This is apparently big news. It made the pages of the Washington Post, so to me that counts as big
news. Anyway, the news is that a group of West Virginians is suing one of the
large coal companies there to stem further damage to a cemetery that is surrounded
by a mountaintop removal coal mine. The photograph below shows the bit of land
on which the graveyard is surrounded by the devastation of the mine site.
For West Virginians their final resting place among the trees in the middle of a mountaintop removal mine photo Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition, Maria Gunnoe/Associated Press |
The group says that
Alpha Natural Resources and its subsidiary, Independence Coal Company, have violated
state law and an agreement that the coal company has with the West Virginia
Department of Environmental Protection to preserve access and keep mining at
least 100 feet away from the graveyard.
The
plaintiffs claim that the access road to the gravesites has become almost
impassable except for heavy-duty, four-wheel drive vehicles. Besides the
degradation to the access roads, visitors to the graveyard have to request
access to the site from the mine’s safety coordinator, show ID, and provide
their Social Security numbers.
The
plaintiffs also say that the mine has damaged the graves. Maria Gunnoe, who has
long fought mountaintop mining and has received the University of Michigan’s Raoul Wallenberg Medal in recognition for her work in environmental and social
justice, says that blasting from the mine has shaken headstones loose and has
caused some of the gravestones to crack, tilt, or sink. Some have been damaged
by falling trees.
Alpha
denies that they are not in compliance with their agreements or the law. They
say that their coal mining has not damaged the graves.
It
is ironic, at least to me, that this lawsuit concerns the effects of a
mountaintop mine on the dead. This mine, the Twilight Surface Mine, basically
swallowed up and destroyed the small Boone County community of Lindytown, the
community that had the gravesite. A little over two years ago Massey Energy,
the original owner of the mine, bought up the small town, sending almost all of
its residents away from the community that many had known for generations.
I
can understand the plight of the plaintiffs in this case, their distress over
the treatment of their relatives’ and ancestors’ resting places. But a greater
crime seems to be how the living have been treated in this area and how their
lives have been disrupted by the mountaintop coal mines. Equally distressing is
the amount of power that a mine company can have. Besides blowing up the
mountains of Appalachia, a single coal company can buy up an entire town, just
because the town gets in the way of its plans for a mine. To me it is wrong that
this country could allow such a triumph of capitalism over community.
Another
thing that is wrong is what the Washington Post considers newsworthy. I don’t
deny that this is a newsworthy story. But it is one of the few stories
concerning mountaintop mining that the Post has run. Searching through the
online newspaper using the term “mountaintop removal” brings up a number of
stories, all of which are on politics (here and here), obituaries (here and here),
or arts (here). I don’t discount the merit of these news stories, but the real
story in Appalachia, the real headline grabber that calls out, “Extra! Extra!
Read all about it!” is that the mountains of Appalachia are falling because of
the coal deep inside them.
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