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

Appalachia will rise again this weekend!

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010 | Posted by Jillian Randel | No Comments

Rising Up for Appalachia!

This coming weekend, September 25-28, the Appalachian Voices crew will be traveling to Washington D.C. for the Appalachia Rising: Voices from the Mountains conference. The weekend workshops will be educational, focusing on issues such as: mountaintop removal, coal ash, coal-fired power plants, citizen lobbying, climate change, resource extraction, corporate campaigns, organizing efforts and legal rights.

The conference will be followed by a rally as well as a day of citizen lobbying Congress.
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Radio Interview: Environmental Concerns for Shenandoah National Park

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010 | Posted by Tom Cormons | No Comments

A babbling brook.

A fall ridge view in the park.

Appalachian Voices’ Virginia Director Tom Cormons was a guest yesterday on a public radio program focused on the impacts of climate change on Shenandoah National Park. A new report from the Rocky Mountain Climate Organization and the Natural Resources Defense Council focuses on impacts to the park and other special places in Virginia. Tom joined the report’s lead author, Stephen Saunders, and park service Ecologist Jim Schaberi on the program.

You can listen to the program here or here.
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Boone Town Council hears about Fish Kill and Coal-Tar Sealant Ban Tonight

Tuesday, September 21st, 2010 | Posted by Eric Chance | No Comments

Fish Killed by Coal-Tar Based Asphalt Sealant in Hodges Creek this Summer


Please join the Watauga Riverkeeper at the Boone Town Council Meeting this Tuesday (September 21) evening at 7:00 pm to show your support for a ban on coal tar based asphalt sealants. The Watauga Riverkeeper, Donna Lisenby will be giving a presentation to the town council about coal tar based asphalt sealants and why they should be banned and we would love to have lots of people there who support the ban. The meeting will be at the Council Chambers on Blowing Rock Road.

The dangerous toxicity of coal tar based sealants was brought to our attention this summer when sealant was applied in the rain at the BB&T bank on Hwy. 105 in Boone, causing a fish kill in Hodges Creek. For more information and to see a video of the destruction please visit the Riverkeeper Blog.


Rural Star Legislation Passes House!

Monday, September 20th, 2010 | Posted by JW Randolph | No Comments

Great news on the legislative front! Last week, by a vote of 240-172, the House of Representatives overwhelmingly passed the bipartisan “Rural Star” (HR 4785) energy efficiency legislation. Appalachian Voices supports this common-sense bill and applauds its passage through the House.

One of the champions of this bill was Virginia Congressman Tom Perriello, who worked with Appalachian Voices’ staff in Virginia and DC to ensure passage. He gave team AV a shout out in his press release, and we were able to speak with him about this victory today.

Congressman Perriello says:

We know the cheapest electricity is the electricity we never use in the first place which is why I have been so focused on energy efficiency. I have been evangelical about Rural Star as a way to reduce Americans’ electric bills while supporting American construction jobs and American-manufactured products. Now both parties have become believers in this common sense way to help rural families and seniors save money on their electric bills and increase home values. In addition to saving consumers money and putting Americans back to work, efficiency upgrades reduce the load on our electric grid, and consequently the impact of fossil fuels on our environment. Rural Star has rightly earned the support of home builders, co-ops and environmental advocates such as Appalachian Voices. I’m very proud to have led in this fight and I look forward to finding even more common ground as we put Americans back to work and serve as good stewards of our natural resources.”

The “Rural Star” program will allow rural electric cooperatives to offer low-interest micro-loans to residential and small business customers who undertake energy-saving retrofit and structural improvements. Because efficiency products are primarily manufactured in the United States, and installation work requires local labor, the bill is expected to significantly bolster American manufacturing and construction industries.

The cost of energy consumption in our region includes not just the number on our electric bills, but the loss of our mountains, streams, and communities due to mountaintop removal. As you know, more than 500 mountains and nearly 2000 miles of streams have been permanently destroyed by this horrible method of mining. All this, and mountaintop removal provides less than 4.5% of our nation’s electricity. Meanwhile, the Appalachian Regional commission has said that we can add as many as 15,000 jobs/year in Appalachia by investing in energy efficiency. This would provide far greater employment benefits than we see from strip-mining, while ensuring that we are using our resources responsibly, and sustainably.

The bill now goes to the Senate, where it has 18 bipartisan cosponsors.

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Maine, Philly, DC, oh my!

Monday, September 20th, 2010 | Posted by Kate Boyle | No Comments


Well our crew on the road has been tirelessly traveling throughout New England since last Wednesday and has done a knock out job.

Here are the highlights:

In Boston they had an hour long live interview on WMBR after an interview on the steps of the State House Building.

In Maine there was a press conference in Portland that got great pickup on WERU, a local radio station, as well as a 30 minute interview with public public radio.

They also visited the Danforth Wind Farm and then had a great presentation in Bangor at Waterfall Arts, and were in the Bangor Daily News!

Next stop on the tour was Philly where they had two presentations this weekend and then another press event this morning- updates from PA soon!

Keep on following us on Twitter, @AppVoices and #apptours and right here at the Front Porch Blog!


Appalachia On the Move

Monday, September 20th, 2010 | Posted by JW Randolph | No Comments

Kentuckian Mary Love and West Virginia’s own Dustin White join Austin Hall at a beautiful wind farm in Maine. Go team!


FARCES of Coal: World 2 – Luke Popovich 0

Friday, September 17th, 2010 | Posted by JW Randolph | 2 Comments

The FArCES of Coal are here for YOU, Candlestick Makers of America

One of my favorite people to see quoted in the news is the ever-dour NMA mouthpiece Luke Popovich. This guy has a simple job description which reads “Say whatever the coal industry tells you to say.” They even make up the numbers and statistics for him. Easy as pie! However, while we expect that Popovich will happily put on his blinders, collect his check in DC, and spout the nonsense of the day about Appalachia, the incredible thing his how he continually manages to screw up his message. Popovich would be hilarious if he wasn’t using his words to support something as reckless and deadly as mountaintop removal.

As you’ll remember, Popovich was the one who accused President Obama of “parking tanks on our front lawns.” Of course, Popovich’s “lawn” is in Washington DC, and for those who know the area I’d wager that his house is nowhere near the armory.

Right now two actual coalfield residents from Kentucky and West Virginia – both directly impacted by mountaintop removal – have traveled all the way to Maine to share their story with the good people of the northeast. The story is here on MPBN, and I hope you’ll listen to it. The reporter does a good job, and in an attempt to cover “the other side of mountaintop removal,” calls Popovich in his Washington office. He manages to get a quote in, and says:

“The effect [of passing the Appalachia Restoration Act] would be fairly devastating because you would see the loss of up to 17,000 jobs…And with those jobs, of course, would be a terrific impact on the communities that coal supports: the candlestick makers, the dry cleaners who all depend on the coal payroll. Then you would have a corresponding impact on the state and local budgets.”

The candlestick makers? WHAT?!! Luke, you silly guy. (more…)

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On the Road…In New England!

Thursday, September 16th, 2010 | Posted by Kate Boyle | No Comments

Well this week our team hit the road for an Appalachian Treasures tour of the New England States in hopes to raise awareness about the issue of mountaintop removal coal mining and the importance of the Appalachia Restoration Act (SB 696) in the Senate.


Our road warriors are:

Dustin White, who was born and raised in West Virginia and grew up in the coalfields. He is the son of a retired coal miner and his family has been living in Appalachia since before the Revolutionary War. He is a volunteer with Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition and became actively involved in the campaign to end Mountaintop Removal when Horizon Resources began active blasting at a mountaintop removal site on a mountain named for Dustin’s family, Cook Mountain, where his ancestors once lived. He continues to fight for protection of his family cemetery and others across Central Appalachia.

—and—

Mary Bettis Love, a native of Knoxville TN, has lived in and around Louisville KY for the past 22 years. Her roots in Appalachia are deep, with family having settled in East Tennessee near the Smoky Mountains in the late 1700’s. She is currently retired, which gives her more time for volunteer work with her church and with Kentuckians For The Commonwealth (KFTC).

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Charlotte Coal Ash Hearing Shows Strong Support for Subtitle C

Thursday, September 16th, 2010 | Posted by Jillian Randel | No Comments

An Elder from Holy Covenant Church of Christ performs a ritual ashing during the hearing

An Elder from Holy Covenant Church of Christ performs a ritual ashing during the hearing

Tuesday’s standing room only coal ash hearings in Charlotte, N.C. were nothing less than encouraging. As a fresh addition to Appalachian Voices, it was a learning experience for me on all things “coal ash.” Citizens from all walks of life stood up to testify against the harmful effects of the improper disposal of coal ash in the environment.

Close to fifteen members, staff and board from Appalachian Voices accompanied our Watauga Riverkeeper, Donna Lisenby, to Charlotte to participate in the process.

The topic of the hearing was the U.S. EPA’s upcoming vote on subtitle C, which will treat coal ash as hazardous waste and provide federal regulations of the byproduct, and subtitle D, which will allow coal ash to be titled as non-hazardous waste and leave disposal decisions up to individual states.

“I don’t think our lives are worth any less. We are not worthless. I want the EPA to see this,” said Elisa Young, a subtitle C supporter from Ohio. (more…)

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A Century of People Step Out to Support Blair Mountain

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010 | Posted by Jillian Randel | No Comments

Over 100 people gathered to rally in support of Blair Mountain this past Labor Day weekend. Blair Mountain is the site of the famous battle waged by coal miners in 1921 to unionize in support of better conditions in the coalfields. It is the location of what is considered the largest civil uprising in the U.S. since the Civil War.

The controversy over the listing and then subsequent delisting of the battlefield as a historic site has been ongoing since the 1980s. Status as a historic site would protect Blair Mountain from the destructive mountaintop removal coal mining that so many of West Virginia’s mountains have suffered. Let’s keep rallying to protect Blair Mountain!

Visit the Friends of Blair Mountain website to get involved and help protect Blair Mountain.


“Cooperative should scrap proposed coal plant”

Friday, September 10th, 2010 | Posted by Mike McCoy | No Comments

This Op-Ed, by the coalition coordinator for the Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition of which Appalachian Voices is a proud member, is running at Tidewater News

Old Dominion Electric Cooperative’s announcement on Wednesday to delay plans for a massive coal-fired power plant in Hampton Roads offers a ray of hope that Virginia can still get on track toward a cleaner energy future.

The temporary halt of what would be one of the dirtiest industrial facilities in the state will allow the company, its customers, government officials and the conservation community to explore alternatives that will cost less and be less harmful to the environment.

The Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition has long opposed the $6 billion coal plant proposed in Surry County, and has mobilized tens of thousands of citizens across the state who are concerned about air pollution, mercury poisoning of waters, mountaintop removal coal mining and the consequences of a warming planet.

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Progress in Virginia coal plant fight: ODEC announces postponement!

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010 | Posted by Tom Cormons | 3 Comments

Old Dominion Electric Co-op announced today that it plans to postpone for up to two years pursuit of air pollution permits for the massive new coal plant it is proposing. Appalachian Voices, as part of the Wise Energy for Virginia coalition, has been working for over a year to stop construction of this Surry County plant. The proposed 1500 megawatt plant, if built, would be the largest coal-fired power plant in the state and would burn mountaintop removal coal. The exciting news about the delay shows the progress we are making in opposing the plant. The fight is far from over, however, and we need your help to make sure this plant never gets built.

Though ODEC’s plans are delayed the company is working to advance the plant at the local level and is seeking water pollution permits from the Army Corps of Engineers. Please click here to write the Army Corps today to ensure a critical evaluation of ODEC’s purported need for this massive plant.

September 8th, 2010 · No Comments

MEDIA RELEASE

September 8, 2010

Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition calls on ODEC to permanently withdraw delayed coal plant proposal

The Wise Energy for Virginia Coalition lauded Old Dominion Electric Cooperative’s announcement today to delay plans for what would be the largest coal-fired power plant in Virginia. The temporary halt will allow the company, its customers, government officials and the conservation community to explore alternatives that will cost less and cause less harm to the environment.

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