
Central Appalachia EJ Program
Bill Price: EJ Resource Coordinator
922 Quarrier Street
Suite 304
Charleston, WV 25301
304-342-3182
304-342-3183 (fax)
304-389-8822 (cell)
bill.price@sierraclub.org
Bill McCabe: EJ Organizer
726 Clinch Mountain Road
Eidson, TN 37731
423-944-3220
423-944-3221 (fax)
423-327-2820 (cell)
bill.mccabe@sierraclub.org
|
Regional Projects: Central Appalachia
Please
sign our petition opposing the destructive practice of mountaintop
removal mining.
Mining activists in Appalachia are some of the most dedicated people
in the world. They live in fear of blasting, flooding, overweight
coal trucks, and slurry releases and still they keep hope. There
is an old hymn that says, "Just like a tree that's planted by the
waters, I shall not be moved." In Appalachia, they have destroyed
the trees, polluted our water, cut off the tops of our mountains,
and blasted the foundations of our homes, but we will not be moved.
The goal of the Sierra Club's Central Appalachia Environmental
Justice site is to support the work of these activists in their
struggles against the irresponsible practices of the mining industry.
Working on behalf of the Sierra Club are environmental justice
organizers Bill Price and Bill McCabe.
The Central Appalachian program began on January 9, 2003. The first
year was focused on developing relationships with activist groups
throughout the site that encompasses parts of five states –
Pennsylvania, Ohio, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia – as
well as all of West Virginia.
Major Win Against Mountaintop Removal Mining in Kentucky
The Sierra Club’s first Kentucky MTR challenge produced immediate results. Shortly after we filed suit, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers suspended the permit for ICG Hazard’s Thunder Ridge mine in order to reconsider its approval in light of the claims we raised. Sierra Club and co-plaintiff Kentucky Waterways Alliance identified several legal deficiencies with the permit, including the Corps’ failure to explain its conclusion that burying several miles of streams would not degrade the waterways because the company would create replacement streams (even though attempts to recreate headwater streams have never been successful). The Corps also failed to demonstrate that the mining would not have any adverse effect on the environment. This victory will help protect drinking water quality for Kentuckians around the state and it represents the first time that the Army Corps has suspended one of its coal mining permits in Kentucky.
Learn more at the Environmental Law Program's website and the MTR homepage!
Video footage from Pikeville, KY Rally against "Liquid Coal"
At a time when we need to get on the path to achieving an 80 percent
reduction in our global warming emissions by 2050--an achievable annual
reduction of 2 percent--the level scientists tell us is necessary to avoid
the most catastrophic effects of global warming, business as usual is no
longer acceptable. Liquid coal produces nearly twice the global warming
pollution as conventional fuel and does not address supply side concerns
about mountaintop removal coal mining. This rally was organized by Kentuckians for the Commonwealth.
Check out the video
Learn more about liquid coal
Read the new Sierra Club report: The Dirty Truth
About Coal:
Why Yesterday's Technology Should Not Be Part of Tomorrow's Energy Future
New Film Chronicles Faith Community's Fight against Mountaintop Removal
Mining
A new film by B.J. Gudmundsson and Patchwork Films, "Mountain Mourning,"
explores the devastating effects of Mountaintop Removal mining in Central
Appalachia. With devastating footage of the battered landscapes, the film
also highlights the connection of the Appalachian people to their land. This
destructive method for extracting coal by clearning and blasting beautiful
mountaintops to expose their minerals is a tragedy. The Sierra Club and
other organizations are working to end this practice.
Check out the trailer for "Mountain Mourning."

Mountaintop
Removal Mining -- In this devastating form of mining,
hundreds of feet of dirt, plants, and rock above a coal seam
are blasted
off and dumped over the side of the mountain.
Blair
Mountain -- Despite widespread
efforts to preserve this valuable place as a historic
site, a mountaintop-removal permit is pending on land where
parts of a famous battle occurred here.

Meet
the organizers for our Appalachian Environmental Justice campaign,
Bill Price and Bill McCabe.
Read
the profiles of Appalachian activists who are making a difference.
View
a slideshow that shows you the mountaintop trouble faced
by the people of West Virginia. (You'll
need Flash.)
The
battle for justice comes to the coal fields of Appalachia. Read
the article by Erik Reece on anti-mountaintop removal mining activism. In
the January/February 2006 Orion magazine
Check out other resources about mining
in Appalachia.
I Love Mountains (End Mountaintop Removal Resource Center)
Ohio Valley Environmental
Coalition (OVEC)
Save Our Cumberland
Mountains (SOCM)
Kentuckians For The
Commonweath(KFTC)
Mountain Watershed Association
(MWA)-
J4CAW
Tristate
Citizen Mining Network (TSCMN)-
Appalachian Voices
(AppVoices)
Coal River Mountain
Watch (CRMW)
Appalachian Voices
Sludge Safety Project
Southern Appalachia Mountain Stewards (SAMS), contact SAMS,
c/o Pete
Ramey, 1414 Valley View Dr., Big Stone Gap, VA. 24219, phone 276-523-2772,
e-mail carlramey@hotmail.com
Up to Top
HOME |
Email Signup |
About Us |
Contact Us |
Terms of Use |
© 2008 Sierra Club
|