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Press Release |
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October 10, 2007
Contact: Maria Gunnoe, Ohio Valley
Environmental Coalition (304) 522-0246
Judy Bonds, Coal River Mountain Watch (304) 854-2182
Cindy Rank, West Virginia Highlands Conservancy (304) 924-5802
Joe Lovett, Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment
(304) 645-9006
Jim Hecker, Public Justice (202) 797-8600
Judge Tells Big Coal: Stop Burying
Appalachian Streams
Residents successfully stop plans to bury streams, destroy homes
in West Virginia
Huntington, WV – A federal judge today
put a hold on coal company plans to permanently bury Appalachian
streams and threaten homes and neighborhoods in West Virginia by
granting a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction
against a mountaintop removal mine. A coalition of local
environmental groups challenged the permit on the heels of a major
court victory earlier this year against this destructive mining
practice.
In ruling that the mining cannot go forward at this time, federal
district Judge Robert C. Chambers noted that the environmental
groups "made a strong showing that the permits issued by the Corps
are arbitrary and capricious, contrary to law, and contrary to the
economic and environmental balance struck by Congress in the passage
of the relevant environmental statutes."
The proposed valley fills at the Callisto Mine in Boone County, West
Virginia, would have permanently destroyed 5,750 feet of streams and
tributaries of Roach Branch, Dry Branch and Lem White Branch of Pond
Fork in Boone County. These streams eventually flow into the Little
Coal River. The order, issued by the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of West Virginia, halts the mining company’s plan
to begin new valley fill activities at the site until the Court can
rule on the groups’ challenge to the Callisto permit.
"The judge just gave hope to other affected residents that live in
communities near this type of destructive illegal mining," said Judy
Bonds of Coal River Mountain Watch. "We have hope now that coal
companies will no longer be allowed to mine coal in our homes."
Mountaintop removal mining is a destructive form of coal mining that
has already buried more than 1,200 miles of streams and destroyed
over 387,000 acres of West Virginia forests and mountains.
Mountaintop removal mining also increases severe flooding in
communities near mining sites, making life utterly miserable for
coalfield residents. Families report sleepless nights and worried
children when rain threatens. Blasting damages foundations and dries
up wells, and property values plunge as mining operations approach
communities.
Bim resident Dorsey Green, whose home in the Dry Branch Hollow is
closest to the proposed valley fill, was relieved by the judge’s
decision.
"I am so thankful for this ruling. I've been a coal miner my whole
life and this valley fill would have destroyed my homeplace and
everything I have worked for," Green said. "I have spent many
sleepless nights thinking about the terrible representation we as a
community get from our regulatory agencies. This ruling will restore
my sleep --and my retirement years."
On March 23, the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, Coal River
Mountain Watch and the West Virginia Highlands Conservancy,
represented by Earthjustice, the Appalachian Center for the Economy
& the Environment and now Public Justice, won a victory in the same
case, when the Court rescinded four similar valley fill permits. The
Court ruled that the permits violated the Clean Water Act and the
National Environmental Policy Act. In particular, the Court found
that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers granted the permits without
adequately considering the environmental effects of the fills, and
without providing any scientific support for the Corps’ claim that
stream damage from the valley fills could be offset through "stream
creation." The Callisto Mine valley fill permit suffers many of the
same defects as the permits that the Court rescinded in March.
"Inch by inch, mile after mile, these illegal fills are changing the
face of West Virginia, burying valuable stream valleys and
destroying the lives of people who have lived in these valleys for
generations," said Cindy Rank of the West Virginia Highlands
Conservancy. "We are grateful for Judge Chambers ruling; no one
wants to put another person out of work but the promise of jobs
based on illegal permits is not fair either."
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