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Poverty & the Environment: A Grist Special Series
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Moving Mountains

Mountaintop-removal mining is devastating Appalachia, but residents are fighting back

By Erik Reece
16 Feb 2006
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This article was originally published in Orion Magazine.

Not since the glaciers pushed toward these ridgelines a million years ago have the Appalachian Mountains been as threatened as they are today. But the coal-extraction process decimating this landscape, known as mountaintop removal, has generated little press beyond the region.

A mountaintop no more.
A mountaintop no more.
Photo: Vivian Stockman/SouthWings.
The problem, in many ways, is one of perspective. From interstates and lowlands, where most communities are clustered, one simply doesn't see what is happening up there. Only from the air can you fully grasp the magnitude of the devastation. If you were to board, say, a small prop plane at Zeb Mountain, Tenn., and follow the spine of the Appalachian Mountains up through Kentucky, Virginia, and West Virginia, you would be struck not by the beauty of a densely forested range older than the Himalayas, but rather by inescapable images of ecological violence. Near Pine Mountain, Ky., you'd see an unfolding series of staggered green hills quickly give way to a wide expanse of gray plateaus pocked with dark craters and huge black ponds filled with a toxic byproduct called coal slurry. The desolation stretches like a long scar up the Kentucky-Virginia line, before eating its way across southern West Virginia.

Poverty & the Environment
Introduction to the series.
How environmentalism got its elitist tinge.
Photos of Louisiana towns battered by Katrina.
A look at the poultry farms ravaging the South.
How coal mining has scarred the hills of Appalachia.
A virtual walking tour of the polluted South Bronx.
More stories on poverty & the environment.
Central Appalachia provides much of the country's coal, second only to Wyoming's Powder River Basin. In the United States, 100 tons of coal are extracted every two seconds. Around 70 percent of that coal comes from strip mines, and over the last 20 years, an increasing amount comes from mountaintop-removal sites.

In the name of corporate expedience, coal companies have turned from excavation to simply blasting away the tops of the mountains. To achieve this, they use the same mixture of ammonium nitrate and diesel fuel that Timothy McVeigh employed to level the Murrow Building in Oklahoma City -- except each detonation is 10 times as powerful, and thousands of blasts go off each day across central Appalachia. Hundreds of feet of forest, topsoil, and sandstone -- the coal industry calls all of this "overburden" -- are unearthed so bulldozers and front-end loaders can more easily extract the thin seams of rich, bituminous coal that stretch in horizontal layers throughout these mountains. Almost everything that isn't coal is pushed down into the valleys below. As a result, 6,700 "valley fills" were approved in central Appalachia between 1985 and 2001. The U.S. EPA estimates that over 700 miles of healthy streams have been completely buried by mountaintop removal and thousands more have been damaged. Where there once flowed a highly braided system of headwater streams, now a vast circuitry of haul roads winds through the rubble. From the air, it looks like someone had tried to plot a highway system on the moon.

Seven floods have inundated the town of Bob White, W.Va., since mountaintop-removal mining started high above in 2000.
Seven floods have inundated the town of Bob White, W.Va., since mountaintop-removal mining started in 2000.
Photo: Antrim Caskey.
Serious coal mining has been going on in Appalachia since the turn of the 20th century. But from the time World War II veterans climbed down from tanks and up onto bulldozers, the extractive industries in America have grown more mechanized and more destructive. Ironically, here in Kentucky where I live, coal-related employment has dropped 60 percent in the last 15 years; it takes very few people to run a strip mine operation, with giant machines doing most of the clear-cutting, excavating, loading, and bulldozing of rubble. And all strip mining -- from the most basic truck mine to mountaintop removal -- results in deforestation, flooding, mudslides, and the fouling of headwater streams.

Alongside this ecological devastation lies an even more ominous human dimension: an Eastern Kentucky University study found that children in Letcher County, Ky., suffer from an alarmingly high rate of nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, and shortness of breath -- symptoms of something called blue baby syndrome -- that can all be traced back to sedimentation and dissolved minerals that have drained from mine sites into nearby streams. Long-term effects may include liver, kidney, and spleen failure, bone damage, and cancers of the digestive tract.

Erica Urias, who lives on Island Creek in Grapevine, Ky., told me she has to bathe her 2-year-old daughter in contaminated water because of the mining around her home. In McRoberts, Ky., the problem is flooding. In 1998, Tampa Energy Company (TECO) started blasting along the ridgetops above McRoberts. Homes shook and foundations cracked. Then TECO sheared off all of the vegetation at the head of Chopping Block Hollow and replaced it with the compacted rubble of a valley fill. In a region prone to flash floods, nothing was left to hold back the rain; this once-forested watershed had been turned into an enormous funnel. In 2002, three so-called hundred-year floods happened in 10 days. Between the blasting and the flooding, the people of McRoberts have been nearly flushed out of their homes.

Related Stories
We Live It Every Day
Portraits and words of people on the front line in Appalachian fight against destructive mining practices.
The Legend of Weepy Hollow
An excerpt from Missing Mountains: We Went to the Mountaintop but It Wasn't There
Consider the story of Debra and Granville Burke. First the blasting above their house wrecked its foundation. Then the floods came. Four times, they wiped out the Burkes' garden, which the family depended on to get through the winter. Finally, on Christmas morning 2002, Debra Burke took her life. In a letter published in a local paper, her husband wrote: "She left eight letters describing how she loved us all but that our burdens were just getting too much to bear. She had begged for TECO to at least replace our garden, but they just turned their back on her. I look back now and think of all the things I wish I had done differently so that she might still be with us, but mostly I wish that TECO had never started mining above our home."

In the language of economics, Debra Burke's death was an externality -- a cost that simply isn't factored into the price Americans pay for coal. And that is precisely the problem. Last year, American power plants burned over a billion tons of coal, accounting for over 50 percent of this country's electricity use. In Kentucky, 80 percent of the harvested coal is sold and shipped to 22 other states. Yet it is the people of Appalachia who pay the highest price for the rest of the country's cheap energy -- through contaminated water, flooding, cracked foundations and wells, bronchial problems related to breathing coal dust, and roads that have been torn up and turned deadly by speeding coal trucks. Why should large cities like Phoenix and Detroit get the coal but be held accountable for none of the environmental consequences of its extraction? And why is a Tampa-based energy company -- or Peabody Coal in St. Louis, or Massey Energy in Richmond, Va. -- allowed to destroy communities throughout Appalachia? As my friend and teacher the late Guy Davenport once wrote, "Distance negates responsibility."

The specific injustice that had drawn together a group of activists calling themselves the Mountain Justice Summer movement was the violent death of 3-year-old Jeremy Davidson. At 2:30 in the morning on Aug. 30, 2004, a bulldozer, operating without a permit above the Davidsons' home, dislodged a thousand-pound boulder from a mountaintop-removal site in the town of Appalachia, Va. The boulder rolled 200 feet down the mountain before it crushed to death the sleeping child.

But Davidson's death is hardly an isolated incident. In West Virginia, 14 people drowned in the last three years because of floods and mudslides caused by mountaintop removal, and in Kentucky, 50 people have been killed and over 500 injured in the last five years by coal trucks, almost all of which were illegally overloaded.

Fighting for Their Lives


What's left of Kayford Mountain, W.Va.
What's left of Kayford Mountain, W.Va.
Photo: Antrim Caskey.
On the third of July, I drove across 10,000 acres of boulder-strewn wasteland that used to be Kayford Mountain, W.Va. -- one of the most hideous mountaintop-removal sites I've seen. But right in the middle of the destruction, rising like a last gasp, is a small knoll of untouched forest. Larry Gibson's family has lived on Kayford Mountain for 200 years. And most of his relatives are buried in the family cemetery, where almost every day Gibson has to clear away debris known as "flyrock" from the nearby blasting.

Last year, Kenneth Cane, the great-grandson of Crazy Horse, came to this cemetery. Surrounded by Gibson and his kin, Cane led a prayer vigil. Then he turned to Gibson, put a hand on his shoulder, and said, "How does it feel to lose your land?"

"What was I going to say to him?" Gibson asked me, sitting at the kitchen table of his small, two-room cabin beneath a single, solar-powered fluorescent bulb. Certainly an Oglala Lakota heir would know something about having mountains stolen away by people in search of valuable minerals.

A short, muscular man, Gibson is easily given to emotion when he starts talking about his home place -- both what remains of it and what has been destroyed. Forty seams of coal lie beneath his 50 acres. Gibson could be a millionaire many times over, but because he refuses to sell, he has been shot at and run off his own road. One of his dogs was shot and another hanged. A month after my visit, someone sabotaged his solar panels. In 2000, Gibson walked out onto his porch one day to find two men dressed in camouflage, approaching with gas cans. They backed away and drove off, but not before they set fire to an empty cabin that belongs to one of Gibson's cousins. This much at least can be said for the West Virginia coal industry: it has perfected the art of intimidation.

Gibson knows he isn't safe. "This land is worth $450 million," he told me, "so what kind of chances do I have?" But he hasn't backed down. He travels the country telling his story and has been arrested repeatedly for various acts of civil disobedience. When Gibson talks to student groups, he asks them, "What do you hold so dear that you don't have a price on it? And when somebody comes to take it, what will you do? For me, it's this mountain and the memories I had here as a kid. It was a hard life, but here I was equal to everybody. I didn't know I was poor until I went to the city and people told me I was. Here I was rich."

A coal silo looms behind Marsh Fork Elementary School.
A coal silo looms behind Marsh Fork Elementary School.
Photo: Antrim Caskey.
Just down the mountain from Gibson's home, in the town of Rock Creek, stands the Marsh Fork Elementary School. Back in 2004, Ed Wiley, a 47-year-old West Virginian who spent years working on strip mines, was called by the school to come pick up his granddaughter Kayla because she was sick. "She had a real bad color to her," Wiley told me. The next day the school called again because Kayla was ill, and the day after that. Wiley started flipping through the sign-out book and found that 15 to 20 students went home sick every day because of asthma problems, severe headaches, blisters in their mouths, constant runny noses, and nausea. In May 2005, when Mountain Justice volunteers started going door-to-door in an effort to identify citizens' concerns and possibly locate cancer clusters, West Virginia activist Bo Webb found that 80 percent of parents said their children came home from school with a variety of illnesses. The school, a small brick building, sits almost directly beneath a Massey Energy subsidiary's processing plant where coal is washed and stored. Coal dust settles like pollen over the playground. Nearly 3 billion gallons of coal slurry, which contains extremely high levels of mercury, cadmium, and nickel, are stored behind a 385-foot-high earthen dam right above the school.

In 1972, a similar coal impoundment dam collapsed at Buffalo Creek, W.Va., killing 125 people. Two hundred and eighty children attend the Marsh Fork Elementary School. It is unnerving to imagine what damage a minor earthquake, a heavy flash flood, or a structural failure might do to this small community. And according to documents that longtime activist Julia Bonds obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, the pond is leaking into the creek and groundwater around the school. Students often cannot drink from the water fountains. And when they return from recess, their tennis shoes are covered with black coal dust.

Massey responded to complaints about the plant by applying for a permit to enlarge it, with a new silo to be built even closer to the school. It was this callousness that led to the first major Mountain Justice direct action on the last day of May 2005. About a hundred out-of-state activists, alongside another hundred local citizens, gathered at the school and marched next door to the Massey plant.

Inez Gallimore, an 82-year-old woman whose granddaughter attended the elementary school, walked up to the security guard and asked for the plant superintendent to come down and accept a copy of the group's demands that Massey shut down the plant. When the superintendent refused, Gallimore sat down in the middle of the road, blocking trucks from entering or leaving the facility. When police came to arrest her, they had to help Gallimore to her feet, but not before TV cameras recorded her calling Massey Energy a "terrorist organization."

Activists protest peacefully outside a coal-processing plant in West Virginia.
Activists protest peacefully outside a coal-processing plant in West Virginia.
Photo: Antrim Caskey.
Three other protesters took the woman's place and were arrested. Three more followed.

In the end, the media coverage at the Marsh Fork rally prompted West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin (D) to promise he would put together an investigative team to look into the citizens' concerns. But seven days after that promise, on June 30, Massey received its permit to expand the plant.

An Ugly History


The history of resource exploitation in Appalachia, like the history of racial oppression in the South, follows a sinister logic -- keep people poor and scared so that they remain powerless. In the 19th century, mountain families were actually doing fairly well farming rich bottomlands. But populations grew, farms were subdivided, and then northern coal and steel companies started buying up much of the land, hungry for the resources that lay below. By the time the railroads reached headwater hollows like McRoberts, Ky., men had little choice but to sell their labor cheaply, live in company towns, and shop in overpriced company stores. "Though he might revert on occasion to his ancestral agriculture," wrote coal field historian Harry Caudill, "he would never again free himself from dependence upon his new overlords." In nearly every county across central Appalachia, King Coal had gained control of the economy, the local government, and the land.

In the decades that followed, less obvious tactics kept Harlan County one of the poorest places in Appalachia. Activist Teri Blanton, whose father and brother were Harlan County miners, has spent many years trying to understand the patterns of oppression that hold the Harlan County high-school graduation rate at 59 percent and the median household income at $18,665. "We were fueling the whole United States with coal," she said of the last hundred years in eastern Kentucky. "And yet our pay was lousy, our education was lousy, and they destroyed our environment. As long as you have a polluted community, no other industry is going to locate there. Did they keep us uneducated because it was easier to control us then? Did they keep other industries out because then they can keep our wages low? Was it all by design?"

Whether one detects motive or not, this much is clear: 41 years after Lyndon Johnson stood on a miner's porch in adjacent Martin County and announced his War on Poverty, the poverty rate in central and southern Appalachia stands at 30 percent, right where it did in 1964. What's more, maps generated by the Appalachian Regional Commission show that the poorest counties -- those colored deep red for "distressed" -- are those that have seen the most severe strip mining and the most intense mountaintop removal.

There is a galling irony in the fact that the 14th Amendment, which was designed to protect the civil liberties of recently freed African slaves, was later interpreted in such a way as to give corporations like Massey all of the rights of "legal persons," while requiring little of the accountability that we expect of individuals. Because coal companies are not individuals, they often operate without the moral compass that would prevent a person from contaminating a neighbor's well, poisoning the town's drinking water, or covering the local school with coal dust. This situation is compounded by federal officials who often appear more loyal to corporations than to citizens. Consider the case of Jack Spadaro, a whistle-blower who was forced out of his job at the U.S. Department of Labor's Mine Safety and Health Administration precisely because he tried to do his job -- protecting the public from mining disasters.

When the Buffalo Creek dam in West Virginia broke in 1972, Spadaro, a young mining engineer at the time, was brought in to investigate. He found that the flood could have been prevented by better dam construction, and he spent the next 30 years of his career at MSHA investigating impoundment dams. So when a 300-million-gallon slurry pond collapsed in Martin County, Ky., in 2000, causing one of the worst environmental disasters this side of the Mississippi, Spadaro was again named to the investigating team. What he found was that Massey had known for 10 years that the pond was going to break. Spadaro wanted to charge Massey with criminal negligence.

There was only one problem. Elaine Chao, Spadaro's boss at the Department of Labor, is also Kentucky Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell's wife; and it is McConnell, more than anyone else in the Senate, who advocates that corporations are persons that, as such, can contribute as much money as they want to electoral campaigns. It turns out that Massey had donated $100,000 to a campaign committee headed by McConnell. Not surprisingly, Spadaro got nowhere with his charges. Instead, someone changed the lock on his office door and he was placed on administrative leave.

Spadaro's story seems to validate what many coal-field residents have been contending for years -- that the very agencies that should be regulating corporations are instead ignoring the law, breaking the law, and at times even rewriting the law in their favor, as when deputy secretary of the Department of the Interior (and former coal lobbyist) Steven Griles instructed his staff to rewrite a key provision of the Clean Water Act to reclassify all waste associated with strip mining as merely benign "fill material." A federal judge rejected that change, arguing that "only the United States Congress can rewrite the Act to allow fills with no purpose or use but the deposit of waste," but the change was upheld in 2003 by the U.S. 4th Circuit Court -- on which sat John Roberts, the recently appointed chief justice of the Supreme Court.

Terrorizing Little Old Ladies


On July 8, I was standing in Richmond, Va.'s Monroe Park, next to a pretty girl with pierced lips and colorful yarn braided into her blond hair, as Mountain Justice activists prepared to march 10 blocks to the headquarters of Massey Energy to demand the closure of the prep plant behind Marsh Fork Elementary School.

In The Same Vein
Coal Miner's Slaughter
West Virginia activist Julia Bonds takes on mountaintop-removal mining
Short, gray-haired Julia Bonds stepped to the mike and told the crowd, "I'm honored to be here with you. We're an endangered species, we hillbillies. Massey Energy is terrorizing us in Appalachia. Little old ladies in their 70s can't even sit on their porches. They have to cut their grass wearing respirators. That's how these people have to live. The coal companies are the real terrorists in America. And we're going to expose them for the murdering, lying thieves that they are."

With that, the marchers started down Franklin Ave., behind a long banner stretching across the street that read: INDUSTRIAL CAPITALISM KILLS OUR LAND AND PEOPLE. They marched on past blooming crepe myrtle trees and exclusive clubs. Then they hung a right, and suddenly we were all standing in front of a granite-and-concrete monolith that had been cordoned off with yellow tape.

Don Blankenship is the CEO of Massey, a man that many feel has dubious access to the Bush administration. Records show that from 2000 to 2004, whenever MSHA Assistant Secretary David Lauriski weakened a mine safety standard, it usually followed a meeting with Blankenship.

The stated goal of the Richmond march was to get Blankenship to personally accept Mountain Justice's demand that Massey shut down the prep plant next to the Marsh Fork Elementary School. Of course, everyone knew that wasn't going to happen.

This Wouldn't Go on in New England


On April 9, 1963, snarling police dogs pinned a black protester to the ground on a Birmingham, Ala., street. The New York Times was there to report it. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference were ecstatic. "We've got a movement, we've got a movement!" one member exclaimed. "They brought out the dogs." Without the arrests in Birmingham, and the press that followed, John Kennedy would not have pushed for the Civil Rights Act, and without daily attempts to register black voters in Selma, and the violence that followed, Lyndon Johnson would have dragged his feet for years on the Voting Rights Act. King and the SCLC knew they needed numbers and they needed confrontation. They needed Bull Connor's dogs and Selma sheriff James Clark's police batons coming down on the heads of older African Americans. They needed to call out, for all to see, the people who enforced brutal oppression every day in the South.

In their own way, Mountain Justice activists worked hard to expose the injustice spreading across the coal fields of Appalachia. Through nonviolent actions and demonstrations, they attempted to show the nation how coal companies break the law with a pathological consistency and operate with little regard for the human consequences of their actions. But on the national stage, Mountain Justice Summer couldn't compete with high gas prices and a foreign war, even though it is precisely that war over oil that is driving coal demands higher and laying mountains lower faster. That plus the fact that U.S. energy consumption increased 42 percent over the last 30 years. Urban affluence and this country's shortsighted energy policy are making Appalachia a poorer place -- poorer in beauty, poorer in health, poorer in resources, and poorer in spirit.

"This wouldn't go on in New England," Jack Spadaro told me last July, up at Larry Gibson's place. It wouldn't go on in California, nor Florida, nor along the East Coast. After the '60s, America and the mainstream media seemed to lose interest in the problems of Appalachia. Though the Martin County slurry pond disaster was 20 times larger than the Exxon Valdez spill, The New York Times ignored it for months. But the seeming invisibility of the people in Appalachia does not make their plight any less real.

That the civil-rights movement happened so recently in our country's history can seem dumbfounding, but not to the people who still live in the shadow of oppression. Those who live in the path of the coal industry -- beneath sheared-off mountains, amid unnatural, treeless landscapes, drinking poisoned water and breathing dirty air -- are fighting their own civil-rights battle. And, as in the past, justice may be slow coming to the mountains of Appalachia. But justice delayed could mean the ruin of a place that has sacrificed much for this nation, and has received next to nothing in return.


See the faces of the people fighting against mountaintop-removal mining.

Orion Online.
You can read more about mountaintop-removal mining at OrionOnline.

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Erik Reece's book Lost Mountain: Radical Strip Mining and the Devastation of Appalachia has just been published by Riverhead Books. Reece teaches at the University of Kentucky, where he is codirector of the Summer Environmental Writing Program.
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Defining our world...

Perhaps it's difficult for those who want to believe that Republicans and Bush and all those that follow that path don't care about people.  They talk a great game about values... but ultimately don't those values have more to do with their own personal acquisition?  If nothing else, doesn't someone need to concede that their idea of definitions for some pretty important words and ideals are different from most of the rest of us?

Consider that they define hunting as being something akin to your drunk uncle going into a pasture with a gun to shoot a cow that his buddy is pointing out to him.  Essentially the 'hunting' of Dick Cheney was essentially this... compromised, tamed birds pointed out by outriders and dogs for the convenience of the 'hunters'.

Now consider that they consider this strip mining important enough to compromise and perhaps take the lives of virtually every person in the entire region.  Would they be among the first to speak up about how horribly the Native Americans were treated by the Western Europeans 100+ years ago?  How is this different?  The culture of these people was completely altered by the arrival of coal mining and it is dangerously close to being destroyed entirely.

Finally, take a moment to recognize that if this is how they view 'hunting' and 'coal mining'.... what would be the parameters of war?  Does this help put the Iraq situation into context?  Does it help us to understand why the Iraqi people (and all of the Middle East) are so upset?  Does it seem not only possible, but dammmed likely that many of the accusations leveled at the treatment of the Iraqis at the hands of the Americans is true?

Before anyone blindly agrees to how "Christian" this administration is... perhaps we need to recognize how they must define that term as well.  It clearly has NOTHING to do with Love Thy Neighbor.

Julie Hensley Greeneville, TN

strip mining article

Instead of fluff stories about Survivor and what movie star is doing what, why aren't the morning shows covering stories like this? This is a great but disturbing article. We are all accountable in a way because of our dependence on fossil fuels.

Satan/Carbon: same word? www.ravings.biz

Prince of Darkness
by
Timothy K. Price
1.
Ol' Satan Coal
Down in his hole
Every past soul
There collected.
2.
Cast to thier graves,
Anthocited slaves
In these last days
Are resurrected.
3.
In furnaces to burn
Power to churn
Engines that turn
The generators
Chorus
Prince of Darkness
Unseen ruler of men,
He who has dominion
Over all the Earth
Prince of Darkness
Unseen ruler of men
Who will have the strength
To turn away from him?
4.
Satan Deceiver
Powers receivers
Watts for believers of
Electronic lies.
5.
Lucifer, Light Bearer
Bringer of error
Fmine, war, and terror,
Ol' fossil fuels.
6.
Higher he flies
Into the skies
Making temperatures rise
Climate change.
Chorus
7.
His name, if  you're able
by the periodic table,
The Beast in the fable
Numbered, 6-6-6.
8.
6 Neutrons at his heart,
6  Protons to start;
6  Electrons apart,
Carbon is the Beast
Chorus
9.
The number, his name,
 the credit card game,
tattoos your brain
to buy or sell
10
Last judgement negleted
 To judge, as expected,
Those  resurrected
 But the living instead.
11
Whose power for greed
Ignored all the need
Got fat on the feed
from slave labor.
chorus
12
Ol' Satan Coal
Down in his hole
Every past soul
There collected.
13.
Cast to thier graves,
Anthocited slaves
In these last days
Are resurrected.
14
 I say each time
I go into the mine
Lord, Let the sun shine
 On me again.

Chorus

satan/carbon

This is a wonderful song, by Timothy.  It would frighten me to hear it set to music.

And it already frightens me to know what is going on in West Virginia and Kentucky, with the government not only turning a blind eye but actually assisting the extraction industries everywhere, and the local people being disgracefully neglected.  The Orion photographs are most eloquent.  Too bad that too few see them.  And we who see them are already persuaded.

Chickens deserve our true friendship! So do fish! So do other sentient beings! Let us learn to be kind.

environmental justice

My undergraduate thesis was focused on this very subject: environmental justice in the coal fields. The most difficult question I found, and one that is at the core of most environmental justice battles, is how do we sacrifice jobs for the environment?

While coal mining has employed declining numbers of Appalachians for decades, it is still a major player in many eastern Kentucky communities. I believe that there are other opportunities for employment in the region that have yet to be fully explored (eco-tourism and recreation are at the top of the list), but that's not going to happen overnight. A common response I got from residents in these communities was, "The coal companies may be dirt bastards, but at least I got a job."

Coal mining can be done in less-destructive, more environmentally friendly ways, but the chances of coal companies using those methods without being forced to by the government are about as good as Bush joining Amnesty International.

RE:Moving Mountains

Reality Check

    Never was much of a reader, always would just wait until the movie come out. Early in life they made you read some stuff in school. I don't know if they still do or not, when considering the current intellectual condition of the general public a case could be made that they don't. Now there is a statement that will endear a lot of readers right off the bat. No I am not saying every body out there is stupid. We all just spend an inordinate amount of time watching TV instead of reading a book every now and then. Somebody made me read "Alice in Wonderland" years ago, I am just now understanding the weird symbolisms and the bazaar theme of that book especially the talking animals. It seems like I just fell down the rabbit hole sometimes when I look at what is going on around me. It's becoming a visual media world made up of sound bits and slick visual productions produced by the Madison Avenue Ad men. Condensed down to a 60 second theatrical productions meant to sell you something or alter your opinion in one minute or less. Its very effective and they make millions with it because they know that from the baby boom generation on that electronic baby sitter called a TV has numbed the brains of two generations. The total mind control has even bled over into the News Program's they don't just report the news anymore. They have to do a commentary and explain to you what you just heard or watched. TV has dummied down our cognitive process to the point they have to explain to you what you just heard or watched, or at least their version of it. The reasons corporations spend millions on an Ad in the visual media to alter a view or make whatever they are selling more socially acceptable instead of using the print media is simple. They don't want you to think about what you are watching or what they are selling.
    Case in point a slick little commercial Walker/Cat is running right now to promote Mountain Top Removal and Hollow Fill. STOP! I know what you are thinking this article is going to be a big long one against Mountain Top Removal and Hollow Fills; it is not. I have a lot of friends that make a living on strip jobs, either on them or hauling coal away from them. I am not anti-coal, that particular type of mining maybe but just because I don't have to do it to feed my family, a lot of my friends do. We don't judge each other by what we do. I have done the other types of mining but that is neither here nor there. The coal corporations have had their foot on our throats down here for generations. We do what we have to do to eat. We will not let them polarize the community and pit one group against another. I have friends who work on the strip jobs that feel just as I do, they would rather do the original contour stripping. It takes longer, more job security and they take a lot of pride in what they do. It takes more skill to put that over burden back on the original contour than it does to just push over into a valley. No one goes to work everyday thinking I'm doing a valley fill. They are thinking about making house payments, paying utility bills and feeding their family, just like the rest of us. They also know the coal is what keeps the lights on for all of us.
     That Ad is as insulting to them as it is to the whole county. To think we would do hollow fills just because a cartoon bug told us to. It is an insult to their intelligence and ours. We do what we have to do to eat. We do as we always have done. Take any bone they throw us and try to scratch out a living with it. Just don't insult our intelligence with that stupid commercial and leave us a little dignity. That commercial may fly in West Virginia but you have to know thanks to the efforts of the tax payers and the Pike County School System most of us have at least an 8th grade education. Some of us spent two years there so that should make us twice as smart. The reason you don't come into the print media is not because of cost, it's actually a lot cheaper. It is because you would have to explain why an owl can't come back to a hollow fill or even a possum. You don't need to have experienced the soundless flight of a large owl at night as it catches a mouse by hearing it a hundred feet away in the dark. You do have to understand it hunts from and nests in trees. It has to have a tree in order for it to come back after the hollow fill. Even the old possum hangs by its prehensile tail, "FROM A TREE". I guess the point they are trying to make is don't stop a hollow fill because of some endangered species bug. They use a cartoon from the insect world, as most people just don't like bugs and who cares about an insect. It would be a harder case to make if all the creatures in the valley were on that court bench in real or animated form saying don't worry we will be back to the valley after the hollow fill.  They should have used a crow or wood hen          " that's really just a souped up woodpecker", loudest mouth in the forest. They bust more deer and turkey hunters than Fish & Game. If they had used a crow they would have every deer hunter in the county on their side. All of them have been ratted out by a crow, crows are to them what pigeon's are to New Yorker's, Sky Rats. Maybe a big cartoon copperhead or rattler might make us more inclined to get a valley filled and get rid of the snakes.
     Seriously, what they think they know about the culture is what makes them makes them stupid. They targeted the people who are fixed in front of a TV in some kind of Reality Show stupor. Thinking even if there is not a football or a UK game on no one will just snap out of it and say Hey! That's a cartoon bug and it's telling me its OK to do Mountain Top Removal and Hollow Fills. It will never dawn on them that real bugs can't talk. Oh, most of us have someone we know with the DT's and they say they see talking bugs but we take them down to the Hope Center and get them dried out. In general most of us know that bugs can't really talk. What will get them busted out is the print media; some one will see the commercial and write an article about it. Other papers will pick it up and it will run down to Lexington. AP will pick it up and it will run national or it will end up in some liberal Environmentalist Magazine. More likely it will show up on one of a Dozen online sites where environmentalist hang out and spread from there. Some tree hugging liberal who is just back from the Artic with Green Peace chasing Whales will read about it in mother earth news and burn them a new one. The Environmental Groups have money also and might decide to make some commercials of their own. Target the same demographic group you did with cartoon animals only to promote their cause. How would they like to see one with all the little cartoon animals crying, bags packed and leaving the Valley just before a valley fill? How about the one where Bambi don't get shot, but it shows a big D-9 Dozer covering him up?
      If you can come up with an argument that will stand the light of day in the print media you may get by the 10% who are still conscious. You had better because if you are going to spend all your advertising money with visual media you could be giving the print media an incentive to let everyone out there know that bugs can't really talk. If nothing else come down here and let us see if your TV AD will pass the print litmus test before you spend millions on it. If it seems as plausible on TV as it would in print you got yourself a winner. Your PR man sucks. We can fill these valleys for you "git er done" we have to eat. We should not have to run your Public Relations for you and do your advertising.  That's degrading and ads insult to injury. When you go on TV you draw attention to Mountain Top Removal and Valley Fills. It was out of sight and out of mind. You people don't even have enough sense to keep your mouth shut and stay off the airways. All press is not good press. This is one of the things on my "Bucket List", just like the movie. Before I kick the bucket I thought I would let everybody know that bugs can't really talk. If you are trying to target the young with cartoons to condition them for your long term Mountain Top Removal and Valley Fill plans, run them during the Saturday morning TV cartoon slot for kids. This may be a stretch but lets assume you have a few people down here with maybe a slighter higher degree of education than 1st grade and come up with something more mature for prime time.
    That is a must for all of us in order to keep us out of the rabbit hole. I was right in the middle of a UK Game when the little woman come through the house with some bills in her hand. She said; looks like we may be getting some premium creep on our car insurance, been with them a while. Why don't you check some rates? Right! I will get right on it, middle of first half here. Half time I went to check my email and well what the heck pull up a quote. I reach it to her right before 2nd half started she looked at it but said nothing until after the game was over. Did you compare coverage and premiums rates on a few of these she ask? No, just pulled up a popular one I see all the time on TV. She come over and sit in my lap and give me a big hug, Honey do remember last week when we had the little talk about the Easter Bunny, THAT LIZARD AIN'T REAL!

The eons of time and nature was good to us down here. It was not until we become civilized that destroying our habitat become fathomable or fashionable.

Moving Mountains, Miser Mining

     They come from old Virginia to the wilderness Kentucky the dark and bloody ground. They were landed and independent Scotch Irish, English and later German stock. The large land grants made them rich in their own way but the isolation and heritage made them clannish. The civil war divided them since most were just one generation removed from old Virginia they took a Rebel Stand, more for states rights than anything else for the land was tamed by the work of their own hands and the sweat of their own brow. That war left them poor and divided and those that took a rebel stand lost much. Weakened and desperate they cut the virgin timber first. Rough men who sawed then floated the log rafts down river to Cattlesburg or Ashland Ky. The country was starved for coal especially in the North East; the price had raised three fold. The North East interest come in and stole the mineral paying pennies on the acre for black gold. They owned the product and the means of production after that. They owned the towns, the company houses, the company stores, the newspapers and you had to sign a no union contract in order to work. They even printed their own money called script only good at the company store.
    Local labor could not fill the need so they hired the immigrants from up north to first build the railroads into the mountains and then to mine the coal. Afro-Americans were also hired to work the mines. Long hours and low pay, terrible working conditions, you complained you were fired. A hundred men waiting to take your place, and the place of the hundreds that died each year in the mines. Northern West Virginia was organized first by the United Mine Workers from the northern coal producing states. They were getting 30% more pay and a shorter workday. When they tried to cross the mountains and unionize the southern coalfields it started what we call the mine wars. The coal Corporations owned the law and hired a large private army of thugs called the Baldwin Felts Detective agency. We had the Matawan Massacre and the battle of Blair Mountain where they actually use airplanes to bomb the miners who where trying to cross the mountain to unionize the coalfields. They fought from the twenties through the forties to unionize the coalfield only to lose it all by the 1990's in the Kentucky Coal Fields.
    The drift and shaft mines employed thousands and if you were lucky enough to get a union job the living was fair according to mountain standards. Then the stripping started in Muhlenberg County and Mr. Peabody's brought the large shovels in and showed us a new type of mining. When Mr. Peabody's coal train had hauled Muhlenberg away and ruined the Green River he moved into the mountains of East Kentucky and others followed. By the 70's it had taken its toll even with the old requirements of having to put the mountains back on the original contour. Oh! They never took a tree inventory, just laid a little topsoil over to the side and pushed the overburden back up on the mountain to close the original contour. They spread the topsoil back on and sprayed a weed mix on it, called it reclamation. They started using some autistic accounting practices and figured if you just shoved the overburden into a valley you could save mega bucks. The current administration has went along with it and now instead of freakish bald mountains you have mountains with now with no peaks and with the valley between them filled level with the blasted off peak or flat to flat as the case may be.  I call it miser mining or scrooge stripping because they are just unabashedly cheap.
    It is not just a ruined mountain; that is the point of this lengthy saga. You destroy two mountains and one valley with a mountain top removal and a hollow fill. The valley is just a receptacle for the debris or overburden blasted and bulldozed into the valley. Those valleys most times are teaming with aquatic, tree, plant, herb, bird and animal life. It is a crime against nature and a crime against humanity. A crime against humanity because my decedents will never see this place as I have seen it, an almost identical vision as my father's seven generations ago. Paradise Lost.

The eons of time and nature was good to us down here. It was not until we become civilized that destroying our habitat become fathomable or fashionable.
Almost Level West Virginia

Take Me Home Country Roads
Revised

Almost level Heaven West Virginia
Cropped-ridge mountains strip job runoff-river
Life is odd there we don't have a tree
Mountain Top Removal Valley's filled with ease

Country roads take me home
To a place that's almost gone
West Virginia mountain mayhem
Take me home country roads

All my memories gather round her
Miner's lady stranger to polluted water
Dark and dusty, dust fills the sky
Mountain Top Removal, teardrops in my eye.

Country road take me home
To a place that's almost gone
West Virginia Mountain massacre
Take me home country roads

I can hear the Dozers in the morning it appalls me
The blasting reminds me of a war far away
Driven' down the road I get the feeling
That I should have stopped this yesterday, yesterday

Country roads take me home
To a place that's almost gone
West Virginia, mountains gone yah
Take me home country Roads

The eons of time and nature was good to us down here. It was not until we become civilized that destroying our habitat become fathomable or fashionable.

Blair Mountain

Anyone wanting an indepth look into the culture of the region and to get the feel of how far coal company's will go to protect their stangle hold on the people should research Blair Mountain WVA.

They are wanting to do a MTR of this historic site as much to demolish a symbol of resistance to ruthless coal barons as to get the coal from under the mountain.

The story takes a lot of tellin and would be to long to go into on a blog. I will tell you its a story of an armed resistance by coal miners living in sub-human conditions who banded together against the coal corporations and a major battle was fought on Blair Mountain.

The coal companies actually used airplanes and bombed the miners. Federal troops were brought in to squash the miners and the state prosecuted thousands of them.

I do not know why someone has not made a good movie of this, probably with the new homeland security department they would not want to show how far  government will go to support corporations.

Its a good read and an important part of the national labor movement of the time. At any rate I hope someone stops the plan to do a Mountain Top Removal on Blair Mountain. It would about like doing on MTR on Mount Rushmore down here. They should not be allowed to blow up one of our most important symbols of resistance to corporate greed, and the collaboration of the state and federal government with big corporations to suppress the people.

The eons of time and nature was good to us down here. It was not until we become civilized that destroying our habitat become fathomable or fashionable.

Under the Microscope

Under the Microscope

    It used to be because of our isolation from the rest of the country we might as well have been part of the Amazon Jungle or deepest darkest Africa. News about this area traveled slowly and was most times incorrect. The stereotypical hillbilly was cast in northeastern newspapers mainly because of the sensationalism and yellow press reporting of the Hatfield & McCoy feud. The English, Scots-Irish and German descendants who come into East Kentucky from old Virginia were somewhat clannish because of their isolation and the culture they brought with them from the old country. However if you do an in depth study of the region you will find that for the most part people here were as civilized as they were in other parts of the country.
     This stereotype is perpetuated in films and documentaries created by some liberal organizations that come in here and live off grant money and corporate donors. The money is most time given in a genuine desire to help the area and not intended for the specific purpose of embarrassing us or showing us in a bad light. One organization over in Whitesburg Ky. will make a film documentary after digging up the most severe situation to build their film around and present it as if the whole regions lives like this. They do us a genuine disservice and other than stroking their own liberal ego's waste of lot of money that could be put to a greater good.
     I know that TV and the Movie's have always done as much to perpetuate this image as much as else and that people are conditioned now to believing what has been presented about this region as the way it actually is. However it is doing us great harm now as most of the country sees us as a backwater uneducated mountain region occupied by slovenly clad illiterate hillbilly's who spend most their time drinking moonshine and feudin. That image now is being replaced by pill snorting methheads whose only goal in life is to draw a check and stay stoned. Again some liberal do good'ers think they are going to make a documentary that will get them some kind of award at the Sundance film festival.
     I am hoping at some point the country will start taking us seriously and will actually admit that we are a part of this country's history and legacy. The legacy I hope will not be the one of an environmental disaster that was allowed to happen to a region because nobody actually cared what went on down there. Robert Kennedy comes down here to highlight poverty in the region during his brother's run for president. Lyndon Johnson actually did something about it with his great society program and his war on poverty.  By in large the area has not had much positive media attention since that era.
    I fear the next time the national media and consciousness turns to the East Kentucky and West Virginia coal fields we will be just a shadow of our former ecological self. The deciduous forest filled with abundant wildlife and clear mountain streams are under assault from large coal corporations who see only us in the light of the afore mentioned stereotype. Most of the mineral is owned by out of state interest, as are most of the large coal corporations. They have the large budgets dedicated to promoting Mountain Top Removal and Valley Filling as being beneficial to the economy locally and coal being the alternative to oil as the energy source of the future nationally. The local spots are simplistic in nature with little cartoon bugs saying they can come back to a Valley Fill after the valley is filled. Another one is how much we need the flat land they create for us in order to obtain some industrial complex or housing development site. We have had enough flat land created for us by them now to put every default mortgage property on that was created by the sub-prime housing melt down. We have enough flat land to fulfill the industrial needs of China if they wanted to build here, since we don't actually build anything anymore and nothing industrial has ever been built on one yet we are becoming to be a little suspicious of the argument. They forget to tell the natives down in dogpatch that it takes millions of dollars to develop an industrial site even if someone needs one. A piece of hard packed flat land with a little weed mix sprayed on it is hardly a Christmas gift. Of course the national commercial productions are a little slicker and sophisticated but they fail to show the nation where the coal is coming from or how they are mining it.
     It will only be through environmental organizations that counter this message can the land here can be saved. I am hoping the collective public relations assets of all the environmental groups can start doing something on the national level to highlight what is being done to this region. I applaud what certain organizations are doing legally and how all environmentalists are keeping abreast of the problem on blog sites between themselves. I feel however the national consciousness needs to be pinched much as it was done in the civil rights era in order for the country to get more emotional about it. The crowning jewel of public relations would be for someone to take up the cause in a national presidential election much as the Kennedy's or Johnson did. Due to our sparse population and voting base I do not see the Mountain Top Removal cause being taken up in the near future.
   If a presidential candidate would take it up even as a peripheral problem connected with coal Co2 emissions being the prime culprit I feel it would augment his/her argument for alternative clean fuel technology if that is part of their platform. It would also highlight this ecological disaster that is occurring in East Kentucky and West Virginia. I will reiterate, the nation needs to see the region for what it is and they need to see Mountain Top Removal for what it is. I believe the national consciousness will be so repulsed by it that a changed will forced at the federal level to stop it. Even on the legal front I believe it will make litigation against coal corporations more effective.


The eons of time and nature was good to us down here. It was not until we become civilized that destroying our habitat become fathomable or fashionable.

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