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Contents
Also see Web Extras

OVEC, Others Challenge Blair Mountain Mining Permit
Dont Let Area Power Plants Make Our Air Even Worse
Renewable Energy and a Renewed E-Council
Coal Expo Exposed:
Sludge is Not Safe
Coal Expo Exposed: Protesters Rally at Candlelight Vigil
Are Your US Senators and Reps Climate Champions?
Oberlin College Doing the Right Thing With Education
Bush Admin. Finalizes Mountain Massacre Study
Christians for the Mountains: Statement by Denise Giardina
Christians for the Mountains Spread Word of Responsible Earthkeeping And That Means an End to Mountaintop Removal
Massey Launches Total Environment Web Assault
Reckless Disregard: Settlement doesnt clear Massey, MSHA
Legal Victory! Judge Tosses OSM's Water Rule Approval
WV Passes Landmark Law Curbing 527 Groups
Capito Got Most
DeLay Money
Texas Congressman Kills National Renewable Energy Standard
Coal Industry Money Fuels Public Policy in West Virginia
Reports Detail
Senate Race Donors
Foxes Guarding Henhouse - Why We Need Real Campaign Finance Reform
Unclean Coal: Myth Perpetrators Get an Earful
Coal Very Costly, Not Cheap, If ALL Impacts Are Factored In
T H A N K S !
Update on Blair Mountain - Feds Want Still More Information
SouthWings Needs YOU!
WV Ranked 7th in Mercury Emissions
From Ireland to
Blair Mountain,
with Love and Lyrics
WV Singers and Songwriters Wanted for Blair Mountain Project
Rosa Parks Lights the Way
Holiday Shopping with OVEC
Students Pray for Kayford
Miscellany
Web Extras Below
Articles not in the printed newsletter
RENEWABLE FUTURE
Change or Die
Courage to Move Beyond Coal
Climate of Change: It's Easy to Save Money Being Green
Sequestration Smokescreen?
Massey settlement agreement scuttles insider trading allegations
Mining 'is turning Eastern Kentucky into a despicable latrine'
Ecoterrorism Tops the Charts
Human Activities Cause of Current Extinction Crisis
Kentucky needs study on truck weight limits
Meanwhile, elsewhere (jobs, money, renewable energy)
Mining pollution in Coal River needs drastic cut, state says
Not Nice to Wonder?
Things you can do for a better planet (while saving money!)
Where's the money for the Island Creek flood project?
Visiting Van, WV


For viewing the PDF version of the newsletter

 

Winds of Change Newsletter, December 2005     See sidebar for table of contents

 
Mountain residents eagerly line up for a sample (not free, of course) of King Coals latest gimmick SludgeAde! Good thing King Coal got his money up front, because this U.S. Army Corps of Engineers-approved drink had more than just a minimal impact, as shown below. Oh well, says King Coal ... Next!

Coal Expo Exposed - Protesters Rally at Candlelight Vigil

by Kristina Murrill, Marshall University Parthenon

Local residents and activists gathered Wednesday night (Oct. 19) to shed some light on the concerns of mountaintop removal.

Members of the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition (OVEC), Mountain Justice Summer and MUPeace met on Third Avenue in front of the Holiday Inn at 7 p.m. for a candlelight vigil for the mountains.

The vigil was part of a three-part series taking place this week to raise awareness of the dangers caused by coal sludge impoundments and mountaintop removal in the state.

William Dodson, an organizer of the event, said the location was chosen because of a coal expo the coal industry is having at the (Huntington area) Arena. He said one of the goals of the event is to heighten the communitys understanding of the subject.

Our goal is to raise awareness in the Huntington community, Dodson said. An event like this is outreach for future events and for people who need to know about mountaintop removal. My personal biggest goal is to let Joe Manchin know that were not going away.

Janet Keating, co-director of OVEC, said she wants everyone to be informed of the dangers surrounding mountaintop removal mining.

Its a rare opportunity to get our message out directly to the folks in the coal industry, she said. We want to make sure they understand that their practices, especially around coal impoundments, are really endangering communities and peoples lives and public safety, and were incredibly concerned about that.

 

Keating said while she was pleased with the support they were getting from the community, many still do not know much about the issue.

Its wonderful to see all the student support from Marshall University today and also the folks from Mountain Justice Summer who organized this, she said. I think OVEC is doing a pretty good job these days, trying to get the word out and so were doing what we can to make sure the people of West Virginia are waking up to the issues of mountaintop removal. Its not just destroying mountains. Entire communities are disappearing.

Ronda Harper, an OVEC member, said her family has been affected and torn apart by mountaintop removal in her area.

The property is where my mother, my grandmother, all my uncles played when they were children, she said. Its been there for almost 100 years and we hate to see all that filled in. Its almost the end of the world for the people who live in Mud River.

Chris Worth, a Marshall student pursuing his masters degree in painting, said it upsets him that large coal industries are still being encouraged in the state.

It amazes me that people still support a conglomerate like the coal king who doesnt really care about the people theyve been raping, he said. I use a word like rape because it is. Theyre not only extracting huge amounts of coal, but soul.
 

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