’ stories of the labor movement.

Louis-Rosenberg moved to the Coal River Valley last year to work as a Sludge Safety Project organizer with Coal River Mountain Watch. His work with Climate Ground Zero includes a May 2009 arrest for playing a support role in a lock down to machinery on Kayford Mountain. In a pre-trial hearing, he was among two of the eight activists involved in the lock down who refused to plead no contest and accept a fine of nearly $2,000. He will be tried by jury on October 15 at the Madison Courthouse in Boone County.

“Mat used to say that he walked in the footsteps and on the shoulders of his grandparents and he was very proud of that,” said Sue Rosenberg, 62, who is in West Virginia for both the March and the trial, “I’m proud to now be walking in the footsteps of my son.” Rosenberg was a Civil Rights activist during her high school years in New York City, and later went on to work against the Vietnam War and nuclear weapons; as well as in solidarity with the people’s movements of Central America.

Sue Rosenberg was recently arrested at a June 23rd Marsh Fork Elementary School rally. The school, in Sundial, W.Va., sits just below a 2.9 billion gallon coal waste sludge impoundment and next to a coal silo and processing plant. Community organizers, West Virginia Senators Byrd and Rockefeller, and Congressman Rahall are pressuring Massey Energy, who owns the plant, impoundment and silo, to pay for the relocation of Marsh Fork Elementary. Rosenberg has been active in her recruitment of others to the cause, including World War II veteran and anti-war activist Joan Keefe. Keefe, at 88, is the oldest participant in the march.

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