MTR at the UN this week

Press conference on Tuesday in NYC 2

A delegation of grassroots groups from around Appalachia will be at the UN's Commission on Sustainable Development meetings this week to discourage further MTR abuse and advocate for alternatives (More on them here: www.stopmtr.org). New Yorkers, turn up for this if you can:

NEW YORK CITY//MAY 8, 2007 NEWS ADVISORY

A delegation of Appalachia coalfield citizen groups will hold a news event at 2 p.m. on Tuesday (May 8, 2007) in Dag Hammarskjold Plaza Park to call on the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development to abolish radical forms of coal surface mining, such as mountaintop removal. Coal extraction industry abuses have destroyed more than one million acres of forests, 500 mountains and 1,000 miles of streams in recent years in the Appalachian region of the United States. The groups will urge the UN Commission to embrace greater use of renewable energy, cuts in fossil fuel consumption and a shunning of liquid-coal and so-called clean coal technologies.

News event speakers will be Ann League, coalfield resident and vice president, Save Our Cumberland Mountains, Lake City, TN; Judy Bonds, coalfield resident and organizer, Coal River Mountain Watch, Whitesville, WV; Erica Urias, coalfield resident and member, Kentuckians for the Commonwealth, London, KY; and Larry Gibson, coalfield resident and board member, Ohio Valley Environmental Council, Huntington, WV.

Every year in central Appalachia, one million metric tons of explosives are used by the coal industry to blow up our mountains, equaling the explosive force of 58 Hiroshima-sized atomic bombs. The impacts do not stop at a mountain's edge: schools suffer from dangerous levels of coal dust, homes are damaged by blasting and increased flooding, and entire communities have been forced out as a direct result of the impacts of large surface mines. With the beauty of our mountains destroyed, much of the landscape unable to support native forests, and water supplies frequently contaminated, communities in Appalachia are left with few economic alternatives other than the coal companies that are destroying the region and its peoples' way of life.

EVENT DETAILS: Tuesday (May 8, 2007), 2 p.m., Dag Hammarskjold Plaza Park, on East 47th Street between United Nations Plaza (1st Avenue) and 2nd Avenue. In the event of inclement weather, the event will be moved indoors.

CONTACT: Ailis Aaron Wolf, (703) 276-3265 or aaaron@hastingsgroup.com; and, also on May 8, 2007: Kevin Pence, (606) 335-0764 (cell).

Erik Hoffner is the coordinator of the Orion Grassroots Network which supports the work of hundreds of grassroots groups and which connects the green leaders of tomorrow with good work today via the Grassroots Jobsource. Based in Massachusetts, he is also a freelance photographer.

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  1. Erik Hoffner's avatar

    Erik Hoffner Posted 12:58 am
    08 May 2007

    the cost of coal: updateThe delegation's goal of encouraging the UNCSD and the global community to aggressively promote a transition away from destructive and inequitable energy production is already under full steam. They yesterday challenged a presenter from the EPRI, Electric Power Res Inst: re: the cost of the full cycle of carbon. The guy said he understood the impacts of MTR b/c he's from Appalachia. When pressed he said that he's from Ohio, LOL. No MTR there. Full details of that conversation here:
    http://itsgettinghotinhere.org/1444#more-1444

    The Orion Grassroots Network: 1000+ grassroots groups working for conservation & more

  2. amazingdrx Posted 1:08 am
    08 May 2007

    John Prine?Is he going to perform "paradise"?  That would be a good idea.
    When I was a child my family would travel

    Down to Western Kentucky where my parents were born

    And there's a backwards old town that's often remembered

    So many times that my memories are worn.
    Chorus:

    And daddy won't you take me back to Muhlenberg County

    Down by the Green River where Paradise lay

    Well, I'm sorry my son, but you're too late in asking

    Mister Peabody's coal train has hauled it away
    Well, sometimes we'd travel right down the Green River

    To the abandoned old prison down by Adrie Hill

    Where the air smelled like snakes and we'd shoot with our pistols

    But empty pop bottles was all we would kill.
    Then the coal company came with the world's largest shovel

    And they tortured the timber and stripped all the land

    Well, they dug for their coal till the land was forsaken

    Then they wrote it all down as the progress of man.
    When I die let my ashes float down the Green River

    Let my soul roll on up to the Rochester dam

    I'll be halfway to Heaven with Paradise waitin'

    Just five miles away from wherever I am.



    http://amazngdrx.blogharbor.com/blog

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