The Front Porch Blog, with Updates from AppalachiaThe Front Porch Blog, with Updates from Appalachia

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Even coal (clean or not) will not save the US way of life

Monday, October 9th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

(Its a huge honor for Jerome to allow this to be cross-posted. He’s probably the most read blogger on energy issues in the entire English speaking world. Thanks Jerome! – j-dub)

Adapted and extended from the European Tribune

This is not about how horribly polluting coal is. It’s not about how dangerous coal mining is. It’s not about how much it contributes to carbon emissions and thus to global warming.

No, this is to fight the meme that coal is plentiful.

Graphs like that above allow people to make the point that
the USA could at least resolve the issue of dependency on foreign oil by switching to plentiful domestic coal.

I’d like to flag that this is absurd.

The International Energy Agency, in its future scenarios, suggests that world demand for energy is set to double by 2050, with demand for coal to increase by 300% over the period (i.e. it will quadruple).

At the same time, we hear that coal is plentiful, with 155 years of reserves at current production rates. (For the US more specifically, which has 25% of world reserves, these would last 250 years again at current production rates.

Of course, these two points are absolutely incompatible.

If you consider a linear growth in demand for coal, the average demand over 2005-2050 will be 2.5 times current demand, which means that we’ll have used 112 of these “reserve-years”, and, at 4 times current production in 2050, we’ll have about 10 years left of reserves worldwide at that rythm of production (not even considering if these reserves will actually be accessible and usable at such rates).

The same calculation for the USA, if you consider that demand for coal on current trends (+71% between 1975 and 2005) is roughly set to double, would lead to conclude that in 2050, at those then prevailing rates of production, the USA would still have 90 years of coal reserves.

That unfortunately presupposes two things:

  • US coal is not exported to other countries – which means that the rest of the world will run out of coal before 2050;
  • usage of coal is not expanded to other uses like transport (currently, it is only used for electricity generation and steel production);

That last point is of course impossible if the whole point is to be self-sufficient: coal is then supposed to be used to produce fuel, via CTL (coal-to-liquids) technology (as touted for instance by Gov. Schweitzer). But the problem then is that, in order to replace 5% of
current oil consumption (1 mb/d), you need 20% of current coal production (roughly 100 million tons), not to mention absolutely staggering volumes of water. So to replace the 12 mb/d currently imported (not to mention the larger volumes required in the future), coal production would need to be increased by 250% right away.

So suddenly we’re not talking about doubling coal production by 2050, we’re talking about quadrupling it quickly, and then increasing it along with demand. And hey, presto, US coal reserves run out before 2050 (without, remember, solving the coal problem of the rest of the world…)

So, even if we choose to ignore pollution and global warming (pretty damn big ifs), it’s simply not going to happen. Coal will run out almost as quickly as oil, especially if we boost consumption in the near term to try to move away from imported oil.

Thus, even in the rosy scenarios of the EIA and other “don’t panic” agencies, we hit the wall in less than 50 years. Is that so far away that we should not start planning for such a life-altering event? If not us, our kids or grandkids will still be alive then. Is that where we want them: in the wall?


EPA CLEAN AIR SCIENCE ADVISORY COMMITTEE CONDEMNS EPA ADMINISTRATOR JOHNSON’S DECISION

Tuesday, October 3rd, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

On September 29th, the seven permanent members of EPA’s Clean Air Science Advisory Committee (“CASAC”) sent a scathing letter to EPA’s top dog, Stephen Johnson, condemning his decision to ignore CASAC’s recommendations concerning recent revisions to the National Ambient Air Quality Standards (“NAAQS”) for particulate matter (“PM”).

Highlights of the letter attacking Johnson’s decision to retain the annual PM2.5 standard at 15µg/m3 include the following statements:

*”The CASAC recommended changes in the annual fine-particle standard because there is clear and convincing scientific evidence that significant adverse human-health effects occur in response to short-term and chronic particulate matter exposures at and below 1515µg/m3 the level of the current annual PM2.5 standard.”

*”While there is uncertainty associated with the risk assessment for the PM2.5 standard, this very uncertainty suggests a need for a prudent approach to providing an adequate margin of safety. It is the CASAC’s consensus scientific opinion that the decision to retain without change the annual PM2.5 standard does not provide an ‘adequate margin of safety … requisite to protect the public health’ (as required by the Clean Air Act), leaving parts of the population of this country at significant risk of adverse health effects from exposure to fine PM.”

“Significantly, we wish to point out that the CASAC’s recommendations were consistent with the mainstream scientific advice that EPA received from virtually every major medical association and public health organization that provided their input to the Agency, including the American Medical Association, the American Thoracic Society, the American Lung Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American College of Cardiology, the American Heart Association, the American Cancer Society, the American Public Health Association, and the National Association of Local Boards of Health. Indeed, to our knowledge there is no science, medical or public health group that disagrees with this very important aspect of the CASAC’s recommendations. EPA’s recent ‘expert elicitation’ study (Expanded Expert Judgment Assessment of the Concentration-Response Relationship Between PM2.5 Exposure and Mortality, September 21, 2006) only lends additional support to our conclusions concerning the adverse human health effects of PM2.5.”

To view the entire letter, click here CASAC Letter


Ed Wiley Arrives, Meets with Byrd!

Thursday, September 14th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

Ed arrived in Washington today, and it was an extremely powerful experience. He met with Senator Robert C. Byrd, and we all have our fingers crossed that Byrd will do something to help the children of Marsh Fork Elementary School.

Here is the AP article:

Wiley arrives in Washington, D.C., meets with Senator Byrd
By the Associated Press
September 13, 2006

CHARLESTON, W.Va. — A Raleigh County grandfather arrived in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, ending a 455-mile walk to draw attention to pollution near Marsh Fork Elementary School.

Ed Wiley, 49, met with Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va., after arriving in the nation’s capital. He planned to meet with Rep. Nick Rahall, D-W.Va., as well.

“I admire the determination and dedication that Ed and Debbie Wiley have shown,” Byrd said in a release. “The Bible teaches that if we have faith of a mustard seed, we can move mountains. I believe that the Wileys have that faith.”

Wiley left Charleston on Aug. 2 to raise awareness about the school’s location next door to a coal refuse pond and preparation plant. He also hoped to build public support to build a new school in a different location.

Wiley represents a local fundraising campaign called Pennies of Promise, which has said a new school would cost $5 million.

The West Virginia Department of Environmental Protection has twice denied Goals Coal Co.’s application to build a second coal silo next to the elementary school.

The Massey Energy subsidiary wants to build a 168-foot-tall silo 260 feet from the school. But those plans drew protests last year because of concerns over student health and the environment. Richmond, Va.-based Massey operates an identical silo, built in 2003, just 225 feet from the school.

The silo stores coal and loads rail cars 150 feet from school grounds. After loading, the operation sprays a binding agent over the coal.


Ed Wiley Arrives in Washington

Wednesday, September 13th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Contact:
Ed Wiley: 860-248-9512 or 304-928-0208
Heather Lascher Todd (Rep. Pallone): 202-225-4671
Coal River Mountain Watch: 304-928-0208
Mary Anne Hitt (Appalachian Voices): 540-239-0073

WEST VIRGINIA GRANDFATHER COMPLETES 455-MILE WALK TO WASHINGTON TODAY SEEKING HELP FOR SCHOOL THREATENED BY MINING

Ed Wiley joined by thousands across America in calling for new school for kids of Marsh Fork Elementary, protection for all coalfield children

WASHINGTON, DC – West Virginia grandfather and former coal miner Ed Wiley today completed his 455-mile walk from Charleston, WV to Washington, DC, seeking help for a southern West Virginia school threatened by mountaintop removal coal mining. Supporters from across the nation joined Wiley for the last mile of his walk, from the Washington Monument to the U.S. Capitol.

Wiley walked to Washington to bring attention to the plight of children at Marsh Fork Elementary School in Sundial, WV, which is on the front lines of the controversial practice known as mountaintop removal coal mining. A 1,849-acre mountaintop removal coal mine surrounds the school area with more mining permitted. Marsh Fork Elementary sits just 225 feet from a coal loading silo that releases coal dust, with independent tests confirming the presence of coal dust in the school. A leaking earthen dam holding back 2.8 billion gallons of toxic coal-sludge is located just 400 yards above the school. The Pennies of Promise campaign was created to build a new school for the children of Marsh Fork Elementary.

Wiley has walked to Washington to seek help from West Virginia Senator Robert Byrd.

“Senator Byrd is an honorable man and a true Appalachian who cares about the people of West Virginia,” Wiley said. “I hope he will stand with us to help the children at Marsh Fork Elementary School, because our children have been sacrificed long enough.”

Wiley’s arrival in Washington coincides with Mountaintop Removal Week, during which supporters from across America have traveled to the nation’s capitol. These citizens have come to alert Congress to the dangers posed by the radical form of strip mining that involves blowing up the tops of mountains and dumping the rock into valleys below, burying streams. Mountaintop removal is spreading rapidly across Appalachia, particularly in the area around the Marsh Fork School.

Wiley was joined today by joined by U.S. Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ); Lois Gibbs, the housewife from Love Canal who alerted the nation to the dangers of toxic communities and who is known as the mother of Superfund; Teri Blanton of Kentuckians for the Commonwealth; and Mary Anne Hitt of Appalachian Voices,

They are calling on Congress to pass the Clean Water Protection Act, H.R. 2719, a bill sponsored by Rep. Pallone that would prevent the dumping of mine waste into streams and would curtail mountaintop removal.

In addition to the event, a major new online campaign was launched today at www.iLoveMountains.org. The site features the National Memorial for the Mountains, an interactive, online memorial that uses Google Earth technology to show the locations and tell the stories of the over 450 mountains that have been destroyed to date. Visitors can watch a video featuring an interview with actor Woody Harrelson and download a new acoustic version of Bob Dylan’s “Blowin in the Wind,” performed by music legend Willie Nelson. Harrelson and fellow actor Edward Norton are among the many supporters of Wiley’s walk to Washington.

“The Memorial is the first comprehensive source for penetrating the secrecy of these city-sized operations,” said Mary Anne Hitt, executive director of Appalachian Voices, the nonprofit organization that developed the site. “It features overlays that bring home the enormous scope of these mining operations: just one, for example, is comparable to the size of the entire Washington metro area.”


The MTR Week In Washington Has Begun!

Monday, September 11th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

Just a quick note from Washington to let everyone know that we’re here and the Mountaintop Removal Week in Washington has begun!!! We had an excellent, very full day of training today and we’re ready to hit Capitol Hill tomorrow. Believe it or not, we have over 60 people here from 13 states who already have over 50 lobbying appointments scheduled! I can’t tell you how inspiring and exciting it was to see all the faces of people who have traveled from all across America, many of them on their own dime, to help us end mountaintop removal and pass the Clean Water Protection Act.

On top of that, Ed Wiley arrives on Wednesday for the completion of his 450-mile, 6-week walk to Washington for the kids of Marsh Fork Elementary School, so the next few days are going to be quite a powerful and exciting. More later – we’ll keep you posted!


Reuters Article About Ed Wiley’s Walk to Washington

Monday, September 11th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

Just saw this Reuters article on WashingtonPost.com about Ed’s walk and wanted to share it with everyone:

W.Va grandpa marches on DC for clean air, safe schools
Sun Sep 10, 2006 7:30pm ET165

By Lisa Lambert

WASHINGTON, Sept 10 (Reuters) – Ed Wiley, a West Virginia grandfather, is marching on Washington, walking hundreds of miles on mountain roads to entreat the federal government to do what local officials won’t do: Move a schoolhouse that sits yards away from a coal silo he says makes kids sick.

“This school has to be moved,” said Wiley, 49, standing on a two-lane road in the Appalachian coalfields. “This is a toxic site. It has to go.”

Goals Coal, a Massey Energy (MEE.N: Quote, Profile, Research) subsidiary, stores coal waste and chemicals in a 2.8 billion-gallon pond up the mountain from Marsh Fork Elementary, where Wiley’s granddaughter attended school. Less than 100 yards (90 m) from the playground, a silo holds coal processed at an adjacent plant.

Wiley, a former coal industry contractor, and his neighbors say the company plans to erect a second silo nearby that will produce even more coal dust and potentially sicken more of Marsh Fork’s 220 pupils.

Some of Wiley’s neighbors, who have formed an advocacy group called Coal River Mountain Watch, say it’s not just schoolchildren who may be at risk. If the pond’s chemicals seep into local groundwater, residents could become sick as well. Worse yet, they say if the 21-year-old earthen dam broke, townspeople could drown.

Coal River Mountain Watch found in an informal survey that many students already have asthma or chronic bronchitis.

Company officials could not be reached for comment on the silo location. Massey Energy has maintained in past disputes that it assiduously follows state and federal rules.

Wiley says he is a realist, not an idealist: He knows that many of the local residents, friends and family, need Goals Coal to keep food on the table. And America’s appetite for energy, increasingly from coal-rich Appalachia, is not going to diminish anytime soon. But the school still needs to be moved and a law passed to prevent the building of future schools near industrial operations, he says.

“Most… mining laws are signed in blood,” he said. “And hopefully we can do it before there’s bloodshed there.

State officials agreed with residents about the second silo but they say it’s up to the local government to decide whether the school should be moved, an expensive proposition that could cost taxpayers in this lower-middle-class area millions of dollars.

Local officials right now seem unconvinced it’s worth the money. They note the state’s air-quality tests have shown that the school, built in 1968, meets safety standards and there are no elevated risks of cancer or respiratory problems in the area. As for the dam, federal officials say it, too, is safe.

Still, locals, including Wiley have their doubts about those assessments.

When Wiley arrives in the nation’s capitol on September 12, he plans to deliver a letter to U.S. Education Secretary Margaret Spellings asking for her help to build a new school. He also hopes to meet with his state’s veteran senator, Democrat Robert Byrd to find ways to get additional monetary support.

And if the federal government won’t listen, Wiley says he will try to raise the money himself. He carries a purple flag that reads “Pennies of Promise.”

Market View
MEE (Massey Energy Co )
Last: $22.83
Change: -1.05 (-4.40%)
Revenue (ttm): $2,167.3M
EPS: -2.39
Market Cap: $1,833.27M
Time: 4:02pm ET

Stock Details
Company Profile
Analyst Research
Company News:
W.Va grandpa marches on DC for clean air, safe schools
Stickler renominated to head US mine safety agency
More Company News…
At the Helm:
Don Blankenship
Chairman of the Board, President, Chief Executive Officer

Salary: USD 1,000,000
Bonus: USD 292,500
Age: 56
Mr. Blankenship has been a Director since 1996 and the Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President of Massey Energy Company since 1992. He was… Full Bio


Upcoming events at Turtle Island Preserve

Thursday, September 7th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

So much is going on down on the farm! We still have a few openings for our tipi workshop on September 23, 2006. Its a full day of studying this incredible living structure from our native plains indians all while we’re right here in comfortable Appalchia. Join Eustace Conway as he demonstrates and guides participants through the history of, setting up and living in a unique tipi shelter.

Saturday September 24 from 10am – 4pm is our bi-annual open house. Bring your friends and family to share in our FREE demonstrations of horse drawn activities, wood crafts, blacksmithing, knife sharpening, buggy rides and various other farm activites. Feel free to bring a covered dish to share during our lunch hour. For more information call: 828. 265. 2267

If you can’t make it out for one of these fine events, we offer Horse drawn carriage rides year-round on our miles of serene nature trails. Perferct for wedding gifts, holidays or even something to do with visiting relatives! inquire within : 828. 265. 2267

Various other workshops and activities are offered throughout the year, look at our website www.turtleislandpreserve.com for more info!


Bragging on Blacksburg

Wednesday, September 6th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

I just have to take a minute to brag on the town where I live, beautiful Blacksburg, Virginia, one of the finest mountain towns in Appalachia. Blacksburg has been recognized by the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) as the first town in the nation to join a new environmental program called the National Partnership for Environmental Priorities. Towns that sign on partner with the EPA to conserve resources and reduce waste, with a focus on 31 toxic chemicals that are especially dangerous to human health. According to the EPA’s press release,

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency mid-Atlantic Regional Administrator Donald S. Welsh has recognized the town of Blacksburg for being the first municipality in the country to enroll in the voluntary National Partnership for Environmental Priorities. The program challenges businesses and manufacturers to become more environmentally aware and to adopt a resource conservation ethic that results in less waste, more recycling, and more environmentally-sound products.

The Town of Blacksburg has demonstrated its progressive environmental leadership in the past, but today a bigger challenge has been met, Welsh said. By enrolling in this national program, the town of Blacksburg serves as a model for other cities and towns across the country by addressing chemical risks within the community and increasing the conservation of resources.

Some of the steps Blacksburg will take include encouraging recyling of flourescent lights that contain mercury and rechargable batteries (such as those found in cell phones) that contain cadmium.

The press release continues,

Blacksburg also has agreed to form a collaborative partnership with groups representing all aspects of the community, including citizen groups, businesses, government, academic institutions, and non-profits, called Sustainable Blacksburg. The voluntary partnership the town has created has a mission to develop a collaborative network that works to create a greener community.

Partnership members will participate in the development and implementation of programs to reduce resource usage, recycle materials, and create re-use initiatives. Partners will work with the community to provide outreach, educational assistance and raise awareness.

Congratualtions Blacksburg! Here’s hoping other mountain towns will follow your fine example.


HELP PROTECT NORTH CAROLINA’S AIR QUALITY: STOP DUKE POWER’S NEW COAL BURNING PLANT

Monday, August 21st, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

Appalachian Voices is working with partners from across the state and the region to protect and improve state and regional air quality by convincing decision makers that Duke Power’s two proposed coal burning power plants are unnecessary for meeting North Carolina’s future energy needs. Duke is rapidly moving through the permitting process to build a 1600-Megawatt pulverized coal incinerator at their Cliffside facility in Rutherfordton County, NC.

Here are three steps you can take to help protect and improve state and regional air quality:

1. Attend a Public Hearing and tell the Utilities Commission that we can meet future electricity demand by improving efficiency, not building new pollution sources.

-August 30, 7 p.m., Charlotte-Mecklenburg Government Center, Chamber Conference Room (CH-14), 600 E. Fourth St., Charlotte, NC.
-August 31, 10 a.m., New Council Chambers, Shelby City Hall, 300 S. Washington St., Shelby NC.

2. Contact the Utilities Commission and tell them that Duke Power should not be allowed to build a new plant unless and until they prove, through their Integrated Resource Plan, that they cannot meet future energy needs through efficiency and clean sources of energy.

-Call: 1.866.380.9816
-E-mail the Chair of the Commission, Jo Ann Sanford at: sanford@ncuc.net (note, while e-mails and letters will not be lodged as part of the official docket, they will be
posted on the Commission’s website and will reach the commissioners).

Click Here For Talking Points and Background Information

3. Become a member of Appalachian Voices and lend your support as we continue to protect and improve state and regional air quality.

Click Here to Join Now


The Appalachian Word

Monday, August 7th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

Loving Men, Loving Mountains (Ethnicity and Gender in Appalachia)
JEFF MANN
Ohio University Press, $19.95
ISBN 0-8214-1650-2

Strangely enough, despite the supposed mainstream popularity of the film version of Annie Proulx’s short story, Brokeback Mountain, nonfiction memoirs and portraits of gay love affairs in rural areas are still searching for a foothold in the publishing world. It makes you wonder if fiction will become the new closet for gay stories to transcend.

Jeff Mann’s endearing and amazingly unaffected new memoir, Loving Men, Loving Mountains, is a major step forward in this direction. An aching reminder of the still hard time of growing up gay in America, Mann’s story unveils not so much the stifling provincialism of a rural community, but the one-way dominance of the heterosexual macho icon in our society at large. From a shy student to forester to leather-wearing dude, Mann doesn’t submit or retreat but subverts this machismo in his own wonderful way.

As the title proclaims, Mann’s memoir deals with two peaks to climb: men and mountains. Based in his native Appalachia, he goes in search of the beauty of mountains and the beauty of men: “What I want is unity, however briefly achieved.” When spurned by one, his simply takes up with the other.

In many respects, Mann’s work is similar to fellow Southern writer Randall Kenan, who has dealt with being a Southern African American in search of some sort of balance with his gay identity. While Kenan has put his prodigious talent to work as a novelist, Mann has turned to poetry, including a sizeable collection at the end of this memoir.

A student of both forestry and literature, and a mountaineer saunterer who would have enjoyed moments among Thoreau and his compatriots, Mann is frequently more compelling as a nature writer; his love of the mountains, and his acute eye for its nuances and complexities often puts into perspective his need to chronicle his sexuality. If anything, nature comes into play in Mann’s daily trials. When dealing with a lover’s illness in the hospital, Mann “stared out the window at the tiny white crosses of a pauper’s graveyard across the valley. Soon the spring equinox would arrive, and the first coltsfoot blooms would spring up along the country roads of Monongalia County.”

While coming-of-age memoirs of gay life, even in rural areas, are nothing new, Mann’s series of essays and stories remind us that mainstream society has yet to accept them. His youth was one of agonizing moments of discrimination, and threats, and delicious moments of passionate longing and dreaming. Interestingly, it is a lesbian teacher, and other lesbians, who provided much of his support network and outlet of expression.

While Mann recounts his numerous love affairs, from a mustache moist with manna, to his transformation into an urban leather dweller, his writing remains wonderfully honest and unpretentious; the prose are always engaging. Mann’s anger is evident, though always tempered with humor; still, he calls into question the double-standard of flirting among other so-called liberal Appalachian writers at a conference—and in effect, his readers—when his own yearning to flirt with a male author is suppressed. “Why, I wondered at Hindman, could I not live in a world where a straight man would take my polite appreciation of his looks as a compliment?”

Back home, Mann remains a mountain boy. In “Love Made Solid,” he recalls making biscuits with his grandmother, and the painful moment of silence when she notes his retreat to a cold farmhouse: “Son, are you in love?” Deeply in love, Mann is unable to respond or disclose his circumstances.

He writes a very poignant story of mother first refusing to accept his sexual preference, and then her phone call during the TV viewing of “An Early Frost” in the mid-1980s, the first drama that dealt with AIDS and her own concern for her son. “We wouldn’t turn our backs on you,” she tells him on the phone.

The second part of the book includes poems. “Bluestone Reservoir” recalls his first motorcycle ride and the erotic joy of youth camaraderie:

“His belly was lean and wet and bare beneath my hands, he yelled into the wind
“Hold tight!” and I was grateful for any excuse to clutch.”

In the poem, “Allen,” Mann brings together his two loves in a fitting tribute of his way of life in lesson for all:

“How to love mountains fiercer than any marriage.”

Never Seen the Moon: The Trials of Edith Maxwell
SHARON HATFIELD
University of Illinois Press, $21.95
ISBN 0-252-03003-6

How refreshing to read a page-turning true crime chronicle that refuses to pander to the morbid curiosity of the commercial market, and instead, seeks to explore the greater mystery of why and how crimes are committed and why and how our society measures them. Written by a journalist who cut her teeth on local courtroom news in the same Wise County, Virginia crime scene, Never Seen the Moon is an important book about a crime committed in the 1930s that still remains a mystery, and a disturbing morality tale, for our times.

This is the scene: on a summer night in Pound, Virginia, a small community in the Appalachian Mountains, a young schoolteacher named Edith Maxwell returns to her family’s home after their proscribed curfew. A conflict with her father ensues; neighbors hear a ruckus. Her father eventually falls dead with a head injury. While Edith claims she has acted in self defense, she and her mother are taken to trial for murder and judged not only on the facts of their case, but the variance of her rebellious behavior as a single woman, turning her into a cause celebre for a floundering (and largely urban) women’s movement in search of martyrs and a cause, and a lightning rod for the yellow media in search of sensational headlines and hillbilly caricatures that will entertain a national readership.

In Hatfield’s deliberate narrative, Maxwell’s story—and the stories about her—transcend the fiction and legends that have surrounded the case for decades and reveals the true crime at play. Deeply rooted in the mountain communities that were razed by the publicity and trial, Hatfield goes to great length in describing and showing how Maxwell’s unfortunate circumstances became a defining moment “in the collective life of a community.”

The outside media circus—a sad reminder that today’s obsession with sordid crimes is not a new one—had other ideas. Heroine or villain, Maxwell became the “curfew slayer.” Her trial dominated the headlines for ages. Through an exhaustive amount of research, Hatfield shows that how the crime and trial often fell secondary to the outside media’s perception of the area and their preconceived verdict of the mountain community– an otherworldly area that was backwards, poorly dressed, anti-education, and scared of “furriners” They became obsessed with the image of a cow ambling down the main street. Journalists (and activists) who had never set foot in Wise County—or the South—conjured up an world for outside readers where Edith Maxwell had been unjustly tried by a nefarious mountain code outside the bounds of law.

Hatfield’s narrative is balanced and detailed, and fails to fall into any demonization of its own; along with the outside media, she shows how Maxwell and her own family sold the exclusive rights to their story to the god-awful Hearst Press. She also notes how some reporters, such as Ernie Pyle, who would go on to regale Americans with his war-time reports, were exceptions to the quick and dirty yellow journalism. Noting his own disdain for the exaggerated portraits of the mountain town, Pyle wrote: “There are people here with Master’s degrees, who think and speak better than we do, who have been all over the world, who have polish and city personalities, who drink cocktails instead of moonshine…I believe some reporters have confused rural poverty with quaintness. If I didn’t know, I couldn’t tell you from looking whether Wise was in Vermont or Iowa.”

In the end, Maxwell was convicted for murder in November, 1935, and ended up serving five years in prison. Warner Brothers made a movie loosely based on her life; popular songs were written about her; feminist and women rights advocates around the nation took up her cause, while celebrities in New York City and Washington, DC (including the beloved First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt), rallied to Maxwell’s side. James Thurber, covering the case for The New Yorker, called it “one of the most interesting trials since the Scopes case.” The key word there, of course, refers to the bizarre behavior of rural and backwards-thinking rubes unfit to stand trial in modern times.

While Maxwell was eventually pardoned by a departing Virginian governor in 1941, and moved to Indiana where she changed her name, married and attempted to live a normal life, the infamy of her case lived in the mountains, and in the eyes of the media. So did the mystery—to this day, we still don’t know if Maxwell accidentally killed her father in self defense, or knocked him out in a cold blooded murder.

Nonetheless, as Hatfield writes, an even greater judgment remains. Never Seen the Moon, in her words, is “a cautionary tale about the dangers of demonizing minority cultures by imposing mainstream values.”

It is also a great page-turning true crime story.


NO NEWS IS GOOD NEWS–RIGHT?

Friday, July 21st, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

Yumm, Yumm!

I’ve been using Grannie Chandwater’s recipe for “diily” beans for many moons now. Although she’s a “Yankee,” it’s a great recipe for those who love all things “dilled.” For those of you unrequited (Zappa-ease) with the “dilly” bean, it’s nothing more than a dilled green bean (either pole or bush).

Enjoy!

This here recipe makes enough for about 4 quart jars, so i’ll leave it for y’all to adjust for your particular amount of beans.

Step One: Prep the Beans

Clean, “stem,” and cut to length, enough beans to fill four 1-quart canning jars
(they should be about 1/2 to 1/4 inch smaller than the inside of the jar when standing upright on the bottom)

Step Two: Make the Brine

5 cups cider vinegar (I prefer organic)
5 cups water
1/2 cup salt (I prefer sea salt, but table salt works as well)

Bring this to a boil for a minute or two, then simmer until you’re ready to pack the jars.

Step Three: Pack the Jars with Summery Goodness

Add to each sanitized canning jar (washed, with lids and rims, in soapy water and kept in a hot water bath until ready to use):

1 clove of garlic (Grannie Chandwater and I never saw eye-to-eye on this issue. I usually use 2-3 cloves)
1/2 tsp. dill seed
1/2 tsp yellow mustard seeds
1/2 tsp. crushed red pepper flakes and
Pack the beans in leaving adequate headroom (check the instructions for your particular jars)
Add brine to the headroom level recommended for your jars
Cap tightly

Step Five:

Can in a hot water bath meeting your region’s requirements (contact your canner’s instructions or local extension service if unsure)

Step Six:

Let mature for about two weeks

Step Seven: (my absolute favotie step)

Enjoy with friends, neighbors and any starngers who might pop in!


Resolved! Catawba County Wants Clean Air

Tuesday, July 18th, 2006 | Posted by Front Porch Blog | No Comments

Last night, in a unanimous vote, the Catawba County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution to support clean air in North Carolina, and to encourage our elected congressional representatives to do the same. image Presenting the resolution was Appalachian Voices volunteer, Brenda Huggins (see photo). In voting for this resolution, Catawba County became the fourth county in North Carolina to send a message to senators Dole and Burr as well as 13 House members urging them to:

urge support for national legislation that would reduce pollution as quickly and to a similar extent as is required by our own Clean Smokestacks Act. Please oppose any legislation that would weaken pollution standards for neighboring states, as set forth in the Clean Air Act and its amendments of 1990, or that would undercut or delay North Carolina’s authority to seek reductions in the portion of our pollution that originates in upwind states.

Twenty towns across North Carolina have also passed similar resolutions. Each passed resolution moves North Carolina one step closer to having a beautiful, breathable future. If you would like to help pass a resolution in your area, please contact Appalachian Voices.



 

 


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