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Press Release |
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October 22, 2008
Contacts:
Vivian Stockman, Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, 304-522-0246
Vernon Haltom, Co-Director, Coal River Mountain Watch, 304-541-1080
Cindy Rank, West Virginia Highlands Conservancy, 304-924-5802
Jim Sconyers, Sierra Club, West Virginia Chapter, 603-969-6712
Sierra Club and Local Communities Seek to Stop
Destructive Mining
Fola mine would destroy streams, forests, threaten community
HUNTINGTON, WV - A coalition of local and
national environmental groups today challenged plans for two
mountaintop removal mines in West Virginia that would pollute
waters, destroy forested mountains, and harm the quality of life for
local communities. Proposed by the Fola Coal Company, the mines
threaten large areas of Nicholas and Clay counties.
Together, the two mines would bury more than five miles of streams
in the Sycamore Run, Ike Fork, and Lilly Fork watersheds of Buffalo
Creek. By the Army Corps of Engineers' ("the Corps") own estimates,
two-thirds of the streams in the Lilly Fork watershed and 20 percent
of the streams in the Buffalo Creek watershed have already been
harmed by mining activities in the past.
"Either the Corps can't add two and two, or doesn't know what
'cumulative impacts' means, or something really rotten is going on,"
said Vivian Stockman, project coordinator for the Huntington-based
Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition. "Because, to issue these
permits, the Corps had to ignore its own findings on the counties'
already-impacted waterways."
The mines would also destroy 903 acres of some of the most
biologically diverse streams and forests in the country.
In addition to concern over the environmental impacts of the mines,
the coalition is challenging the Corps' failure to allow the public
to participate in the permitting process.
"It's ironic that citizens are often criticized for taking their
complaints to the news media and to the streets, while often, as in
this case, we are cut out of the administrative and permitting
process by the agencies," said Cindy Rank of the West Virginia
Highlands Conservancy. "The laws insist that the public be informed
and active participants in the permitting process and yet too often
we have to appeal to the courts to make those rights and
responsibilities accessible to us."
Across Appalachia, mining companies destroy mountains to reach the
underlying coal and then dump the resulting millions of tons of
debris into the valleys below. This mountaintop removal mining has
damaged or destroyed approximately 1,200 miles of streams, destroyed
forests on some 300 square miles of land, disrupted drinking water
supplies, flooded communities, and destroyed wildlife habitat.
"Mountaintop removal coal mining is an absolute catastrophe, one
that happens here in our backyard every day," said Jim Sconyers,
chair of the West Virginia Sierra Club. "Our members have seen it up
close; they're appalled, and determined that it must stop."
Data from mountaintop removal mine permits show that this
destructive form of mining will only provide jobs and energy for
another few years. When not irresponsibly strip mined, West
Virginia's mountains are home to some of the country's best wind
power potential, an energy source that will provide power and
long-term jobs for the foreseeable future.
"This destructive mine would provide only temporary jobs, while
permanently destroying any real, sustainable economic benefit from
the mountain and water resources," said Vernon Haltom, co-director
of Coal River Mountain Watch. "Destroying all other resources for
the sake of coal is a step backward when our state needs to move
forward with renewable energy projects that can bring about
sustainable economic development."
The coalition, including Sierra Club, Ohio Valley Environmental
Coalition, Coal River Mountain Watch, and West Virginia Highlands
Conservancy, is represented in this challenge by Joe Lovett at the
Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment and Jim
Hecker at Public Justice. The Fola Coal Company is a subsidiary of
Pittsburgh-based CONSOL Energy Inc. The coalition appeared in the
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of West Virginia today
to ask the court for a preliminary injunction after the Army Corps
of Engineers issued permits for the mines in violation of the Clean
Water Act and the National Environmental Protection Act.
www.ohvec.org
www.coalriverwind.org
www.wvhighlands.org
www.sierraclub.org/MTR
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