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March 2009
Contents

Residents Vent Concerns to DEP
Bush Midnight Rule Change Exposed to Sunlight of Justice
BLACK FRIDAY
Communities Must Organize to Win
Mining the Mountains
Dozens of Boone County Residents File Massive Lawsuit Against Eight Coal Mine Operators About Tainted Water

Coal Companies Cause Loss of Jobs, Not Environmentalists

Come CLEAN: The Citizens Energy Investment Act Needs You
Come Lobby With the Sludge Safety Project
Prenter Gets Funding to Bring Clean Water to the Community
All We Wanted Was Water
Sludge Safety Project Action Goals for the 2009 WV Legislative Session
Coal Slurry Poisons Water Supplies, State Agencies Do Nothing
Lobbying for Change - Now!
DEP Gets Earful on Permit Renewal for Marsh Fork
DEP Still Ducking Its Responsibility
Waste Ponds: An Industry Hazard
OVECs New Organizer Fights to Protect Family Cemetery
OVECs Cemetery Protection Bills Introduced at Legislative Session
Power Company Meets with Stakeholders
Notes from Maria Gunnoe, OVECs Boone County Organizer
Ashford Residents Comments to DEP - Spare Our Community
Why Not Wind?
WV Coal-Ash Dams Infrequently Inspected, DEP Admits
National Park Service Opposes MTR Permit Renewal on Gauley Mountain
Gimme FIVE! - For Clean Election Reforms in WV
Meet, Eat and Greet and Support Clean Elections
Get Active with Clean Elections in WV Now!
WV Residents Join with Indian Tribal Leaders to Protest OSM Actions
Burning the Future Coal in America
Kudos to OVEC
Coalfield Native Writes of Industrys Disregard for Environment 
Drinking Water Problems Obvious, Should Be Investigated
Eating For OVEC Keeps Raising $$$
Voices of Buffalo Creek: A Survivor Speaks Out
Air Quality Compared in Mining and Non-Mining Areas of West Virginia
NPR Interviews OVEC Members on Stream Buffer Zone Rule Change
Role of OVEC and CRMW in Helping with Coal Novel and Film
The Most Important Number on Earth is 350 - Heres Why
Hes a Coallllll Man
Hear This: We Dont Want Sludge in Our Water!
OSM Faults WV Dam Enforcement
SSHhhhhh!! What the Coal Lobby Wants Hidden
Valuing Ecosystem Services: Picturing an End for Mountaintop Removal
Rant on Rahall
Miscellany


For viewing the PDF version of the newsletter

 
Winds of Change Newsletter, March 2009     See sidebar for table of contents

Communities Must Organize to Win

 
OVEC board member and volunteer organizer Chuck Nelson speaks with Dutch media on Kayford Mountain.

OVEC board member and volunteer organizer Chuck Nelson sent this note to Ashford community members two days after the DEP hearing.

Jan. 8, 2009 - Just wanted to keep people in the loop of what has been going on since the hearing Tuesday night. I was very pleased with the turnout at the meeting. There were a lot of legitimate concerns brought up, and I hope that the DEP will take these concerns into consideration when making its decision. DEPs not listening to community members has been an ongoing problem at these informal hearings. Thats why I brought this to their attention Tuesday night.

I think while the energy level is still high we should have a community meeting as soon as possible. This is very important in organizing.

But I want everyone to know right off the bat that success doesnt come overnight. It takes extensive time in order to reach success. It depends on how much input and energy the community is willing to invest.

Its the residents who will bring about change, create how they want their communities to prosper.

Organizations can only offer support and resources. We have many other communities that are being impacted from mining. There is much work to be done on the state level, as well as the national level.

Believe me, we are fighting mountaintop removal and the abuses from coal continuously.

Successful tactics include talking to your neighbors, writing letters to your state and national representatives, drawing media attention to the effects mountaintop removal is having on our communities, telling our personal stories, lobbying politicians.

Flooding the local newspaper with letters to the editor is a great and effective tool. Taking photos with a still camera or a camcorder is undisputable, and carries a lot of weight. Documenting damage like structural and dust problems is a must.

Keep complaining to the DEP, too, even though you might think that this has no effect. Keep calling and demanding that the DEP do its job.

This fight is as tough a fight as you will ever encounter. But always keep in mind that this is your community, and you can determine what you want your community to be like.

Do not let anyone take away your heritage, your memories and your way of life. You are not expendable for the comfort of others, and thats exactly what is happening.

Dont be content with the idea that its "just the way it is." A contented person will never change anything. You have a voice, and you have power in your personal stories and history.

We all want our children, and their children, to have the same opportunity as we did. Dont let your community die and turn into a ghost town like so many nearby us have. Nows the time to say, "No more, we are going to preserve our communities, our heritage, our memories and our way of life."

Its going to take actions of all residents to participate and get involved. But it is imperative that we stay together, and to continue to have meetings if this community is going to be successful.

We organizers are here to help with support and resources, but if you wish to prevail, its going to have to come from within the community.

If you would like to lobby and have no way, let Robin, Maria (OVEC staffers), or me know, and well see that you get there, and I also want everyone to know that we will be there with you, whether it be in Charleston or in Washington.

Never give up and never quit fighting. If you should need to reach me, you can call me anytime.

 

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