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Coal
Industry and
State Ignore Mingo County's Black Tap Water
Water
No Good For Bathing Or Drinking,
Attributed To
Government Graft
By Antrim Caskey
Filtered water as it flows from the taps in
hundreds
of homes
in Mingo County, W. Va. Photo By Sweetwater Jones
MINGO COUNTY, W.Va. -- Southern West Virginia is dying. Its
mountains are collapsing into themselves. They’ve been mined
underground, empty
caverns are filled with coal sludge, and had their tops blown off and
swept
into the valleys below to extract the upper seams of coal.
Below, the
mountain people are being forced from their homes. Their drinking
water smells like sulfur and is laden with toxic chemicals; bathing,
cooking
and drinking with this well water is to be avoided whenever possible.
Their
land and homes are being washed away in floods due to irresponsible
mining.
Schools are closing. Cancers and kidney, liver and respiratory problems
have
ravaged the communities that sit below the mountains being mined.
Statewide,
sixteen mine workers have been killed so far this year. Gov. Joe
Manchin III spoke to the press after three mining accidents in the
state on
Feb. 1 resulted in two deaths and one injury. He called for a statewide
“safety
stand down.”
Production
was to be halted and safety inspections would start immediately,
Manchin promised. “We’re not going to produce another lump of coal – we
are
going to correct the safety conditions,” he said. To many, the “safety
stand
down” rings hollow; promises have been made before.
West Virginia produces 150-million tons of coal a year,
second
only to Wyoming, according to the West Virginia Coal
Association
(WVCA). Seventy percent comes from underground mining, while the rest
comes
from surface mining, which includes strip-mining, long-wall mining and
mountaintop
removal.
One-third
of West
Virginia’s
coal is shipped to 28 different countries around the world, according
to Bill
Raney, president of the WVCA, a powerful industry lobby. The human
costs of
coal production are profound. The waste from coal mining and processing
has
poisoned the air and the ground water. I saw many people who had sores
on their
bodies from bathing in the poisoned water; those who can afford to buy
all
their drinking and cooking water, but most cannot. I felt like I was in
a
developing country brushing my teeth with bottled water.
Have you
ever turned on your tap and had the water come out black? I witnessed
this several times in the last two weeks. Water from every tap in
Kenneth
Stroud’s home in Mingo County came out rust colored, laced with a
gritty oily
substance some alleged to be diesel fuel. When the coal company has
been
pumping toxic sludge into your mountains for 30 years, this is what can
happen.
The coal
industry, which employs more than 40,000 West Virginians, is embedded within the state’s governing
bodies and
regulatory agencies. Government from county to state is mired in
corruption and
graft, I was told again and again during my latest two-week visit to
the
mountain state. Residents say the West Virginia Department of
Environmental
Protection and the federal EPA are a joke.
They
complain that public hearings for mining permits are for show. The
permit
hearing is a routine where “a button on a recording device is pressed
and a
‘thank you very much, we’ll take your words [of protest] back with us’
is the
panel’s standard response.
Citizens
from Boone, Raleigh and Mingo Counties told me how they go to these hearings and
pour their
hearts out, asking for help, for the law to be enforced. They tell
state
officials how the air they breathe, the water they drink and the land
they live
on is making them sick and killing many, but to no avail. State police
are
often present at the more controversial hearings, like those for
expansion of
the mine behind Marsh Fork Elementary in Sundial, Raleigh County.
In his
State of the Union Address, President Bush called for Americans to end
their dependence on oil, pointing to coal to pick up some of the slack.
The BBC
reported that in order to do this, West Virginia will have to increase its current coal
production by
50 percent.
What will
this do to southern West Virginia? How can she endure more? I felt a
visceral tension
in the air, conflict is palpable. The mountain people, the ones whose
families
have lived here for seven, eight, even nine generations, are suffering
badly.
They are being sacrificed for the coal industry and our nation’s
seemingly insatiable
appetite for power.
Antrim Caskey spent two weeks talking to
people in the towns of Sylvester, Bob White, Rawl and Rock Creek. The
stories
of sickness and death, and wholesale destruction of communities left
the author
with tears of sadness and rage for the crimes being committed against
the
mountain people of West Virginia.
For more
information on the situation
in West
Virginia,
contact Mountain
Justice Summer.
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