I’m not sure what to
think of this latest development in West Virginia mining. In perhaps what might
be called a fit of NIMBY, opposition has formed to a mountaintop mine operation
going in right next to the Kanawha State Forest, which is about five to ten
miles from the state capitol Charleston. Almost 200 concerned residents met at
a local church on Tuesday to discuss ways they could have the permit for the
planned mine rescinded.
Where the mine is planned next to the state forest. Image Tye Ward The Charleston Gazette |
Officially designated as a state forest, the 9,300 acres of land are nonetheless managed as
and considered by local residents to be a public park. People camp, hike, hunt,
and fish there. While a company called Keystone Development has been mining an
area east of the forest, the permit would allow an expansion of that mine into
a mountaintop removal operation. Originally, the mountaintop mine would have
come to within 100 feet of the forest and would have filled in an adjacent
valley with mining debris, but Keystone scaled back some of the mining
footprint and changed plans for the debris to possibly be dumped at another
mining site.
While preserving the beauty and pleasure of a park is fully understandable, mountaintop mining is harmful wherever it happens. I don’t mean to jump allover
these people, who certainly have a legitimate concern, but where were have they
been as hundreds of mines have flattened the rest of their state? Did they show
up at other churches as their fellow West Virginians were diagnosed with
bladder cancer caused by mountaintop mining? Did they want to rescind permits to
mines that would cause expectant mothers to give birth to babies with birth
defects?
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