Posts Tagged ‘Seniors March’

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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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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Senior March to Culminate at Mammoth Coal Company

Monday, October 12th, 2009
posted by Dea

Contact: Andrew Munn or Dea Goblirsch 304-513-4710
Email: news@climategroundzero.org

CEDAR GROVE, W.Va.- The Senior Citizens March to End Mountaintop Removal will culminate in a protest and press conference at Massey subsidiary Mammoth Coal Company on US-60, east of Cedar Grove, at 4:00 p.m. on Monday. Mammoth Coal Company is 25 miles from the march’s starting point at the state capitol in Charleston. At least 28 seniors between the ages of 50 and 88 will have put their feet to the pavement during the 25 mile walk, including Larry Gibson of Kayford Mountain and Jesse Johnson of the Mountain Party. Gibson and Johnson both spoke at march-associated events at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Charleston.

City of Belle police arrested two young people for deploying a banner off of the Walker CAT building in Belle, W.Va. on Saturday. The banner read “Yes, Coal Is Killing West Virginia Communities.” The two arrestees, Gabe Schwartzman, 19, and David German, 18, were released on the same day for $100 personal recognizance.

Several of the participants, including Herk McGraw, 75, and Sue Rosenberg, 62, are relatives of young people who have been arrested for acts of non-violent civil disobedience in the Climate Ground Zero campaign against mountaintop removal. Two of march co-organizer Roland Micklem’s daughters are among the marchers.

The senior citizens received training in nonviolence and conflict de-escalation Sunday night in preparation for potential confrontation at Monday’s protest.

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Police keep march away from American Electric Power Coal Plant; March continues

Sunday, October 11th, 2009
posted by Dea

Thirteen marchers, ages 53 to 88, walked the fourth five-mile stretch of their journey to the gates of Massey-owned Mammoth Coal Company Sunday. The route took them past American Electric Power’s Kanawha Valley coal plant in Glasgow, W.Va.. In the wake of Saturday’s banner drop at the Walker CAT facility in Belle, W.Va. security and one police vehicle met the marchers as they passed AEP’s entrance. The marchers moved on and avoided further confrontation.

The march will resume tomorrow at 11:30 a.m. in Cedar Grove. It is expected to arrive at the gates of Mammoth Coal Company at 4:00 p.m., where the marchers will protest mountaintop removal.

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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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Senior March Day 3: Two Arrested for banner on Walker CAT; Police Intervene with March; Rising Tension

Saturday, October 10th, 2009
posted by Dea

Contact: Andrew Munn or Dea Goblirsch 304-513-4710
Email: news@climategroundzero.org

BELLE, W.Va. -  Two young people unfurled a banner which read, “Yes, Coal is Killing West Virginia’s Communities”  off of the Walker CAT building in Belle, W.Va. at 12:55 this afternoon. The youth are affiliated with Climate Ground Zero and say they acted in autonomous solidarity with the Senior Citizens March to End Mountaintop Removal, are affiliated with Climate Ground Zero. The marchers passed the Walker CAT building on today’s route.

Gabe Schwartzman, 19, and David German, 18, were arrested by City of Belle Police and cited for trespassing on a structure or conveyance. They were taken to the Magistrate’s Court in Charleston, where they were released at 3:00 p.m on $100 personal recognizance. Steve Walker, CEO of Walker Machinery Company, went to the police station while Schwartzman and German were being cited for trespass.

At the behest of Walker CAT, the City of Belle Police Department detained the march at 3:20 p.m. Officers took the IDs of three marchers who walked onto the business’ property to speak with security. According to Roland Micklem, one of the three, he entered Walker CAT’s property to convey his convictions to security guards.

“I wanted to contact somebody with an opposing perspective and demonstrate to him that we have no hostility towards them as fellow humans; we have a serious point of disagreement, however, on the use of their machinery to destroy God’s mountains for profit,” Micklem said. The marchers moved off of the property when asked to leave.

Walker CAT’s Earthmoving Division is one of the main suppliers of equipment to mountaintop removal sites in West Virginia. They are also at the forefront of pro-coal advertising campaigns. In addition to television, print, and billboard adds, Walker CAT produced “Mountaintop Mining Viewpoint,” a brochure aimed at influencing public opinion in support of MTR. The twenty-eight page document makes claims that mountaintop removal coal mining is necessary, cheap and environmentally responsible.

While speaking to marchers and supporters at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Charleston last night, Larry Gibson of Kayford Mountain stated, “They keep saying coal is cheap. Ask someone who lost someone in the mining industry how cheap it is. We know better than that in the coal fields.”

The March received its first physical harassment today. At 2:00 p.m. a driver threw a cup of water on Micklem, who says he “took it in stride.” The march has attracted both support and derision from passerbys. Marchers who so choose still plan to commit an act of non-violent civil disobedience to protest mountaintop removal at the conclusion of the march at Mammoth Coal Company on Monday afternoon.Down the Road

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Second Day of Senior Citizens March to End MTR is a Success; Larry Gibson Speaks

Saturday, October 10th, 2009
posted by Dea

Nine senior citizens set out from Poorboy’s Market in Charleston’s East End at 11 a.m. this morning, marking the second day of their march protesting mountaintop removal. Walking five miles in the unseasonable hot sun, they broke only for lunch, served by Everybody’s Kitchen. The seniors ended at the intersection of Maple & DuPont in DuPont City.

three

Sarah Micklem, daughter of organizer Roland Micklem, was among the marchers. Sue Rosenberg, the mother of Climate Ground Zero’s Mat Louis-Rosenberg, and Zoe Beavers’ grandfather, Herk McGraw, also participated in today’s events.

The day culminated at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Charleston with dinner and a speech given by Larry Gibson, Kayford Mountain resident and founder of Keepers of the Mountains. The fiery sixty-three year old marched on Thursday.

The evening event was co-sponsored by the Student Environmental Action Coalition and the Charleston Adult & Youth Environmental Network.

The Senior Citizens March to End Mountaintop Removal will resume at Dupont & Maple at 12 a.m. Saturday morning.

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Senior Citizens Embark on 25 Mile March Against Mountaintop Removal

Thursday, October 8th, 2009
posted by Dea

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Contact: Andrew Munn or Dea Goblirsch 304-513-4710
Email: news@climategroundzero.org

CHARLESTON, W.Va.- Fifteen participants between the ages of 50 and 83 set off on a Senior Citizen’s March to End Mountaintop Removal at 10 a.m. this morning.  The march was preceded by a rally and press conference in front of the State Capitol building, and is sponsored by a coalition that includes Climate Ground Zero, Mountain Justice, Intergenerational Justice and Christians for the Mountains. It is part of an ongoing civil disobedience campaign against mountaintop removal in West Virginia.

Senior Citizen March

The seniors are walking five miles each day for five days, ending at Massey subsidiary Mammoth Coal on Monday, Oct. 12. In a statement issued by the US Mine Safety & Health Administration yesterday, Mammoth Coal was named as one of ten mining operators that need to improve performance or face tougher enforcement.

The mountaintop removal mine and processing plant, formerly operated by Cannelton Coal, was bought out by Massey in 2004. Massey cut the United Mine Workers of America contract and reopened the site, located east of Charleston on Route 60, as the non-union Mammoth Coal Company. The decision was met with a UMWA-organized picket and lawsuits.

“Mountaintop removal is closing in on our home place in Coal River, destroying the ridge up and down the river,” said Julian Martin, 73, a coal miner’s son and Vice President of the West Virginia Highlands Conservancy, “I see mountaintop removal as probably the world’s worst environmental disaster.” Martin’s grandfather fought in the largest organized labor uprising in United States history, the Battle of Blair Mountain.

March organizers Roland Micklem, 81, and Andrew Munn, 23, are planning activities and speaking events each evening, including talks by Larry Gibson of the Keepers of the Mountain Foundation and Jesse Johnson, 2004 and 2008 Green Party gubernatorial candidate at the Unitarian Universalist Church of Charleston on Friday and Saturday night.

“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,” said Micklem, a Korean War veteran and former environmental journalist. His organizing philosophy is rooted in Ghandian principles of nonviolent civil disobedience and dialogue with opposition; the energetic senior invited Massey Energy officials to speak with him at the gates of Mammoth Coal Company on Monday. Micklem has not yet received a response.

“As a young person, it is inspiring to see the strength with which senior citizens are stepping forward to meet the task at hand,” said Munn, “Climate justice and the preservation of ecological and cultural heritage are issues for all generations, so I think it is fitting that we see this coalition emerging at the forefront of the movement to stop mountaintop removal.”

Friday’s portion of the March will leave at 11 a.m. from the Poorboy’s Market, located at 4008 Malden Dr. in Charleston.

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81 Year-Old Announces Senior Citizens March to End Mountaintop Removal

Thursday, September 17th, 2009
posted by andrewmunn

81 Year Old Military Veteran Announces 25 Mile Senior Citizen’s March to End Mountaintop Removal

Contact – Roland Micklem or Andrew Munn 304-854-7187

Click here to listen to Micklem’s radio interview excerpts

CHARLESTON, W.Va. – Roland Micklem is an 81-year-old military veteran from Richmond, VA. State police arrested Micklem and three others for blockading Massey Energy’s regional headquarters in an act of non-violent civil disobedience on the morning of Wednesday, September 9. In his statement, Micklem announced his intent to lead a five day, 25 mile march for senior citizens, ages 5o and older, in a protest against mountaintop removal (MTR). Micklem and other participants will depart on the morning of Thursday, October 8 from the state capital in Charleston, W.Va.. The march will conclude at the gates of the Massey-owned Mammoth MTR site in Kanawha County on Monday,October 12, where those who choose to will engage in an act of non-violent civil disobedience against mountaintop removal.

In Micklem’s open letter, he states, “No substantial gain in our efforts to continually evolve into a more humane and caring society has been made without the willingness of individuals—with non violence as both a creed and a strategy–to step outside the framework of law and tradition in order to correct wrongs when conventional measures had failed. The abolition of slavery, the enactment of civil rights legislation, the right of women to vote, the termination of the Vietnam war could not have come about without the help of the same kind of non violent, direct, and sometime unlawful action that we are using here to stop mountaintop removal. And as a Christian as well as one who basically respects the laws of the land, I see the growth and maturing of my Faith to be in direct proportion to my readiness to stand for truth, and to embrace causes that will contribute to our moral and spiritual uplift as the dominant species on the planet.”

Micklem’s march is a collaborative project between Climate Ground Zero, Mountain Justice, Intergenerational Justice, and Christians for the Mountains, and is part of an ongoing campaign of non-violent civil disobedience against mountaintop removal. Micklem and march co-organizer, Andrew Munn, age 23, are planning evening activites and speaking events to conclude each day’s walk and educated the public about MTR and related issues. Larry Gibson of kayford Mountain and 2004 Green Party gubernatorial candidate, Jesse Johnson are among those expected to speak and participate in the march. Senior citizens who are unable to march are invited to join in for the evening activities. More information on programming will be made public in future releases on www.climategroundzero.org.

According to Micklem, five people, including clergy men and women, are committed to the full march, and at least ten others will join for stretches. He expects more will join as word spreads.

Massey subsidiary Mammoth coal operates a mountaintop removal site and coal processing plant next to Route 60 east of Charleston. In 2004, Massey bought out Cannelton Coal, which formerly operated that site, cut the United Mine Workers contract, and reopened it as the non-union Mammoth Coal Company despite a union organized picket and lawsuits.

   

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

 

81 Year Old Military Veteran Announces 25 Mile Senior Citizen’s March to End Mountaintop Removal

 

Contact – Roland Micklem or Andrew Munn 304-854-7187

Click here to listen to Micklem’s radio interview excerpts

 

CHARLESTON, W.Va. – Roland Micklem is an 81-year-old military veteran from Richmond, VA. State police arrested Micklem and three others for blockading Massey Energy’s regional headquarters in an act of non-violent civil disobedience on the morning of Wednesday September 9. Click here to view the video of the action. In his statement, Micklem announced his intent to lead a five day, 25 mile march for senior citizens, ages 55 and older, in a protest against mountaintop removal (MTR). Micklem and other participants will depart on the morning of Thursday October 8 from the state capital in Charleston, W.Va.. The march will conclude at the gates of the Massey-owned Mammoth MTR site in Kanawha County on Monday October 12, where those who choose to will engage in an act of non-violent civil disobedience against mountaintop removal.

 

In Micklem’s open letter, he states, “No substantial gain in our efforts to continually evolve into a more humane and caring society has been made without the willingness of individuals—with non violence as both a creed and a strategy–to step outside the framework of law and tradition in order to correct wrongs when conventional measures had failed. The abolition of slavery, the enactment of civil rights legislation, the right of women to vote, the termination of the Vietnam war could not have come about without the help of the same kind of non violent, direct, and sometime unlawful action that we are using here to stop mountaintop removal. And as a Christian as well as one who basically respects the laws of the land, I see the growth and maturing of my Faith to be in direct proportion to my readiness to stand for truth, and to embrace causes that will contribute to our moral and spiritual uplift as the dominant species on the planet.”

 

Micklem’s march is a collaborative project between Climate Ground Zero, Mountain Justice, Intergenerational Justice, and Christians for the Mountains, and is part of an ongoing campaign of non-violent civil disobedience against mountaintop removal. Micklem and march co-organizer, Andrew Munn, age 23, are planning evening activites and speaking events to conclude each day’s walk and educated the public about MTR and related issues. Larry Gibson of kayford Mountain and 2004 Green Party gubernatorial candidate, Jesse Johnson are among those expected to speak and participate in the march. Senior citizens who are unable to march are invited to join in for the evening activities. More information on programming will be made public in future releases on www.climategroundzero.org.

According to Micklem, five people, including clergy men and women, are committed to the full march, and at least ten others will join for stretches. He expects more will join as word spreads.

 

Massey subsidiary Mammoth coal operates a mountaintop removal site and coal processing plant next to Route 60 east of Charleston. In 2004, Massey bought out Cannelton Coal, which formerly operated that site, cut the United Mine Workers contract, and reopened it as the non-union Mammoth Coal Company despite a union organized picket and lawsuits.

 

For more information on the Senior Citizen Walk to End Mountaintop Removal, visit www.climategroundzero.org.

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