Three months on some West Virginians still aren't drinking the water. |
Sorry to have dropped
the ball on this blog for a while. There has been plenty to write about, but
I’ve been tied up with a few things lately. I promise to get back to a more
regular schedule with my posts here.
The
story that I’ve been following a great deal lately is the toxic spill in West
Virginia’s Elk River that occurred in January of this year. Though the spill happened
almost exactly three months ago, apparently there are still folks who are
staying away from their tap water, and some folks are complaining that the
telltale licorice smell still lingers in the water coming from their taps. The levels of the 4-methylcyclohexane methanol have dropped in
the drinking water. The highest level of the chemical in water tested in a
ten-home pilot project was found to be 6.1 parts per billion, much lower than
the Center For Disease Control’s somewhat arbitrary threshold of 1000 parts per
billion.
It
seems as though some members of the national press are keeping an eye on the
water problems in the Kanawha Valley. I heard this story on Here and Now. Interviewed for the story is Rahul Gupta. The Kanawha-Charleston health director said that there may now be evidence pointing to long-standing low levels of MCHM being
present in the drinking water of the Kanawha Valley. As he said, there is no
research on what this chemical might do to people who are exposed to small
amounts of it over long periods of time.
And
the spill made the pages of the New Yorker. Evan Osnos, who years ago worked as a photojournalist in Clarksburg,
West Virginia, my hometown, delves into the history of the coal companies and the
grip that they have on the politics of the Mountain State. In his piece Osnos
suggests that the rise of the GOP in West Virginia, a very traditional Democratic
stronghold, is not a good trend. Although the anti-environmental rhetoric of
the GOP and that party’s willingness to slash and burn environmental and health
regulations would seem to support what he has to say, I think things are bad in
my home state no matter which party occupies the state house or the governor’s
mansion. The lack of regulatory control over the coal companies and the
chemical industries goes back through the administrations of governors Joe
Manchin and Jay Rockefeller, both Democrats.
Democrats
and Republicans both bear some of the blame for the state of affairs in West
Virginia; the same can be said of the electorate that sends these politicians
into office. Ultimately, however, the coal companies and the chemical industry
in West Virginia are responsible for the polluted waters and sickened people.
From the time Appalachian children attend grammar school, where the coal
industry has developed and, with the blessing of the educational establishment,
inserted into Appalachian schools’ curricula to indoctrinate students and turn
them into coal industry loving adults, through the industry’s campaign against
the president and environmental regulation in the guise of fighting Obama’s
“war on coal,” King Coal and the chemical companies influence enough of the
electorate to get coal-friendly politicians into office. Their influence is not
total. Recent polling indicates that mountaintop removal remains unpopular in
West Virginia. Even still, you don’t have to convince every voter, just enough
to make the difference to get your preferred candidate into office. And once in
office, no matter what a state senator or governor may believe personally, they
are barraged with the money and lobbying of the industries that control West
Virginia.
Without
footage of floodwaters or images of flattened houses, most of the national press moved on from the story of West Virginians and their water
problems. But Osnos quotes West Virginia Senate Majority Leader John Unger
pointing out why this toxic spill deserves the attention of the rest of the
country, “Martin Luther King said that injustice anywhere is a threat to
justice everywhere. Why should anybody care about what goes on in West
Virginia? Because it’s the canary in the mineshaft. If you ignore it in West
Virginia, it’s coming, it’s going to continue to build, and the issue is:
Should our country have the debate about our rights to the very basic
infrastructure that sustains us? Or should we continue to ignore it?”
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