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Historic Appalachian Communities Health Emergency Act Introduced in Congress for Mountaintop Removal Moratorium

Posted: 06/19/2012 5:06 pm

Recognizing the mounting humanitarian crisis from mountaintop removal mining in the Appalachian coalfields, Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) and Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY) joined Congressional representatives from across the nation today and introduced H.R. 5959, The Appalachian Communities Health Emergency (ACHE) Act. The historic bill places "a moratorium on permitting for mountaintop removal coal mining until health studies are conducted by the Department of Health and Human Services."

"The ACHE Act will stop new mountaintop removal coal mines until the science clearly demonstrates the mines will not cost these hard working communities their health or their lives. It will also fund some of the best researchers in the world to carry out that science," Kucinich said.

Over the past few years, as impacted coal mining residents have pleaded for basic civil rights and environmental protection, around 20 peer-reviewed studies have suggested higher risks and links between reckless strip mining and devastating health impacts, including birth defects, cancer and chronic heart, lung, and kidney disease. (A report released last week noted that strip miners are even subjected to unacceptable levels of black lung disease.)

"Today marks a new but long overdue journey in the pursuit of justice for the victims of mountaintop removal mining," said Bo Webb, the 2010 Purpose Prize recipient with the Appalachian Community Health Emergency group, who lives under a mountaintop removal operation in West Virginia and has often testified to the toxic fallout of silica dust and heavy metals.

But this long overdue pursuit of justice for the victims of mountaintop removal did not come from the notoriously Big Coal-bankrolled representatives in the Congressional districts impacted most by mountaintop removal; just last month, in fact, Rep. Hal Rogers (R-KY) and Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV), among others, had retired coal miners and effected citizens arrested in their offices for attempting to simply discuss the health crisis.

Nearly four decades ago, eastern Kentucky author Harry Caudill pleaded with outside members of Congress to intervene on massive strip mining operations in his central Appalachian region. "West Virginia, for example, has its own congressmen and its own senators who do nothing, say nothing, advocate nothing, see nothing wrong," Caudill told an told an interviewer. "It always takes someone like a man named Ken Hechler from New York or a man named John Kennedy from Massachusetts to notice that West Virginia is dying on the vine."

Thanks to Rep. Kucinich, Rep. Slaughter and Kentucky Rep. John Yarmuth, among others, Congress -- and the Obama administration -- must now finally take notice of one of the most egregious humanitarian and environmental crises in the nation.

"As certain people of the Eastern Kentucky coalfields helped me to understand nearly 50 years ago, the fate of the land and the fate of the people are inseparable," renowned Kentucky author Wendell Berry wrote in support of the congressional Act. "Whatever affects the health of the land must affect the health of the people. From that understanding, it is clear that the measures called for in the ACHE Act should have been enacted many years ago. Granted even a minimal concern for the health of the land and people, and even minimal respect for the findings of science, the need for this bill now is obvious."

Led by a movement of affected Appalachian coalfield organizations, the ACHE Act has the backing of the major environmental groups in Washington, D.C., including Earthjustice and the Sierra Club, as well as West Virginia Highlands Conservancy, the Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and Southern Appalachian Mountain Stewards.

"The ACHE Act is a clear demand on behalf of people being poisoned by mountaintop removal that the poisoning cease and that we be afforded all the protections available to the rest of America," said Bob Kincaid, board president of the Coal River Mountain Watch. "We refuse to be the coal industry's sacrificial victims for even another instant."

 
 
 
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Recognizing the mounting humanitarian crisis from mountaintop removal mining in the Appalachian coalfields, Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) and Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY) joined Congressional representa...
Recognizing the mounting humanitarian crisis from mountaintop removal mining in the Appalachian coalfields, Rep. Dennis Kucinich (D-OH) and Rep. Louise Slaughter (D-NY) joined Congressional representa...
 
 
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10:39 PM on 06/20/2012
Today, June 20, 2012, was West Virginia's 149th birthday. This day, I have, for the first time, felt like celebrating the day, for on this day I can say as has never been said before, that West Virginia has stood up and said to the predators who have mauled her since her very birth "NO MORE!". That is what the A.C.H.E. Act means.

Never before have legislators from outside our region stood up to the Coal Industry to demand an end to our torment.

This is a day that will be remembered long into the future, a future which, perhaps, will be less likely to be infused with coal company profit-driven sickness, agony and grim death.
09:10 PM on 06/22/2012
So far in 2012 coal production in central Appalachia is down nearly 7%, and nearly 1,700 coal miners have lost their jobs. Kentucky and West Virginia are both in a bind because each state is now paying an additional million dollars per month in unemployment claims to the laid off miners and to add insult to injury coal severance tax are a lot less than in previous years.

The unemployment rate in Boone County West Virginia has gone from 5.5% in Dec. 2011 to over 12% today. Perry and Knott Counties in Kentucky currently has an 12% unemployment rate now Arch Coal announced an additional 500 jobs will be lost in these counties.

Now a few forgotten politicans are wanting to see their name in the media are trying to make something out of nothing. What's amazing to me is that coal is mined and burnt much cleaner today than it was just twenty or thirty years ago, yet some claim it is causing more sickness today than then.
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DonVitoCorleone
Autodidact, and proud of it!
09:06 AM on 06/20/2012
Nice thought, but with this regressive republican congress, I would doubt this will even make it out of committee. This why demos need a strong majority in the house and senate, otherwise the party of no will continue to be just that.
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10:36 PM on 06/19/2012
I am very happy to see this pass. Life depends on it. For nature, for mankind.
08:50 PM on 06/19/2012
If anyone really wants to help ease health problems in central Appalachia they can help get them off drugs and back to work, or they can help eliminate sewer lines that run directly into the streams.
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pjlim
07:36 PM on 06/19/2012
Finally someone is attempting to put a stop to the destruction of the "green, rolling hills of West Virginia"! This is an unconscionable attack on both the environment and health of the citizens of the state with the blessings of their cash flush politicians.
05:27 PM on 06/19/2012
The ACHE Act spells hope for the people of Appalachia enduring the sickness and death forced on them by mountaintop removal. Nothing, nothing at all, can justify the poisoning of people's air, water, and land.