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Jeff Biggers

Jeff Biggers

Posted: May 15, 2009 03:46 PM

Breaking: EPA Clears Waterboarding Permits for Appalachia


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As American citizens in Mingo County and other areas of the flood-stricken Kentucky and West Virginia coalfields continue to dig themselves out of the muck, indefatigable Charleston Gazette reporter Ken Ward is reporting on his Coal Tattoo blog that the EPA has "signed off on almost all (87.5 percent, to be exact) of the mountaintop removal permits that has so far been reviewed under the initiative announced in March."

Ward has just posted a letter dated yesterday from the EPA to US Rep. Nick Rahall (D-WV), announcing that:

"EPA has raised environmental concerns with six pending permit applications in the Corps' Huntington District out of a total of approximately forty-eight we have reviewed. We have advised the Corps that EPA does not intend to provide additional comments on the remaining forty-two permits. The Corps may proceed with appropriate permit decisions on those remaining projects."

Read that line again: Have 42 out of 48 permits for mountaintop removal -- the process of blowing up our nation's oldest and most diverse mountains, razing historic communities, poisoning watersheds, and causing massive erosion and flooding, which Vice President Al Gore has termed "a crime, and ought to be treated as a crime" -- cleared as "environmentally responsible" by the Obama administration's EPA?

Since President Barack Obama has taken office, an estimated 300 million pounds of ammonium nitrate/fuel oil explosives have been detonated across our American mountains.

In effect: Residents in the mountaintop removal areas have been subjected to a kind of waterboarding environmental policies.

All well-meaning intentions aside, an indubitable fact remains: mountaintop removal is an immoral crime against nature and our citizenry, a human rights violation and it must be abolished, not regulated.

The EPA's letter to Rahall is a curious document. Acting Assistant Administrator Michael H. Shapiro writes:

"I understand the importance of coal mining in Appalachia for jobs, the economy and meeting the nation's energy needs. I also want to emphasize the need to ensure that coal mining is conducted in a manner that is fully consistent with the requirements of the [Clean Water Act], the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act, the National Environmental Policy Act and other applicable federal laws."

If Mr. Shapiro has never been to a mountaintop removal site -- among the 500 mountains and 1.2 million acres of hardwood forests that have been erased from our American maps -- then he needs to visit now and witness first-hand the failure of our mountaintop removal regulations.

"When Congress passed the Surface Mining Control and Reclamation Act in 1977," testified Joe Lovett, the Executive Director of the Appalachian Center for the Economy and the Environment, at an Oversight Hearing of the US House Committee on Natural Resource on the 30th anniversary of the SMCRA, "it thought that it was enacting a law to protect the environment and citizens of the region. OSM has used, and has allowed the states to use, the Act as a perverse tool to justify the very harm that Congress sought to prevent. The Members of Congress who voted to pass the Act in 1977 could not have imagined the cumulative destruction that would be visited on our region by the complete failure of the regulators to enforce the Act."


For more information on today's breaking news, or flooding, see Ward's Coal Tattoo blog:


In the meantime, here's Goldman Prize winner Maria Gunnoe describing how it feels to be flooded out numerous time in the past few years, after mountaintop removal operations altered the natural valleys and terrain:

And here's a clip from the recent flooding in Mingo County, which residents attribute to strip mining erosion along the nearby ridges and mountains. Not that we will ever know the true impact of mountaintop removal and strip mining on flooding -- as Ward reported in 2001, the WV's Department of Environmental Protection has actually gone to court to resist
"efforts to require coal operators to study stream flows more extensively to help pinpoint each strip mine's impact on flooding."


As American citizens in Mingo County and other areas of the flood-stricken Kentucky and West Virginia coalfields continue to dig themselves out of the muck, indefatigable Charleston Gazette reporter K...
As American citizens in Mingo County and other areas of the flood-stricken Kentucky and West Virginia coalfields continue to dig themselves out of the muck, indefatigable Charleston Gazette reporter K...
 
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califlefty
Fighting back against the lies
03:40 PM on 05/29/2009
An article critical of Obama and only a handful of comments on the HufPo... my how the crickets are chirping. Barrack Obama is shaping up to be the worst environmen­tal President, EVER and we just cant get past his smile. Shame on us.
12:56 AM on 05/19/2009
Thank you Jeff Biggers for your wonderful writing.
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03:59 PM on 05/16/2009
So I guess this makes Lisa Jackson a fraud.

I knew Obama wasn't a progressiv­e and I voted for him for ONE REASON: that he would do something serious about CLIMATE CHANGE and this type of environmen­tal devastatio­n, mountainto­p removal and the mining and use of coal being primary. Obama and his EPA have just officially lost my support. This is going to have devastatin­g effects on not just the people in the area, but everyone in the country and the world. This means we are going to keep on using the dirtiest fossil fuel for hundreds of years to come.

The OBAMA EPA just signed the death certificat­es for hundreds of millions of people.

Obama won't do anything about climate change either. The Waxman-Mar­key bill doesn't go nearly far enough and it's over, folks. This was our chance, and they are blowing it.
entropyisfun
why we cant have nice things
01:38 PM on 05/16/2009
Mountain top removal is ecocide for the surroundin­g environmen­t.
http://www­.ilovemoun­tains.org/
12:08 AM on 05/16/2009
I can't figure out why anyone is surprised here. Obama is the ONE who stood alongside Jay Rockefelle­r in Ohio and said "West Virginia is the Saudi Arabia of coal." Was anyone listening?

We had a candidate who said he would "support a ban on mountainto­p removal coal mining." Was anyone listening?

The voters got what they asked for - change we can believe in!
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04:34 PM on 05/16/2009
You are right, Obama is turning out to be exactly as he advertised­. He has always been a proponent of coal -- but when he was saying that during the campaign, a lot of people, including me, thought he was saying it because he "had to" for political reasons. I guess he really believes in the non-existe­nt "clean coal" because he's said it enough.

We're screwed. At least Obama was honest. It was us who are the fools.

It's time for the battering rams.
11:32 PM on 05/15/2009
The c11 dimensiona­l chessboard has been leveled to 2 dimensions­.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quidam56
06:16 PM on 05/15/2009
I surrender !

Stop the bombing in Appalachia­. http://www­.wisecount­yissues.co­m/?p=138
04:59 PM on 05/15/2009
I want to personally express my utter disgust with President Barack Obama for signing off on the mountainto­p removal death certificat­e for me, my family, and my community in southern WV. As if we weren't already being terrorized and slowly murdered by outlaw coal companies such as Massey Energy, Obama has now given his approval to Don Blankenshi­p and Joe Manchin to finish us off. Today, more than ever before, I am ashamed of Nick Rahall and Senator Robert C Byrd who obviously owe their soul to the company store and have stood by for so many years while we the people of coalfield communitie­s have suffered because of the fraud and falsehood of so called cheap energy. But more than anything I am ashamed for the man whom I voted for and celebrated for when he was elected president. May God have mercy on your soul Barack, even though you have no mercy on ours.